Day 302, to Paros

Monday, 9/30/2019

We have a slow departure day today: “bags out” at 10am, meet to get on the bus at 11am. I enjoy the posh breakfast bar one more time — how do you know it’s a five-star hotel? One item in the breakfast bar is a large bowl of macadamia nuts. Another is a large honeycomb (not honey, an actual comb) to scrape onto your yogurt — and then had to kill some time. I went for a short walk, up a hill hoping for a view, but didn’t get one. Then I just went to the lobby meeting point and sat.

Anastasia announced a change of plan. The itinerary called for a 12pm ferry to Paros, and lunch there. However, that had assumed the summer ferry schedule and they’d just switched to the winter one, with a 1:30 departure. So now we would walk around the harbor and have lunch at a Mykonos restaurant. The sun was very bright and I’d now walked the perimeter of the little harbor four times before. But the lunch was quite good.

The ferry was a “Sea Jet”, a big catamaran hull. It backs up to the dock and lowers a ramp. A large mob of people get off, all pulling roller bags, and disperse to waiting buses and cars. Then the Paros-bound mob, of which we are a tiny part, pull our bags up the ramp and find places to stack them in metal racks just inside the car deck. Then upstairs to a very comfortable large cabin with big seats, and by that time the ship is well away.

Forty minutes later the announcement comes (announcements are always in Greek then English by the way) that we are docking in Paros. The mob descends to the car deck, everyone finds their bags, and we wait for the rear ramp to lower. I have a good picture of this but it is taking forever to upload from the phone on this hotel’s wifi. OK here we are. Note that Paros appears to be much like Mykonos, except the hills are higher.

img_4100-l

So we bus to the Hotel Aegeon, which is clean and charming but quite a step down from five stars. Maybe 3.5. Anastasia announces we will meet for a walk to town and supper at 5:50, so, time for a nap. I think I will publish this and put in the evening’s activities in tomorrow’s post.

Day 301, Delos

Sunday, 9/29/2019

Want to know if you are in a five-star hotel? In the breakfast bar you pour orange juice from a pitcher and taste it and it is fresh-pressed. Not to mention there are platters of cute little cold-cuts and platters of different kinds of cheeses and fruit and…

I made sure to be in good time for the 9am departure meeting. We bused around to the opposite end of town, and then walked around the inner harbor to the smaller ferries that go to Delos. Ours was the Orca. What, in the Agean sea? I thoroughly enjoyed the half-hour cruise to Delos. The temperature was about 72F, the sea deep blue, and a brisk breeze had swept the sky clean and made waves just big enough to make the boat move around in a pleasant way. I stood by a railing the whole way and got my glasses all gunked up with salt spray.

Delos is another bare, brown, rocky island, with even less vegetation than Mykonos. However the whole foreshore is covered with ruins. This picture spans less than a fourth of them.

9-29 delos ruins (1)

We walked a lot (health app says, 12,200 steps for the day). There are a whole lot of old stones, many loose, many forming partial walls. Anastasia tried to make it interesting.

9-29 anastasia explains 1280

I wasn’t enjoying it, much. I think we weren’t prepped enough, or I wasn’t, at least. The ruins include evidence from 1,000 years. The island was a religious center for the Naxians, people from the island of Naxos, who made it the site of really big temples around 800BC. Then the Athenians became top dogs and they took it over and built stuff for several centuries. The the Romans decided it would be a duty-free port, and for a couple of centuries it was a commercial hub for trading vessels from all over and a population of over 30,000 — all living on imported food because no crops grow there. Then Mithradates, an ambitious dude from Anatolia, in one of his three wars with the Romans, destroyed the whole thing. So about 50BC it was abandoned by everybody and gradually covered over, until the 1800s when French archaeologists started uncovering it. But what’s left is just stones, jumbled together, and a lot of 3- to 5-foot high walls. It isn’t obvious what’s early Greek, Athenian, or Roman. The archaeologists can say, this little square of broken wall was a temple to Artemis, and this line of broken columns was put up by Philip of Macedon, and so on. But it’s just broken masonry. Anastasia tried but I’m not sure anybody could make it exciting. I just got hot, dehydrated (well, I should have brought a water bottle) and a bit grumpy, although I didn’t express that.

