Mike Hagerty's Photo of the Day

I'm going to start with a photo of the day to get myself motivated to keep posting. I tend to set these kind of goals for myself, do it for about a week or two, find a good reason not to do it one day, then use the same reason for the next several months until I get back to it. Hopefully that won't happen...but it probably will. The layout right now really is quite horrible and I realize the title appears at the top twice, but until I figure out how I want it to look, it probably won't change. Enjoy...

Thursday, July 31, 2008

My Room

Slow progress in the field, due to past problems at the plant (see: mass hysteria), has given us more time to poke around the unit and prepare for the upcoming startup. Today we looked at some Pressure Safety Valves. It was fascinating.

Beijing update: I ordered tickets to the USA-Spain basketball game and to the Men's Tennis finals...worried about them getting here on time now!


Here's a pic of my room at the Kantary Bay, where I spend slightly too much time. The beds are decent, the rooms are nice, the TV plays english channels (CNN, ESPN, HBO, Discovery) and the internet does the job. I'm looking to buy a motorbike to get out and see more of Rayong, which hopefully i'll do next week if i find a good price.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Satisfying Sea Demon Spirits

I'm back to working day shift this week. For some reason I feel like I have much more time outside of work when I'm working evening or night shift. Which makes preparing photos for this thing much more difficult. Tonight we actually had a big team dinner, but i forgot my camera. But this is one I wanted to post a couple days ago.


On the beach outside our hotel, this statue is at the main intersection. I think it's called the Sea Demon, but we're not sure exactly what it is. Sometimes it looks quite manly, sometimes as you can see here it's rather feminine. Kinda plays along with the rather androgynous nature of the Thai people. But another strange thing of this statue are the objects left around it. You have buddha figures and horses, glass bottles of Fanta and little nomb-like figurines. You also see similar displays outside buildings and businesses where food and drinks are left for spirits to look over the structure...but why anyone would leave anything for the Sea Demon, i don't know.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Give Me a Break

Slow day at the office going over some startup procedures, getting our punchlist up to date. On a daily basis dates of this project possibly being over are thrown out there. Today, the word was early December (maybe).

One of my coworkers here in Thailand started eating quite a few Kit Kat bars at work. The other day at the Walmart of Thailand, Tesco Lotus, I passed by a box and picked some up. I'm quite addicted at this point. Looking at the box today though I noticed an interesting note on the box that caught me by surprise. I'd even call it un-American...as in, it would never fly to have such a thing printed on a box of candy bars in the US.


In case you can't read it threw the glare, it says "Nestle chocolates are shipped fresh from our factories in perfect condition. Exposure to heat and sunlight may cause the appearance of white spots, or fat blooms. The taste, however, is unaffected and the chocolates are safe for consumption"

FAT BLOOMS?!?!

On the back of the box, it reads "GOOD TO REMEMBER This Kit Kat recipe is specially made for tropical countries. It withstands heat better and tastes best in air-conditioned places." That doesn't seem to jive with the message on the front that reminds you "Your favourite break best enjoyed Outdoors"

I'm confused, but full after eating five. No fat blooms to report.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Back in Rayong

Today I drove back to Rayong after the weekend in Bangkok. Heading back to work in the morning.

I didn't actually take a picture today. This photo is from my tour of Wat Po, where the reclining buddha is located. I hired a tour guide to show me around the complex who was quite good. Halfway through the tour we were looking at some pagodas in the courtyard where people's ashes can be laid to rest if the family has the money for it. I asked a question about who is allowed to do that and he said it was just based on being able to pay, then stunned me when he threw out the line, "No money, no honey. No money, no home" He has a point. I had to take a picture of him saying it...


Looking around the NY Times travel section, I came across a cool article about a philosopher's trek through the Adirondacks, check it out.

Walking the Streets of Bangkok

Saturday night I didn't go out and slept for 12 hours after not getting much sleep the two nights before. Sunday around noon I hit the streets of Bangkok hoping to make it to the Grand Palace and Wat Po before they closed for the day. I started in China Town with some noodles for lunch and ended on Khao San Road for some snacks and a beer for dinner. The palace and temples in between were pretty spectacular.


