Happy Thanksgiving Y'all!
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So today is the day for which we have paid the big money. The 90th Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade viewed from room 610 at the J. W. Marriott Essex House. Clay had expected more for our money and last night it arrived. We had gotten ready to get in bed to watch a movie at 8pm when the doorbell rang and there was knocking. I had set the do not disturb button at our door so I was leery but I had on pj's and Clay had on only underpants. So I was at least covered. I went to look out the peephole while Clay shut himself in the bathroom. I must have been visible because as soon as I touched the door the man on the other side loudly apologized for ignoring the DND and said he was delivering gifts. I opened the door and he handed me a heavy Marriott tote bag. Inside were a pair of waters, a pair of etched glass souvenir Essex House coffee mugs, a novel, a guide booklet, a tiny souvenir-sweatered teddy bear and a plaid souvenir lap blanket. I am pretty sure Clay still doesn't think he's gotten his money's worth!
So anyway today was the big day and it was pretty special. It would have not been fun to be outside and on our feet again for hours today. However, we had been notified in advance in writing that we would be unable to stand in front of the hotel during the parade and that we could not sit on the bleachers across the street as they were reserved for Macy's guests/clients. Neither was true. We watched random people line the rails below our room for an hour before the parade as well as help themselves to the bleachers after the organized fill occurred for about 30 minutes prior. I guess you couldn't count on either or as Clay said figure out how to get there with all the road and sidewalk blocks. The only reason we could see it was that we were above it. Anyway, it was fun. The window is small and we pretty much had to stand up and lean against it to see the parade except for the random very high balloon that was even with the window. Those moments were golden though! I am glad we did it and now it's been done.
So, we've spent all day inside and have dinner in the Essex House's Southgate Restaurant at $125pp at 5pm. Clay thinks he can eat his money's worth and is sure I can't. I am sure I can't either! He has a plan though. The other night at Nino's Tuscany they had $3.50 each oysters on the half shell. They are on the Thanksgiving Buffet menu tonight. Clay figures that if he eats 20 to 25 oysters and some turkey or beef that he has gotten his money's worth. We'll see.
We've checked in online for our flight home tomorrow on United. Essex House wants $10 or so to allow us to print them in their Business Center so that is not happening. Clay has mapped out a public transit route for us to Newark Airport tomorrow and we'll allow plenty of time for that with the added goal of getting there early enough to find a kiosk and print our boarding passes at the airport.
The Thanksgiving buffet was good but we're both positive we did not eat our money's worth! Clay ate about a dozen oysters. I ate a half dozen raspberry macarons so Clay felt I made a bigger dent than expected. It turned out to actually cost us $337. The 20% gratuity was automatically added to the bill for the self-service buffet! Then there were taxes and a $12 beer Clay ordered. They included welcome drinks and coffee after. We had one of each of the welcome drinks. Both were seasonally tasty. One had rum and spices and one had vodka and apples. We both thought that we had prepaid for everything on this trip months ago and we're surprised to see the original $125 pp charged on the tab. We didn't have anyway to prove it and after a manager checked our hotel account, he couldn't find that we'd paid it. Clay checked when we got back to the room and couldn't find the $250 we both thought had been charged when we made the reservations. So, Clay went back down and authorized the charge.
Unless something extraordinary happens, I won't be back with any more posts about this trip. It has been a good trip and a good birthday present even if a bit too extravagant.
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Little Bob hits the road
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
A long day's walking
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Clay started a movie on TV last night, Hangover III. He promptly went to sleep. I stayed up and laughed myself silly. They were outside on Central Park South setting up bleachers across the street for the parade until at least midnight. I fell asleep before the noise stopped. We slept in this morning as we had no where to be early today. I wanted to go to the Guggenheim and after 3pm go see the parade balloons being inflated. Clay was up first about 12 hours after he'd gone to bed and that woke me up. He went down the hall to get ice, then he went downstairs to the restaurant in the lobby to get me a complimentary coffee. After that he went across 58th and around 6th to go to Merci Market for breakfast. He had a bagel and cream cheese and brought me a yogurt.
We set out towards Central Park about 10am. We walked paths and trails and stopped at the Dairy Visitor Center, the ice skating rink, the Balto statue, the Alice in Wonderland statue, Cleopatra's Needle and came out on 5th Avenue past the Met. The Guggenheim opened today after 10am so we got there about an hour later. We passed the Neue Gallery on the way and saw their banners that they were currently showing Klimt. We were excited but when we went back found that they are closed on Tuesday and Wednesday. So, we missed that. But we really enjoyed the Guggenheim. The building is by Frank Lloyd Wright and it was as special as the art displayed. We ate at the restaurant there sometime after 1pm. We ate light not because we were starving but because we needed to sit somewhere for an hour or so! It was good and because we had made a gift shop purchase and had the receipt we got a 10% discount.