So back we came and walked through old town Mykonos to a restaurant for lunch. I should say that the Greek cuisine has been nice. Actually today wasn’t especially Greek, the entree was a pork chop.

After lunch we were at liberty, and supper tonight is on us individually, not provided. I spent an hour walking around the old town shops, hoping to find a nice straw hat, but all the shops had the same Chinese-made straw or paper fedoras, and none in my size. Took some pictures.

9-29 mykonos alley 8009-29 old town wall 1024

Then I walked on back to the hotel, up a fairly steep hill. There I took a pleasant shower — this has been my pattern for a couple of days, take a shower in the afternoon and change into tomorrow’s clothes for the evening — and did some hand-laundry. Later I think I will have the prix fixe menu at our posh hotel.

Day 300, To Mykonos

Saturday, 9/28/2019

The phone made a single tentative “kerbloop?” noise at 5am and that was the wakeup call, but it was enough. Did indeed have my bag out at 5:10, and as scheduled we were on the bus at 6am for the 20-minute drive through predawn darkness to Piraeus to board the Blue Star ferry.

9-28 boarding

It was a large ferry, with several decks, more than one bar, and large comfortable assigned seats inside. The ride on the calm, deep-blue Adriatic under brilliant sun was about five hours long. I spent some time on two different large, roofed decks with chairs and tables open to the breeze, most occupied by Greeks having cheerful conversations and smoking (lots of second-hand smoke); and some time in my assigned armchair reading a book on my phone. Eventually we reached Mykonos where we picked up our bags and Anastasia led us to our bus past an extremely large cruise boat.

9-28 rolling

The bus driver exercised amazing skill driving a large coach through extremely narrow twisting streets to our restaurant for lunch. Quite a nice place and a good meal. Also, squid.

9-28 squid

Squid aside, this is pretty much what all of Mykonos looks like: very dry barren dirt, no trees, brilliant sun, blue water, lots of little white buildings. From lunch our coach took us to our hotel which is actually a five-star and very posh one. Really, really fancy. Here’s the view from my balcony.

9-28 posh

We are at liberty until 6pm and… oh my gosh it is 6:09 and the phone is ringing! I held up the whole group and I am so embarrassed!

We all hopped on the coach and were trucked around to the opposite end of the town, the North end where the ferry dock is, and let off to walk through the tiny streets of the town. Mykonos is almost totally a resort; Anastasia says there are almost no farmers, fishermen, or other “ordinary” people living here. Everyone works in retail, hotel, or restaurants to service the constant flow of tourists. The town center is basically a big mall formed of a maze of tiny winding streets. Just the same it is photogenic as all get-out, especially tonight because we were just at the golden hour fading to an orange sunset. Instead of the relatively tedious process of getting WordPress to display pictures, I will point to a Smugmug gallery of unedited images.

After walking all the way through the center of town north to south, we turned around and went back along the waterfront south to north, ending at a restaurant for supper. This process was slowed a bit when one of the group tripped on rough cobbles and fell, hitting hard enough that she got a bit of an abrasion above one eye, and needed a while to recover. Frankly I’m surprised it took this long for someone to fall. The sidewalks in the Plaka, the entire top of the Acropolis, and every foot of road in Mykonos, are a minefield of irregular pavement, sudden steps, cobbles, lumps, intrusive curbs.

Anyway, back to the hotel. Tomorrow we start at a civilized 9am to visit the famous archaeologic site on the nearby island of Delos.

 

Day 299, Acropolis

Friday, 9/27/2019

Slept very well, more than 8 hours sack time. Woke early enough to read email and the news before breakfast.

At 7am I went to the breakfast room. By 8am most of the tour were in the lobby and we headed out.

anastasia leads out
Anastasia leads out the troops

We walked around two sides of the rock and up to the, um, I guess it’s the western end, where is the only entrance/exit to the park grounds. Here we looked down on some famous places, the site of the Agora where (among many others) Sophocles like to sit and ask uncomfortable questions, the Pnyx, the hill where the Athenian citizens met to debate and vote, etc.

From Anastasia’s talk I suddenly realized how differently, all right, how incorrectly, I’ve been pronouncing Greek terms. Take the Temple of Dionysus. I’ve always read that as “DIE Oh NIGH Sus” but she says, “dee ONNY shush”.

