fivemack: (Default)
Tom Womack ([personal profile] fivemack) wrote2006-10-28 08:35 pm

Logistics for Worldcon 2007

I've got a membership for the Yokohama Worldcon, and am starting to wonder what else I need.

The flights seem to be either £600 on the hopefully-not-bankrupt-by-then Alitalia changing in Milan, or £500 on Aeroflot changing in Moscow (bringing with that all the delights of Russian transit visas); I suppose that's unavoidable since Japan is relatively distant and aviation fuel relatively costly. I've tried being flexible about mid-week departures and returns but it doesn't seem to reduce the cost; I presume NRT is the right airport.

There's obviously no point going to Japan for a five-day con; I'd plan to take a fortnight or so, so would be interested to know if people going are tending to take their extra time pre-con or post-con ... I'm sure there are likely to be fannish trips to places like the Tokyo Science Museum. I'm completely decision-paralysed by the long list of hotels on the con website, and so would like to appeal to people I know who are going to tell me which hotel they're in and I'll aim to use that one.

I get the impression Yokohama may not be the right place to stay for touristing in the Tokyo region: would it make more sense to book the central nights of the con in the con hotel (anyone prepared to share a room? five nights at the £120/night single-room rate is a lot more than I'm comfortable with, I can provide references that I'm not an axe-murderer) and get a travel-agent in England to book me a cheap hotel somewhere in the metro area for the rest of the fortnight?

[identity profile] randwolf.livejournal.com 2006-10-28 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
If you have the time, have you considered the Trans-Siberian Railway?

[identity profile] fivemack.livejournal.com 2006-10-28 09:37 pm (UTC)(link)
A number of my friends are thinking of that, but it does add another week to the trip even if you go straight through, there's a rather fiddly bit of scheduling to get the weekly Vladivostok-to-Niigata ferry at the end, and it would seem silly to take the trans-Siberian and not spend a few days in Moscow at the beginning, a few days in Irkutsk and by Lake Baikal in the middle, and maybe even a few days in Vladivostok at the end (see [livejournal.com profile] rezendi's log of a trip on the Trans-Siberian recently).

Also, I'd feel distinctly hypocritical spending much time in Putin's Russia, even in transit, after vowing for regime-related reasons not to visit Bush's America, even in transit.

[identity profile] naath.livejournal.com 2006-10-30 10:52 am (UTC)(link)
Some of us put some effort into this concept. It takes two weeks and that's if you make the ferry connection at Vladivostok. Also it costs twice as much as the plane to get from London to Tokyo by train. Also you actually have to stay a night in Moscow (more money for Putin) to get a transit visa.

Also there is only so much bridge that you can play.