Now knowing what we know now, I can't say that we'd have crossed the park headed to Columbus Ave and 79th. But we didn't know and off we went. We headed for the 79th St entrance because I wanted to see the Belvedere Castle in the park. We went in and all the way up inside. It was crowded but nothing like what was coming! We exited through the Ramble and started seeing detour signs. Then crowds and crowds of people trying to get out of the park. But the paths and roads and entrances and exits were closed. We wandered back and forth for maybe an hour with Trolls balloons in sight next to the Natural History Museum but no way to get there. We had to walk over a mile, maybe 2, by the time we got inside the viewing area with a million or so other people. I'm only counting the ones who touched me not everyone I could see. There were only about 2 dozen balloons and Snoopy and Kermit have evidently been fired. So it wasn't as exciting as I'd hoped. If we could have backed out we might have but I have to say we worked almost as hard to get away as we did to get there. I was fully dark by the time we had walked maybe 3 or 4 blocks in the opposite direction of where we wanted to go. We had planned to return to the Plaza Food Hall to eat at the Chinese place where we couldn't get seats yesterday at lunch. We were both beat and had to use the bathroom by now so we got a taxi. Traffic was a nightmare but at least we were headed away from the parade balloon madness. As I told Clay, it is done and I'm glad we did it though I wouldn't recommend it! If we had known what to expect, I expect we wouldn't have done it.
We got to the Food Hall after 5pm. We got seats in a nearly empty Chinese place and both had rice bowls instead of noodles or dumplings.. It was a bit of a disappointment. I had chicken and Clay had salmon. Maybe noodles or dumpling would have been better, but I liked the crepe place better. After that we detoured over to Merci Market to stock up for tomorrow since we have plans for a lazy day in the room watching the parade from our extraordinarily expensive parade view room. We bought enough for breakfast and lunch, we hope. Clay said he might want to go out in the afternoon, but I am not sure what would be open then. We'll see. We made reservations for the Essex House Thanksgiving buffet at 5pm tomorrow per recommendations of the hotel. They wanted $125pp for it and we paid it. We do not have high expectations and may wish tomorrow that we'd done some research for something more reasonable, but we were concerned about crowds and bad weather and this was definitely the easiest thing which we assumed would make it worth the extra expense. We'll see.
It has been a long, exhausting day so I'm going to put my feet up now and give thanks!
photos
Clay started a movie on TV last night, Hangover III. He promptly went to sleep. I stayed up and laughed myself silly. They were outside on Central Park South setting up bleachers across the street for the parade until at least midnight. I fell asleep before the noise stopped. We slept in this morning as we had no where to be early today. I wanted to go to the Guggenheim and after 3pm go see the parade balloons being inflated. Clay was up first about 12 hours after he'd gone to bed and that woke me up. He went down the hall to get ice, then he went downstairs to the restaurant in the lobby to get me a complimentary coffee. After that he went across 58th and around 6th to go to Merci Market for breakfast. He had a bagel and cream cheese and brought me a yogurt.
We set out towards Central Park about 10am. We walked paths and trails and stopped at the Dairy Visitor Center, the ice skating rink, the Balto statue, the Alice in Wonderland statue, Cleopatra's Needle and came out on 5th Avenue past the Met. The Guggenheim opened today after 10am so we got there about an hour later. We passed the Neue Gallery on the way and saw their banners that they were currently showing Klimt. We were excited but when we went back found that they are closed on Tuesday and Wednesday. So, we missed that. But we really enjoyed the Guggenheim. The building is by Frank Lloyd Wright and it was as special as the art displayed. We ate at the restaurant there sometime after 1pm. We ate light not because we were starving but because we needed to sit somewhere for an hour or so! It was good and because we had made a gift shop purchase and had the receipt we got a 10% discount.
Now knowing what we know now, I can't say that we'd have crossed the park headed to Columbus Ave and 79th. But we didn't know and off we went. We headed for the 79th St entrance because I wanted to see the Belvedere Castle in the park. We went in and all the way up inside. It was crowded but nothing like what was coming! We exited through the Ramble and started seeing detour signs. Then crowds and crowds of people trying to get out of the park. But the paths and roads and entrances and exits were closed. We wandered back and forth for maybe an hour with Trolls balloons in sight next to the Natural History Museum but no way to get there. We had to walk over a mile, maybe 2, by the time we got inside the viewing area with a million or so other people. I'm only counting the ones who touched me not everyone I could see. There were only about 2 dozen balloons and Snoopy and Kermit have evidently been fired. So it wasn't as exciting as I'd hoped. If we could have backed out we might have but I have to say we worked almost as hard to get away as we did to get there. I was fully dark by the time we had walked maybe 3 or 4 blocks in the opposite direction of where we wanted to go. We had planned to return to the Plaza Food Hall to eat at the Chinese place where we couldn't get seats yesterday at lunch. We were both beat and had to use the bathroom by now so we got a taxi. Traffic was a nightmare but at least we were headed away from the parade balloon madness. As I told Clay, it is done and I'm glad we did it though I wouldn't recommend it! If we had known what to expect, I expect we wouldn't have done it.