We got to the top and entered about 9am. The strong morning sun was making the old columns glow.morning light on columns

From the south side we looked down on the theater where Sophocles’ plays were staged, and beyond to the Acropolis Museum.

theater and museum

After a while there were quite a few people with us.

toooooristsAt 10:30 we met and walked down to the Museum. A dramatic building outside and in, the displays are mostly the bits of the friezes and statuary from the temples on the Acropolis. A repeated theme was, “the ones that are pure white are plaster casts of the originals which are in the British Museum.” Lord Elgin, who originally looted the best friezes, and the British Museum which so far refuses to repatriate them, are not well regarded here.

The Museum is built on columns that support it above an archaeological dig, and the floor is made of glass so you look down into the old foundation stones underneath.

By the time we’d finished with the Museum and started walking to our lunch destination it was 1pm, and it turned out the restaurant was a good kilometer away on the far side of the Plaka. The walks to the restaurant, and back to the hotel, were via different shopping streets in the Plaka. Lots and lots of shops, selling all varieties of tourist things. Quite a few have cheap straw hats, and I wouldn’t mind getting one, but it isn’t convenient just now.

As of 4pm, back at the hotel, the Health app shows 12,188 steps for the day. At 6pm we meet in a conference room for a nice presentation by an archaeology professor on the history and methods of archaeology in Greece and Europe. At 7:15 or so we go up to our hotel’s roof garden restaurant for dinner. I sit with a couple who take three trips a year(!) and have been to Africa 10 times. As well as many South American and European countries.

The plan for tomorrow is to transfer to Mykonos, by a ferry that leaves Piraeus, the port of Athens, at 8am. Which means we have to get on a bus at 6am. Which means a wakeup call at 5am and “bags out” at 5:15. Other than the early start it is expected to be an easy day, with a 5-hour boat ride, and one sight-seeing thing after.

 

Day 298, arrival in Athens

Thursday, 9/27/2019

The transition from Wednesday to Thursday occurred in the air over the Atlantic. Just under eight hours in the seat, if I include the 20 minutes of taxi time after pushback at JFK. I managed some sleep, mixed into probably four hours of eyes-closed quiet time not quite sleeping.

The approach to Athens passes over a lot of the rugged land of Southern Greece, all of which has a strong resemblance to Southern California, including steep rounded hills blanketed in what probably is not, technically, chaparral, but looks like it. Even on final approach the resemblance to, maybe, Bakersfield or Simi Valley, was strong to me, except for many orderly groves of olive trees.

I came out of the arrivals door into a semicircle of at least 20 people holding signs, waiting for specific people or names of tours. But no Road Scholar. I walked around the semicircle four times. Then I decided to call the tour leader but my phone, despite having connected happily while the plane was taxiing to the gate, now had “no service”. All the pay phones required phone cards. The information desk directed me to a phone that took coins (I had some Euro notes and coins, left over from Italy two years ago). Anastasia told me the driver was there, with three other tour members, go back to the arrivals area. Anyway, found him. Met three other members and we had a nice half hour ride in a posh Mercedes van to our hotel.

Anastasia met us. The group will be 21 in all. Four are already here, arriving yesterday. My little quartet came on the same flight (and don’t ask me how I failed to connect with the other three and our driver, earlier) and the rest are coming in this afternoon.

Our rooms weren’t ready (it was only noon) so she led the four of us on a short walk. The hotel is just down the street from the Acropolis Museum, a huge modern building we’ll visit tomorrow, and the Plaka, the old town, which, because a couple of cruise ships are in port, was jammed with tourists and people selling things to tourists. Got a view looking up at the Acropolis which I may put in here later.

acropolis_9_27
The white crane vanished later in the day.

Back to the hotel for a very welcome shower and change of clothes, connect to wifi, make this entry. Worked out a method of getting pics off the phone, into my Dropbox folder, down from the Dropbox folder onto the Chromebook, so that WordPress could find them and upload them to a blog post (see above). Nothing more to do until 6pm. I washed my shirt, shorts and socks from the flight and put on tomorrow’s clothes.

The group assembled at 6pm and Anastasia gave us an overview of tomorrow and the following days. We introduced ourselves around the circle. I am the only Californian, to my surprise. Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida well represented. Then we all trooped out to a restaurant maybe 8 blocks away. Standard Greek fare, well presented. Moussaka is what you would get if you made ravioli, but instead of pasta ribbons, you used thin strips of eggplant, and instead of tomato, cumin and spinach.