Outside Bangkok

On Saturday Richard and I arranged for a car to take us to some sites outside Bangkok. I really wanted to check out Ayutaya, the former Thai capital, but planned on doing it Sunday. Unfortunately, I couldn't get the tour setup but it'll give me something to go back to Bangkok to do. Saturday morning, Richard decided to pass up the trip after staying up all night dealing with some financial matters back in the US (a pleasure of living on the other side of the globe). I ended up seeing the Floating Market, an elephant zoo, the Golden Mount and finished with some shopping.

Bangkok Trip Begins

The last four days of Photo of the Day are being added retroactively since I had little desire to spend time on my computer while in Bangkok for the weekend. Due to the change in our schedule, as previously noted, I had four days off from Friday to Monday. Having been in Thailand for over five months now, it was about time I make a trip up to Bangkok to check out the city. The first goal I had for the trip was to prepare for my next four day off trip to BEIJING for the OLYMPICS!!! BOOYAAAH!!! I had to obtain a visa to get into China, which required that I have 1) a letter from the hostel I'm staying at in Beijing saying I had reservations, 2) proof of my flight in and out of China (strangely on Egypt Air, how does that make sense?), 3) two visa application forms with passport photos and 4) passport. So today's (well, Friday's) photo of the day is the Chinese visa that will make the trip possible:


After taking care of that business, Richard and I headed down to the Chao Praya River that runs through Bangkok to do some sightseeing. It was around 4 pm already, so I was just planning taking a boat ride to get a feel for the city, but we ended up checking out Wat Arun (which was awesome) and taking a longtailed boat ride through some Bangkok canals with a crazy Thai driver. I'll post the whole lot of photos later this week, but here's one from Friday. Wat Arun, the Temple of the Dawn...ironically, at dusk:

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Happy Birthday Maura!

Maura is 23 years old today, say happy birthday if you get the chance!

Getting around Rayong can be kinda tough. There are many motorcycle taxis available in town. But our hotel is a little outside of town and so there's no bike taxis waiting to whisk you away. When I first got here, I rented a car but can't do that anymore. My coworkers are renting a car on their own dime and let me borrow it today. Little did I know when I got to Rayong, the Thais drive on the left side of the road. The obvious troubles with driving on the wrong side of the road aren't too tough to get over. At intersections you just need to remind yourself, "stay to the left, stay to the left." it was the small things that got me. One, the directional signal is on the other side. For the first week I was driving here, I turned on the windshield wipers every time i wanted to turn. Two, remembering which side of the car to get in to drive got me a couple times. Three, you tend to find yourself drifting towards the left side of the lane, where you normally would be seated if you were driving on the normal side of the car.


I had three things to do: get a new phone card, buy some groceries, and look for a used motor bike of my own. Bought the phone card, got my groceries, and may have found a good bike deal!


Quotes of the day:

"If all you ever do is all you've ever done, then all you ever get is all you ever got"

"When a person is addicted to crack cocaine, his problem is not that the price of crack is going up."

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

On the Way to Work

Pretty slow day today, talked to some friends on GChat (entertaining), realized I forgot my laptop power cord at work (devastating), cooked some pasta for lunch (filling), read the new ND magazine (always inspiring).

I ordered two magazines last year when I started to travel (Business Week and The Economist) and they have a weird way of piling up in my room. I'll look through them, but they tend to go unread. However, whenever I get either the ND Magazine or Peeks (magazine of the 46ers) I read it cover to cover. I think it's a combination of the frequency they are published and the personal connection to the subject matter. They're both a nice reminder of things back home.