We got to the Food Hall after 5pm. We got seats in a nearly empty Chinese place and both had rice bowls instead of noodles or dumplings.. It was a bit of a disappointment. I had chicken and Clay had salmon. Maybe noodles or dumpling would have been better, but I liked the crepe place better. After that we detoured over to Merci Market to stock up for tomorrow since we have plans for a lazy day in the room watching the parade from our extraordinarily expensive parade view room. We bought enough for breakfast and lunch, we hope. Clay said he might want to go out in the afternoon, but I am not sure what would be open then. We'll see. We made reservations for the Essex House Thanksgiving buffet at 5pm tomorrow per recommendations of the hotel. They wanted $125pp for it and we paid it. We do not have high expectations and may wish tomorrow that we'd done some research for something more reasonable, but we were concerned about crowds and bad weather and this was definitely the easiest thing which we assumed would make it worth the extra expense. We'll see.
It has been a long, exhausting day so I'm going to put my feet up now and give thanks!
photos
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
Thanksgiving in NYC for our birthdays
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
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We flew to Newark today to start our birthdays trip. I had voted to drive up but Clay over-ruled me. We got cheap seats on United. It was a full flight and OK except for a rough take-off and a world-class rough landing. Descent was about a half-hour long nightmare and I was only a couple of minutes from using the barf bag when mercifully it was over. We didn't check luggage so as quick as we could get outside we took a cab into Manhattan through the Lincoln Tunnel. This was convenient but the tolls for the roads and tunnel made it extravagant. I was relieved to sit in a car though!
We got in about noon and our parade view room at the Essex House was not promised until 4pm. We dropped our bags with the Bellman forgetting how cold it was outside and leaving our extra layers and Clay's hat and gloves in the bags. Oh well. On top of that we somehow gave Clay's cell phone number to the desk wrong or it was typed in wrong. Anyway, when we got back after 4pm and the room 610 was ready for us, Clay asked why he wasn't called and we found out they had called some other number. Oh well. The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade view rooms on floors 3 to 8 are available at Essex House for a 3-night minimum for a queen bed for us at $1799 per night. This will definitely be a once in a lifetime experience for us.
Clay wanted to walk by Trump Tower and St. Patrick's Cathedral so we walked that way. At The Plaza I saw a sign for Todd English Food Hall in the basement and we went in. It was like a big fancy food court. We wanted a Chinese place but as we waited it came clear we'd never get a seat so we crossed over to the crepe place. It was very good. We each had a savory and shared a Nutella. We also shared a Nutella hot cocoa. It was a great lunch and affordable. We'll be back as it is open from morning to 8pm.
It was a police state zoo on 5th Avenue a block either side of Trump Tower. I pity people who live around there! We walked on down to St. Patricks and went in. We walked down another half block and across the street to Rockefeller Plaza. We went in the big Lego store and got Mom a new watch for Christmas after some phone consultations. We watched the zamboni and the ice skaters. We walked back by MoMA. We spent enough time in their large gift shop to realize that neither of us love modern art enough to wait in line to pay about $25 pp to go in the museum.
We got our room and waited to 5pm to go back out. We had seen a place about a half block away called Nino's Tuscany that had a sign outside for wood oven pizza. We went back for dinner. We were the first ones! By 6:10pm other people were arriving but I was beat already. We got a salad for Clay and a meat lover's pizza to share. We couldn't finish it. It had no tomato sauce on it! It was alright. We skipped dessert and went to the Food Hall again. Before dinner we had gone to CVS a couple of blocks away and got Coke Zeros for the room. We also checked out a deli/grocery place that is over on 6th Avenue just around the corner from the back entrance here. It is open 24 hours a day so that will work nicely for us!
Tomorrow we hope to visit the Guggenheim and go see the big balloons being inflated for the 90th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade!
photos
photos
We flew to Newark today to start our birthdays trip. I had voted to drive up but Clay over-ruled me. We got cheap seats on United. It was a full flight and OK except for a rough take-off and a world-class rough landing. Descent was about a half-hour long nightmare and I was only a couple of minutes from using the barf bag when mercifully it was over. We didn't check luggage so as quick as we could get outside we took a cab into Manhattan through the Lincoln Tunnel. This was convenient but the tolls for the roads and tunnel made it extravagant. I was relieved to sit in a car though!
We got in about noon and our parade view room at the Essex House was not promised until 4pm. We dropped our bags with the Bellman forgetting how cold it was outside and leaving our extra layers and Clay's hat and gloves in the bags. Oh well. On top of that we somehow gave Clay's cell phone number to the desk wrong or it was typed in wrong. Anyway, when we got back after 4pm and the room 610 was ready for us, Clay asked why he wasn't called and we found out they had called some other number. Oh well. The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade view rooms on floors 3 to 8 are available at Essex House for a 3-night minimum for a queen bed for us at $1799 per night. This will definitely be a once in a lifetime experience for us.
Clay wanted to walk by Trump Tower and St. Patrick's Cathedral so we walked that way. At The Plaza I saw a sign for Todd English Food Hall in the basement and we went in. It was like a big fancy food court. We wanted a Chinese place but as we waited it came clear we'd never get a seat so we crossed over to the crepe place. It was very good. We each had a savory and shared a Nutella. We also shared a Nutella hot cocoa. It was a great lunch and affordable. We'll be back as it is open from morning to 8pm.