Back to the hotel to post this and stay awake long enough (it’s already 8pm) for digestion to start, then crash.

Day 297, en route to Athens

Wednesday, 9/25/2019

Of course I couldn’t manage to stay asleep until the alarm went off. I got up at 2:40. At 2:55 I got a text saying the Uber I’d scheduled for 3:15 was five minutes away. So I headed out — and then immediately headed back, because I was briskly walking to the elevator without my bag. Sheesh.

Uber

driver was clearly a refugee from the 1960s, long hair and mumbled to himself all the way to the airport. Well, not mumbled, but talked a monologue about politics most of which I couldn’t get over the road noise. At SFO, surprise, the

doors to the security line

and gates don’t even open until 4am! So much for being two hours early for  flights. Mine nominally boards at 5:40. And nobody manning any of the Delta, or other, desks.

A few dozen people around the security entrance were occupying every available seating space. I found part of a bench down a hall, and had time to pull out the Chromebook and try it using, for the first time, a different wifi. Seems fine if a little slower than normal. (Chromebooks seriously need an internet link to be fully usable.)

I’m not TSA precheck for this trip. Although both Road Scholar and KLM know my number, that somehow didn’t get passed to Delta for my online check-in. So I had to do the full thing, take off shoes and belt and put laptop in a tray. I didn’t care on this trip, since it would only have saved me time on this one boarding. For the return flight, I would need Global Whatsis, the international version, which I only just learned about this month.

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departing SFO at dawn

The first leg,

SFO-JFK, was as nominal and routine as a flight can be. Boarded on time. I’d deliberately selected a seat at the way-way-back, row 42, because I didn’t care how long it took to get off the plane and two, I thought they would board the back rows earlier than the front ones. Nope. I can’t figure out what Delta’s algorithm was, but the biggest group (after three different classes of Privileged Folk) was Main 1, and they mostly sat in the middle. I was Main 3, last group. So I was a tiny bit apprehensive that my bag would not actually fit under the seat. But it did, just. We had a tail-wind and the pilot proudly announced we were 25 minutes ahead of schedule on arrival.

I won’t say the five hours flew by but at least they passed quietly. I had a couple of short naps, even. And listened to a lot of podcasts and music. After landing I had to go from C65 to B38, nominally all the international terminal, but in actuality requiring a shuttle bus ride. As I was striding along from the bus into the B-gates terminal it occurred to me that I was striding, carrying my bag, moving right along. Marian and I took several flights in 2016-17 when her mobility was increasingly impaired, and using wheelchair assists to get from gate to gate, and always trying to plot the shortest walking route. Today I consciously savored the feeling of being freely mobile, realizing that it is not a given, wondering how long I’ll have it.

Anyway that got me to B38 with a bottle of OJ and two hours to kill before the

flight to Athens.

Which is a bit delayed. The Aux power unit (APU) on the aircraft needs service, with the result that the plane has no air conditioning and “it’s about 95 degrees on board” according to the flight officer who came up to the desk to explain the delay. 15-30 minute delay in boarding — they say. So not an on time departure. Wonder when it will go?

Answer: it pushed back an hour late.

depart_at_sunset
Depart JFK at sunset

And that was Wednesday.

 

Day 99, Home again

Monday, 3/11/2019

Up, dressed, brushed my teeth, out the back door of the Excalibur — avoiding yet another trek through the blinking noisy neon jungle of the casino floor — and a Lyft to the airport. At the entrance to the security gate a TSA woman was telling people to wait, “security is full except for pre-check”. But I have pre-check, so whizzed on up the stairs. There I found the regular security line backed up, a couple hundred people probably in a 5-fold snake, but only me and one other guy in the pre-check line and I was through in 30 seconds. Recent flights I’d been noticing the pre-check line was getting crowded, but not here. I guess most people who go to Vegas for a weekend, don’t travel enough to go through the pre-check registration rigmarole.