Today's photo is from the drive into work. We have a driver with a van bring us back and forth to work. It used to be a big crew packing it in, but now we're working shift so a little more room to operate. This guy is our third driver, I don't know his name. The first one was Weetoon, a jolly Thai guy that tried to speak to us in Thai and we tried to speak to him in English, and somehow we got along just fine. Except his van didn't have seatbelts. When UOP safety chief came to town this had to change. Second guy was Ning, a much younger smiley guy that would slow down as we passed thai women on the streat and say "ooohh, lady, lady." Not sure why we lost him, something about too much overtime carting us around. This guy is nice, we buy him cokes when he stops at 7-Eleven on the way home. The other guy messing with his glasses is Richard. We're working the same shift so you'll probably be seeing a lot of him. Things to notice: praying monk and model military jet, whhaattt?


Interesting article: Why India Will Beat China

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

My Thai Guitar

Many people on the road have things they like to do in each country. An idea I came up with when I started traveling was to buy an acoustic guitar in each place that I stay longer than a month or so. Somehow I forgot to do this on my first assignment in Japan, then was stuck in oklahoma for a couple months. However, I finally got around to buying my first international guitar a couple months ago. The guy at the store kept telling me "Yamaha...number one, very good." I told him that I didn't want to buy a Yamaha cause I can buy one at home (or could have in japan) that I wanted the best Thai guitar. After running across the street to find someone who could speak better english, he realized what I was saying and proudly pointed to this guitar and said "Number one in Thailand!" Other than being a fifth of the price of the Yamaha, I thought it sounded better.



I took this picture on the deck of my hotel room. The water in the background is the Gulf of Thailand. After my swing through Colorado for Reid's wedding, I've been working on some John Denver songs. I'm having some trouble with Rocky Mountain High, but I think I got Annie's Song and Eagle and the Hawk down.

Back to work tonight from 4 pm to midnight.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Holiday

Day two...and still going strong! I updated yesterdays post after I found my camera cord.

In thailand you don't have "days off" and you don't have a "weekend". Instead you have "holiday". So today for me is holiday.

We started doing some shift work to better be able to track the activities at the plant. After working two 12 hour shift this past weekend, I get today off and then four days off next weekend. This morning Richard Samaniego (another UOP advisor) and I played some tennis. This is the tennis court at our hotel that I tend to spray shots all over. Thankfully, it is fully fenced in but we still find a way to lose balls.



This is amazing: http://www.vimeo.com/1211060

Sunday, July 20, 2008

The Twentieth of July

Ok, here we go. First post. I came up with the idea to try a photo of the day to give people a better idea of what my life is like here in Rayong on a daily basis. I've posted pictures from trips to islands and up to Pattaya or out in Rayong (which can be viewed at http://picasaweb.google.com/jmhagerty) but not much about the people I work with and the things I do on a daily basis. So I planned on taking a picture each day to post. And today I did just that. But when I got back to my room, I couldn't find my cord to download the picture. So I'm already breaking one of my goals of each picture being taken the day it is posted.



I wanted to start with a picture from work because that is where I spend the majority of my time here in Thailand. This first picture is from one of our vessel inspections back in April probably. The guy to the left, Teerapong, is a process engineer and on the right, Narin, is a board operator. Narin started sending me emails to my UOP address filled with (update: non-pornographic) pictures of Thai girls. Although the effort was appreciated, I have a feeling Honeywell wouldn't appreciate it. And although it may look like it, I'm not about to jump out of a plane.

I had to work today because we started a new shift schedule this past week. It was rainy and gray this morning that felt like a spring day in New York. It felt nice. We got the steam ejectors working this weekend and started boil out of some separation columns today. Between all of that I booked a hostel room in Beijing in August, once I find out more information on visas this week I'm going to book a flight. I'm quite beyond excited.

Check back tomorrow for something new.

Update - I found my camera cord so I'm now in business. Here's the picture I intended to put up yesterday:



This picture shows a part of the plant I'm helping to startup. The large columns with all the white lights on them are what we were working on yesterday. This section separates all of the different molecules produced in upstream equipment into a product stream of Phenol that is 99.95% pure. If everything else goes as it should (and it won't), this section will be the toughest part to get to work once we get started