It was a police state zoo on 5th Avenue a block either side of Trump Tower. I pity people who live around there! We walked on down to St. Patricks and went in. We walked down another half block and across the street to Rockefeller Plaza. We went in the big Lego store and got Mom a new watch for Christmas after some phone consultations. We watched the zamboni and the ice skaters. We walked back by MoMA. We spent enough time in their large gift shop to realize that neither of us love modern art enough to wait in line to pay about $25 pp to go in the museum.
We got our room and waited to 5pm to go back out. We had seen a place about a half block away called Nino's Tuscany that had a sign outside for wood oven pizza. We went back for dinner. We were the first ones! By 6:10pm other people were arriving but I was beat already. We got a salad for Clay and a meat lover's pizza to share. We couldn't finish it. It had no tomato sauce on it! It was alright. We skipped dessert and went to the Food Hall again. Before dinner we had gone to CVS a couple of blocks away and got Coke Zeros for the room. We also checked out a deli/grocery place that is over on 6th Avenue just around the corner from the back entrance here. It is open 24 hours a day so that will work nicely for us!
Tomorrow we hope to visit the Guggenheim and go see the big balloons being inflated for the 90th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade!
photos
Monday, October 3, 2016
Home
I guess this falls into the better late than never category!
We are, of course, home. We were home within 24 hours of so of my previous post. We got disembarked in a very efficient and friendly manner. We waited with our color group until called and then walked off and made a long circuitous walk and down an escalator into chaos. There was a Norwegian cruise ship alongside the other side of the pier also disembarking. The luggage was tightly packed in rows that did not allow 2 people coming and going. So, you could reach your luggage but you couldn't get it out. No one could unless their bags were at the front of a row. After much struggling, we located all 5 bags and got them out to the back of the escalators. I thought we could manage them but Clay insisted we get a luggage handler with a cart to handle them. He was right. The guy he found and asked with an empty cart was a fixer! He got us out of there in a manner we never would have managed. He took us to where the taxi line for Serenity should have been to find that the guy working the road was sending all Serenity people down the block to the Norwegian cab stand! He and the next Serenity luggage carter got some cabs sent down to us but it wasn't clear the guy running the area ever got it or got that he was wrong. Anyway, we were off very quickly and found ourselves with a couple of hours wait in Penn Station. That was fine as it could have gone differently. There could have been traffic or a long line to check bags and there was neither.
The train to Raleigh was okay. The seats were comfortable and the car was not full. The ride to Washington was good and only a little late. The rest of the ride from there was rougher, the car more full and we just got later at each stop. We arrived in Raleigh closer to 10pm than to 9pm. We got our bags quickly and into a cab and home with no trouble.
We were happy to be home. I could hear the house alarm through the door before I opened it. I guess it had been sounding since it went off on August 12! The alarm log said it was the motion detector. I have to assume it was some kind of equipment malfunction as there was no sign anyone had been in the house in our absence. It hasn't happened again. So, I'm just keeping my fingers crossed it was a random occurrence.
We haven't finalized plans for our next trip. NYC for the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade! But, we are hard at work on early 2017's trip. Remember when we agreed in the NWP that we won't do the Oceania Sirena Australia Circumnavigation? Well, evidently that was not our decision to make. On September 2, our TA had accepted a guarantee A1 cabin on our behalf. We learned this less than 2 weeks before final payment was due when I checked in with her. I don't know when she planned to tell us since I prodded her before she got around to it. So the options now were to forfeit the waitlist deposit or make final payment and go. We're going, of course. Still waiting for a cabin assignment after telling the TA during the NWP waitlist clearance that we wouldn't accept a guarantee again. Oh well, best laid plans and all. It is a long way to go and costly so we are making the most of it. We have a land tour of New Zealand up front and the Ghan train after. Hesitantly looking forward to it. We'll go to Komodo Island on the cruise. Check that off the list. Also, we'll have stops in Papua New Guinea, so one new country for our time and trouble.
We are, of course, home. We were home within 24 hours of so of my previous post. We got disembarked in a very efficient and friendly manner. We waited with our color group until called and then walked off and made a long circuitous walk and down an escalator into chaos. There was a Norwegian cruise ship alongside the other side of the pier also disembarking. The luggage was tightly packed in rows that did not allow 2 people coming and going. So, you could reach your luggage but you couldn't get it out. No one could unless their bags were at the front of a row. After much struggling, we located all 5 bags and got them out to the back of the escalators. I thought we could manage them but Clay insisted we get a luggage handler with a cart to handle them. He was right. The guy he found and asked with an empty cart was a fixer! He got us out of there in a manner we never would have managed. He took us to where the taxi line for Serenity should have been to find that the guy working the road was sending all Serenity people down the block to the Norwegian cab stand! He and the next Serenity luggage carter got some cabs sent down to us but it wasn't clear the guy running the area ever got it or got that he was wrong. Anyway, we were off very quickly and found ourselves with a couple of hours wait in Penn Station. That was fine as it could have gone differently. There could have been traffic or a long line to check bags and there was neither.
