First up, my adorable cat Bob. He had a bout of FLUTD (feline lower urinary tract disease) which required a two-day hospital stay. He finally came home on Saturday morning and when we got home, Neo and Bob started hissing at each other. Neo was NOT a happy camper. He kept hissing and growling at Bob. I kept Bob in the laundry room for the afternoon. Poor cat kept peeing every five minutes. I hope he was not in pain. I finally let him out and the two cats were very wary of each other. Bob learned to just ignore Neo’s hissing after a while. We theorized that Bob picked up all sorts of strange smells at the vet's and Neo was freaking out because Bob smelled like other animals. Finally, on Sunday night, Ed and I bathed Bob to get him to smell like shampoo instead. He was really good about being bathed, which was a unexpected. He usually freaks out when we do any kind of grooming for him but in the bathtub, he just stayed still. It almost seemed like he was enjoying the bath. He was really cute.
Then on Monday morning, I was off to Lagos, Nigeria. It took 27 hours from the time I left our house to the time I walked in to my hotel room in Lagos. Very long day. Lagos is a crazy place! My colleague Bill had some issues with his visa and sure enough, it took a lot of dollars to sort everything out. "Is there anything you can do for us" is the key phrase from the immigration officers. Then there was the situation with my luggage which was not in the pile of luggage from our flight. So I proceeded to report it lost. When I said that I had flown business class, their attitude changed and less than two minutes later, my luggage appeared. I was just so relieved to see it! I thanked everybody at the counter, grabbed my luggage and went to find Bill who was still sorting things out (i.e. handing over currencies) with the immigration folks. And all this within an hour of arriving in this city. Welcome to Nigeria.
Then there was the ride from the airport to the hotel. Our client had arranged for us to be picked up and driven to our hotel. What we didn't know and expect was that there would be armed security people in trucks driving in front of and behind our van! A fully armed security escort through the city. It was pretty surreal. And they drove so fast. Apparently, to deter the carjackers from targetting you, you just have to drive faster than them. The traffic and the way people drive here are also pretty crazy. I guess when you have 15 million people in a city, that tends to happen.
The hotel where we are staying is very posh. And we haven't left it since arriving. The meetings with our client are taking place at a conference room here at the hotel and they are discouraging us from leaving the hotel compound (it's all fenced in with armed guards at the gate). Tomorrow, we get to go to their office which is a five-minute walk from here. But I think they've arranged for a security convoy to take us there. I really would prefer to just walk and see a bit of what's outside the walls of this compound.
The people we've met have been very friendly. Tonight, I met a couple of guys from India who do business here and they said that Nigeria is the land of opportunity and lots of money can be made here. All other markets are saturated but Africa is not, and Nigeria is the place to be.
At our hotel, it is not cheap. I had a cocktail before dinner tonight and it cost $22. That's for one drink. It is a luxury hotel, I suppose. The guys from India said that a bottle of Star beer (that's the Nigerian beer) in the hotel is 650 naira but outside, you can get it for 150 naira. I wish I could wander outside of the hotel and see the other parts of Lagos. That would be so interesting.
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