Routine flight home, but I noticed that miles of jumbled hills from I-5 west to the Bay were brilliant Irish green from a wet rainy season. I’ve noticed this wilderness before, hundreds of square miles, mostly roadless, that lies between US 101 on the west and I-5 on the east. But usually from the air it is mostly yellow with dry grass. Right now it is lush. If I was still a bike rider, I’d be planning a ride to Mt. Hamilton. Now I’m thinking, some kind of a weekend drive, in the next month before the green begins to fade. Down SR 25, maybe.

Once home I did a few useful things. I got out Marian’s jewelry box and the envelope of old receipts that show provenance. Tomorrow Suzanne’s friend Louise is going to come and practice appraisals on it. Then I paid a bill, filled out a survey questionnaire from the hospice company (all positive, they were great), and put in an hour filling out the tax accountant’s online workbook. Another couple of hours, probably, to finish the taxes.

A hobby I’ve had the last couple of years is doing video reviews of modern meal replacements. That’s going to end pretty soon, because when I move to an ILF, with all meals provided, I won’t have a reason to use these products. Right now I’m getting half of my calories from them. Recently I took delivery of a new one. It’s chocolate flavored, so I ordered bags of chocolate from two other, more established vendors. The second of those just came in today’s mail. So I shot stills and close-up video of the process of mixing a shake for each of these three. I put the shakes in the fridge to mature (they’re always better after chilling overnight). Tomorrow I’ll shoot myself doing a taste comparison.

I should have spent a couple hours scanning slides but I really wanted a nap, so I did that and then frittered away the time to supper on the computer.

 

 

Day 98, yet more Vegas

Met Harriet and Linda for tacos, and went into the arena. Oregon, a very powerful team this year (undefeated season, I think) had a lot of trouble with UCLA, and the game went to overtime. UCLA could have won it, almost did, but their coach Cory Close incurred a technical foul in the last minute, giving Oregon two free throws that turned the course of the game. At any rate, the Oregon players had a long and difficult game, which will hopefully slow them down for the championship game. Stanford had a somewhat easier time with UW, and Tara did a lot more substitutions than normal, presumably to keep her team fresh.

Sunday, 3/10/2019

Daylight savings started today. As a result I got to the terminal to print my Southwest boarding pass about 40 minutes after the 24-hour window opened. But still, boarding number A44, two positions better than the outbound trip, so other people must have slept in also.

I went to directv.com to set up a recording of tonight’s game, which I had neglected to do before leaving home. This used to be a snap, log in to directv, go to “Guide”, scroll the listing to the right channel, click record. Well, it still kind of works that way but since AT&T took over DirecTV, they have insisted on integrating the two websites, so now I have to navigate through layers of AT&T website to get to the same place. Despite being signed in with my AT&T login, it still cannot comprehend anything other than that I would want to buy a DirecTV subscription. Actually controlling or using my account… well, never mind. I got it done.

One benefit of the move to an ILF is that I will almost certainly not have AT&T as my internet provider, and not have DirecTV as my TV provider. Probably ComCast excuse me XFinity for both, I think that’s what C.H. has as the in-house system. I’ve been a DirecTV subscriber for … twenty years? Must be. Certainly since the 1990s sometime. XFinity will not be an improvement customer-service-wise, by all accounts, but I won’t have to deal with it directly.

I recall that while showing me around C.H. Craig mentioned that he was part of a resident committee that did tech support for other residents, and pretty clearly suggested I could be, too. Well, maybe so. Could be an aid in integrating to that community. I can start with figuring out the TV and internet for my own unit and go from there.

Harriet texts that she and Linda can meet me at noon. I’d suggested a visit to the Springs Reserve, so we’ll probably do that.

OK we spent a couple hours walking through this pleasant municipal thing, with its Butterfly experience, botanical garden with lots of cacti, etc. Then back to the hotel where I had a short nap and then it was game time.

Stanford started out well, taking a quick 6-point lead, and maintaining a lead of 6-10 points into the fourth quarter. Then Oregon caught up and the game was tied with 3 minutes to play, when Stanford got a couple of crucial baskets. In the final minute, Oregon had to start fouling; Stanford hit all their free throws, and the game ended with a Stanford win: champions of the PAC-12.

Had a late supper with Harriet and Linda then back to the room to get a good night’s sleep before an early departure tomorrow.