The train to Raleigh was okay. The seats were comfortable and the car was not full. The ride to Washington was good and only a little late. The rest of the ride from there was rougher, the car more full and we just got later at each stop. We arrived in Raleigh closer to 10pm than to 9pm. We got our bags quickly and into a cab and home with no trouble.
We were happy to be home. I could hear the house alarm through the door before I opened it. I guess it had been sounding since it went off on August 12! The alarm log said it was the motion detector. I have to assume it was some kind of equipment malfunction as there was no sign anyone had been in the house in our absence. It hasn't happened again. So, I'm just keeping my fingers crossed it was a random occurrence.
We haven't finalized plans for our next trip. NYC for the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade! But, we are hard at work on early 2017's trip. Remember when we agreed in the NWP that we won't do the Oceania Sirena Australia Circumnavigation? Well, evidently that was not our decision to make. On September 2, our TA had accepted a guarantee A1 cabin on our behalf. We learned this less than 2 weeks before final payment was due when I checked in with her. I don't know when she planned to tell us since I prodded her before she got around to it. So the options now were to forfeit the waitlist deposit or make final payment and go. We're going, of course. Still waiting for a cabin assignment after telling the TA during the NWP waitlist clearance that we wouldn't accept a guarantee again. Oh well, best laid plans and all. It is a long way to go and costly so we are making the most of it. We have a land tour of New Zealand up front and the Ghan train after. Hesitantly looking forward to it. We'll go to Komodo Island on the cruise. Check that off the list. Also, we'll have stops in Papua New Guinea, so one new country for our time and trouble.
Friday, September 16, 2016
New York, New York
We were up with an alarm at 6am. There was a beautiful big
orange-red full moon low on the horizon as we neared New York Harbor. We were
both out on deck 13 before 6:45am as requested. It was a spectacular sail in.
Under the Verrazano Narrows bridge and around the corner. There on the
starboard side was Lower Manhattan and the new WTC Tower and on the port was
the Statue of Liberty. Soon we were all waving to the NBC helicopter as it
circled us. The water cannon/fireboat had a technical problem and was canceled.
The captain spun the ship around we thought as we passed the Intrepid Museum
and we thought he was going to back in so he’d be nose out for a quick getaway
tomorrow, but we came in nose first anyway. We were having breakfast at the
back of Lido at the time so we saw everything from the rear by then. We are docked
on the port side and have a view of a parking lot. The starboard side has a
view of the USS Intrepid.
Yesterday evening, we came back to what must be final bed
gifts. There were 2 giant maps of our route, but they must have been printed
earlier because they didn’t reflect our sail inside the Gulf of St. Lawrence
inside Newfoundland passage that we actually took. But, the best was that they
gave each of us a set of embroidered patches for every maiden call we made on
this Inaugural North West Passage. I’m glad because I had only bought one of
the Nunavut flag! Last night we went to the computer center and bought 2 VIP
Passes at $60 to visit the 86th Floor outdoor observatory without
lines to The Empire State Building. Clay has wanted to do this since “Sleepless
in Seattle” and neither of us had done it before. They didn’t have the lines
fully populated but we saved a lot of line time anyway. We went around 2 or 3
full times and when we came down and out of the gift shop the woman in front of
me for the bag x-ray and metal detector was still in line for the elevators to
the 86th floor! So, I guess money well spent.
I had found instructions for the subway to The Empire State
Building and Clay said he could do that with his phone, but this morning he
said he wanted to take a taxi and walk to the Guggenheim after on the way back
to the ship. I shot that down since the Guggenheim is nowhere near. When I was
out of the bathroom ready to go, he had checked and admitted I was right and it
was a bad plan. Since we could overlook the Intrepid Museum next door to our
dock on the starboard side, I had already suggested we go there since it was an
easy walk and I thought that was what we’d do. He agreed as long as we walked
back. I didn’t understand not using the subway, but he wasn’t having it. We had
a nightmarish 20 minutes in a taxi. It was only saved by the fact that the guy
knew he screwed up and at some point turned off the meter. That and the fact he
had NBC on the TV in back and we got to see Serenity sailing in!
We got off the ship at about 9:30am. We got to the Empire
State Building about 10am. We left about 11:30am. We started walking back and I
was checking You Are Here and Here’s What’s Nearby street maps every block.
Clay asked what I was looking for and I said to see if there is somewhere we
should go that is in our path. Like what? Maybe lunch. Clay said he wanted a
slice. I pointed out that Spinelli’s Pizza was around the next corner towards
Penn Station and Madison Square Garden. He checked Google which did not have
Spinelli’s. It had 2 Little Italy’s in the next block over. I turned the corner
and we found Spinelli’s about 2 doors down. It was very good. 2 large pepperoni
slices for $3.50 each. We enjoyed the experience and they had seats and
fountain sodas. Refueled we walked on down 7th Avenue towards Times
Square. We walked through a fashion district walk of fame and found some public
art devoted to sewing and textiles. We turned on 47th and walked to
the Hudson River through Hell’s Kitchen. WE got to the USS Intrepid Sea, Air
& Space Museum at 12:34pm. We paid for General Admission plus the Space
Shuttle. Clay made the decision what tickets. I had argued to go today because
the Star Trek 50th special exhibit was leaving the end of October
and we won’t be back until Thanksgiving. But, we didn’t go in anyway. The good
news is that under the space shuttle Enterprise was the Galileo shuttlecraft
from the Star Trek TV series. A case of life imitating art imitating life…
We came back to Serenity about 3pm and went for ice ceam at
Scoops which we ate reclining on the pool deck. A lot of people are leaving
today. We saw Ron Chapple, the Cineflex operator, all packed up and leaving as
we returned as well as a lot of crew coming and going. We’ll be going ourselves
first thing tomorrow morning. We did some more packing this afternoon where the
extent of Clay’s overpacking became evident. I have actually thrown a lot of my
stuff away as we’ve gone because I packed knowing I was freeing space for
things coming back and getting rid of old things or using things up. It seems
even with the 2 big expandable bags expanded that we’ll have to pack the duffel
bag I brought as an extra bag. Good news is that we are still well within our
Amtrak luggage allowances and we should still be able to handle it all on our
own. I say that. I hope that is true. We’ll find out tomorrow.
We have dinner at Prego tonight and no other plans for the
evening beyond finishing up packing and putting our bags out between 8pm and 11pm.
I’ll end here then. It has been a great trip. I’m so glad we decided to do it and
that we cleared the waitlist and got to do it!
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Newport, Rhode Island
Clay went to the gym for the last time early this morning.
He woke me up when he came back in the cabin after 7am. We were scheduled to
arrive in Newport, RI until 10am so we had nowhere to be this morning. It was
pretty calm sailing overnight. For some reason we came way out into the
Atlantic after leaving Boston yesterday. We looped way out and then sailed
pretty slowly straight back in to get to Newport. I forgot to mention earlier,
maybe because I hadn’t seen it on a map, but when we sailed from Bar Harbor to
Boston the body of water we crossed was the Gulf of Maine. I learned that from
a shore birds exhibit at the aquarium in Boston yesterday. Now you know. So the
sun was shining, some clouds, fairly calm seas and 63F this morning. The high
in Newport today was forecast as 72F. That sounds about right.
Land was visible from about 7am until we anchored. We went
to the main dining room after it opened at 8am. I wanted a final Eggs Benedict.
Since we are asked to out on deck 12 & 13 forward tomorrow by 6:45am,
breakfast may be hit or miss and the following day we have to be off by 8:10am.
So, I figured this was my last chance at a nice calm breakfast. We watched most
of the sail in from Bistro as I enjoyed a coffee. Don’t ask! We also needed to
wait for cabin to be ready for the day. We went to the cabin after we thought
we heard the anchor drop. We never saw a tender leave but after we were ready,
we went down to the tender area. We waited a few moments before they let the 10
or so of us waiting off the ship onto the tender. After we loaded a couple of
busloads of Panoramic Newport tours got on and we were off at 10:30am.
According to the knitting instructor who sat in our section with a tour sign, we
were on the first tender. We never heard any announcements being made about the
ship clearing, or tenders leaving. It was 30 minutes past scheduled arrival
time and we just showed up. Credit to Crystal again, because we remember what a
nightmare tendering was last year here on Oceania. Honestly, we still can’t figure
out how Oceania handled tendering so badly or shuttles in Boston so badly.
Crystal has done it right all along and credit to them for it. Also, we have
not seen on Crystal the preference given to ship’s tours departing the ship
that we have seen on every ship we’ve ever been on before. Nicely done.
The tender ride lasted about 20 minutes. Newport must be the
sailboat capital of the world. We must have been here on a Sunday last year
because it seemed like all downtown was closed. Today was busy and bustling for
the Newport Boat Show. It was like a completely different town. We walked
around the historic old town center. We saw the outside only of Touro
Synagogue, White Horse Tavern, Brick Market, Old Colony House, Courthouse,, Quaker
Meeting House, Trinity Church and St. Mary Church. We had lunch on Bowens Wharf
sitting outside watching the Boat Show. We had some ice cream and walked around
some more before going back and walking right onto a tender before it departed.
We were back aboard Serenity by 2pm and spent the next couple of hours doing
some packing.
We both admit to way overpacking. We wound up doing laundry
about every 7 days and didn’t need at least 30-50% of the clothes we each
brought. It was colder everywhere than was normal for each place on the date we
were there and still we didn’t use all the heavy clothes and accessories we
brought. Something to think about. It is hard to leave at home anything you
think you might want or need later, but you probably need less than you think.
We have dinner in the main dining room for the last time
tonight. Our final dinner on the last night aboard in NYC is at Prego at 6pm.