Day 97 more Vegas

Well that evening had some surprising turns. I met with fans Harriet and Linda for supper at Puck’s, then into the arena for the Stanford-Cal game. This was a close affair for 35 minutes, Stanford starting cold, catching up to have a narrow lead. With 5:00 to play, defensive sub Shannon, whose role had been to help contain Cal’s all-star center Christine Anigwe, stepped back and splashed a three. On the next three possessions point  guard Keana hit a three, a three, and a layup, an 11-0 run to blow the game open.

I expected the second game, Oregon State vs UW, to be an easy win for the Beavers. And my streak of absolutely wrong predictions continued. OSU did have a ten point lead at the half, so I left, and followed the game back in my room, on the play-by-play scroll on the ESPN score page (Excalibur not offering the PAC-12 network on their TV system). UW caught up, then took a small lead. The game was tied with 0:05 left to play. A UW player snapped off a three from NBA distance, and it went down. Some UW players thought the game was over and rushed the court, resulting in a technical foul with the clock at 0:01. That gave OSU two free throws and possession of the ball. They made the free throws; then inbounded the ball with 0:01 seconds to play and did get a shot off, but it fell short, so UW won by 1 point.

So on Saturday it will be Stanford-UW at 8:30, preceded by Oregon-UCLA at 6pm. Everyone expected an Oregon-Stanford final, and that is how it is shaping up — but I am done making predictions during the tournament.

14,343 steps. Can’t say Vegas doesn’t give you exercise.

Saturday, 3/9/2019

Started the day with coffee and scone at the in-house Starbuck’s. Then I went out to try riding the Deuce, the shuttle bus that runs up and down The Strip. Went south first, to the famous Welcome sign where tourists were queuing up with the aid of an Elvis impersonator to take selfies.

IMG_3629

Of course there is an Elvis impersonator. Then I rode back up to the north and got off to walk through Bellagio. This is the approach to Bellagio.Italian Lakes: Days 10-12 Como on Lake Como

OK, not really, that was the approach the the actual Bellagio on Lake Como, two years ago. The Vegas Bellagio is a huge casino/hotel whose decor is themed around polished marble and terrazzo floors and semi-classical decor. It’s actually nicer to walk through than either Excalibur or the MGM Grand, mostly owing to higher ceilings and wider aisles. But it’s still a casino.

Rode a bit further then the bus hung a right and left the Strip. Not sure why, but I got off. Then I couldn’t see an obvious bus stop for the return direction (I suspect the route does some kind of loop at this point so the return route was a different street?) so I just called a Lyft. I opted for a shared Lyft, with the result that there was another couple to drop off at a completely different resort off the Strip, so I got a bit more of a tour.

Now it is barely noon with hours to kill. I decided to just laze the rest of the day in the room, catching up on podcasts and youtube subscriptions that I’ve fallen behind on. That’s fine for today, but Lordy what will I do with myself tomorrow?

Game results in next post.

 

Day 96, second day in Vegas

Friday, 3/8/2019

Goodness but I do not like Vegas. Being in casinos is simply unpleasant owing to the visual overload, the constant noise, and the pervasive smell of tobacco. Outside is a bit better. I went for a walk this morning, to find The Park. It’s an outdoor plaza with plants behind New York New York. And it has music playing. Not as loud as inside a casino, but inescapable.

I rode the tram, surely the most useless mass-transit system ever. One way, it runs from Excalibur to Mandalay Bay. The return goes from Mandalay Bay to Luxor, to Excalibur. In other words, to get from Excalibur to Luxor, you ride to Mandalay Bay, get off, wait for the next train, get on, ride back to Luxor. Which I did, and walked around inside Luxor for a few minutes, then walked on sidewalks back to Excalibur.

Finally it came time for the first session. UCLA quickly took a 15-point lead over ASU so I left at half-time and came back to the room (9,457 steps so far) which had been made up. Following the notice about saving water, I had hung my used towels neatly on the rods. And of course they had been replaced with new ones anyway.

Now to plan the rest of the day. I expect the next game, Arizona-Oregon, to quickly turn into a rout because Oregon is just that good (but I’ve been wrong a lot so far). The game I really want to see, Stanford-Cal, doesn’t start until 6pm. I think I will hang here in the room, following the UA-UO game on the internet, until 4pm. Then go and have an early supper at (probably) Wolfgang Puck’s where I had supper last night, before the 6pm session. I will publish this now and finish the thrilling chronicle of events in tomorrow’s post.