There is a special NYC New Year’s Eve style party in the Crystal Plaza this
evening around 8 to 9pmm with a balloon drop. It is not a sit down event we are
told. I can definitely pass on that. There is a Simon Bowman show in Galaxy Lounge
tonight at 10:30pm. There is a classical pianist in Stardust. There are 2
popcorn movie showings. We may just go to bed early to be up and out for the
Manhattan sail-in. I can hear the tenders being put away. The last one was
scheduled back at 4:30pm. We should be sailing in a couple of minutes. We had a
beautiful day today.
photos
photos
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Boston, Massachussetts
Last night the video was a work in progress because it isn’t
finished yet. Clay and I were both in it, though the videographer Kevin Freeny
must have really worked to get us since we both avoid photographers. It is just
a few seconds each and you’d have to know it was us. I have a parka hood up and
am shot from the back and side but you can see my tremor. Clay has his camera
over his face with a big lens and he is cut into footage of a fishing trip that
saw whales when his whale watching cruise was changed to a fjord cruise. Maybe
we won’t make the final cut. They will either deliver DVDs or flash drives to
our homes one per booking number after the cruise. The big surprise of the
evening was Edie Rodriguez onstage before and after the video. She held a
drawing at each showing for the commemorative gold pendant they are taking
orders for onboard. She also talked about a North East Passage cruise with the
new polar expedition yacht Crystal have ordered. You have to wonder what it
takes to bring her on in Bar Harbor and off in Boston. I mean ordinarily people
can’t get on and off foreign-flagged ships between US ports. Anyway, she said
she was jealous of us all and had to come when she could and this was when she
could. She thanked us all for the success of this inaugural sailing. She said
Crystal was going to put out a photobook through Amazon and other online
outlets made up of shared photos by passengers because she had been so thrilled
with what we were posting online through social and other media. She said all
profits from sales would be given to the NWP communities as part of their
voluntourism charity effort. It was a nice touch.
We both slept through the night and I didn’t think it was
too rough. I woke up before 6:30am to find Clay out of the cabin as we were
entering Boston Harbor. We docked at Black Falcon Terminal where we were with
Oceania last year. What a difference! Well done Crystal! The complimentary shuttles
were well handled. The ship was announced cleared at 8am. The shuttle schedule
said the first one left at 9am. If that was true, then we were on it. Through
laziness or disinterest or something, no one had a plan here. Our cabin wasn’t
ready so I went into the computer room and used their much faster connection to
do some research. It turned out that we had done a good chunk of the North part
of the Freedom Trail when we did the US Park Ranger led free tour last year. We
could try for the 30-person group on the South portion at either 10am or 1pm.
So, we went back to the cabin and changed our clean up light to do not disturb and
got ready for the day. It was almost 70F already with a forecast high of 82. I think
it got hotter! We were first in line at 9:30am at Faneuil Hall when they
started handing out tour tickets for 10am. It was a small group. The south side
tour did not cover as much of interest and did not cover as much ground and we
had a pretty poor ranger/guide. Last year the guy we got was much better.
Today, the girl just read from the backs of her prop pages. In her defense, she
didn’t have as much to show us as the North side. Just sayin’.
We walked past a place called Cheeseboy that had a S’mores
Melt photo in the window. Nutella, marshmallow and graham crackers on cinnamon sugar
bread. At 11:10am when the tour ended, we checked out the Boston Irish Famine
Memorial and then crossed the street and shared one. It was very messy. Then we
walked back to Quincy Market and to Durgin-Park for lunch after 11:30am.
Through a lack of imagination and research we returned to Durgin-Park. I had my
cornbread and Boston baked beans. Clay had a baker’s dozen of raw oysters and we
shared a warm Indian pudding with vanilla ice cream. Clay had a red brick
Samuel Adams beer. It was good and filling. Back out into the sun and heat we
walked through Quincy Market to the New England Aquarium. It was about $25
each. That seemed high for a compact 4-story aquarium. We thought it would be
cooler in there. It wasn’t and it was even more humid. It was fine though. They
had 3 kinds of penguins. You could see the harbor seals from outside without
even paying and they were in the shade with a breeze so that would be a
bargain.
We walked past a dancing fountain that people were playing
in and sat in the shade to watch for a bit. It was surrounded by Chinese zodiac
head sculptures. Walked back to the shuttle bus about 2:30pm and took an almost
full bus back to Serenity. I was so drained from the sun and humidity that I
stripped off and took a nap. I slept a couple of hours and missed a big thunderstorm.
I was glad we came back early since we hadn’t carried anything for rain as
there was not a cloud in the sky all morning.
We had our last of 4 complimentary dinners in Silk Road. We
had dishes we’d had before and it was all good even though I had to send my steak
back to get it well done. That is the first time that has happened. We plan to
go to the Billy Joel show tonight. It will be only about our 3rd or
4th time in the Galaxy Lounge at night.
A couple of other notes. Our cabin window was washed today!
Hurray! Better late than never. I was sure they had to wash it before the next
cruise began anyway. Tonight on our bed we found a North West Passage certificate
on our bed for each of us, so there’s that. We traveled 7273 nautical miles. Still
nothing for becoming bluenoses by crossing the Arctic Circle. Oh well. We also
got a printed copy of the words to the song Northwest Passage by Stan Rogers.
They have played that a lot on this cruise as our sailaway music otherwise they
play Louis Armstrong’s It’s a Wonderful World.
photos
photos
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Bar Harbor, Maine
Clay was up for the treadmill early. I was up before 7am
when he came back. We traveled very slowly over the next 2 hours to reach our
anchorage at Bar Harbor. I’d like to say it was a scenic sail in but it was
really windy and the decks were very wet so either it had rained recently or the
water had been rougher than I’d thought. Those things kept us from going
outside until we stopped moving. The dadgum dirty windows kept us from enjoying
what must have been a scenic sail in. I have never, ever been on any ship
sailing in any sea, around any continent that has not even made a show of
trying to clean windows. It is beyond all comprehension. Our cabin window is on
the Promenade Deck so there is absolutely nothing keeping anyone from cleaning
these windows every day. Yet ours has only been cleaned once, when Clay took
one of our washcloths to it.
We had breakfast in Lido and then sat in Cove waiting for
9am and immigration clearance or our cabin being ready for the day. About 9am we
went up to deck 13 forward and had a look around Bar Harbor. It was blue skies and
sunshine and about 75F today. The last time we were on land for a day like this
was in Denali! Finally, time to use that sunscreen I packed for the brutal
Arctic sun which we never saw. Crystal was very unclear about the ship’s
clearance by immigration. The letter we got assigning us Group 4 which caused
us to reschedule our Oli’s Trolleys tour to Acadia National Park stated that
once you cleared and had your keycard holepunched that you may proceed ashore.
Reflections implied the entire ship had to be cleared before anyone could go
ashore and this is how it works most of the time in most places. Clay asked at the
desk and she agreed that the entire ship had to be cleared. The CD made one
last call for anyone in the 14 or so groups he had called that had not done so
to go to the Immigration spot they were assigned. Then he wished us a pleasant
day ashore. This was right after 10:30am which would have made us too late for
the 10:30am check in required for the 11am tour we originally booked. So it was
good that we rescheduled that. Clay took this well-wishing to be an all cleared
to disembark announcement, which I didn’t get at all. He didn’t say, everyone
is now clear to go ashore and the tenders are running. I had been watching for
tenders to go ashore until the nose of the ship swung around and I couldn’t see
anymore. So, we don’t actually know how early we could have gotten ashore here.
We were ashore by 10:45am and there was at least one tender ashore ahead of us
as it was leaving as we arrived.
We walked directly through the building at the street end of
the pier and found ourselves at the Oli’s Trolley Gift Shop where we got in
line and went ahead and checked in. They gave us a map to show where we were and
where to line up for the trolley by 12:45pm. We should have lined up earlier
since it was a completely full trolley and we were in the back seat since we
only arrived a couple of minutes before 12:45pm. They didn’t start boarding
until right before 1pm though and it was hot standing in the sun. So, it was a tradeoff.
First we toured a bit by foot. The ship’s port information had a few must
sees. One of them was St. Saviour’s
Church, so we headed that way. It was said to have 10 or 12 Tiffany windows but
there were a lot more windows than that and we couldn’t say which were Tiffany and
which weren’t. We passed most of the other must sees which were art galleries. I
use that term almost ironically because it was a lot of restaurants, bars, ice
cream and souvenir shops selling art as well as best I could tell. Clay got a t-shirt.
He wanted ice cream but didn’t have any because nothing seemed “Maine” enough
to him. We sampled some maple popcorn but didn’t like it enough to buy any. We
went in the public library and looked up because that was on an on-foot tour I
had printed from online. It was nice but not that impressive. We walked though Village
Green and we read a lot of historical markers. We saw Smokey the Bear on a fire
house. We found the Acadia National Park Information Center there by Village
Green and went in and got the NP stamps. I asked about patches and they said
several shops in town sell official park souvenirs. Clay’s t-shirt had come from
one. We had to walk back down through those shops again anyway. We saw all the free
Island Explorer shuttle buses and the schedules were there. This probably would
have been the thing to do but with limited time we wanted a guided tour. Ours
was just too crowded and rushed to be enjoyable. The park service has guided
bus tours at 10am and 2pm that may be better or may not and we’d have chosen that
but we were afraid that neither time would work and they wouldn’t have. Oh
well. It was a beautiful day anyway. We had lunch at a little coffee shop-type
place on Main St. Clay wanted a lobster roll. The first place had a nice
outdoor patio but their lobster roll was market price on the chalkboard. I
think that struck Clay as pretentious and also he thought they’d be too slow and
all I could order there was a big pretzel. We walked on to the Independent and went
in. I could eat sandwich #2 on the board, a bacon, mozzarella and pesto panini
for $9 and his lobster roll $16. That was good and we enjoyed them even though Clay
saw them as low as $12.95. I was excited to see chocolate whoopie pies in a
case for $3.50. I had to have that and ate part of it while I waited for my
sandwich. Both sandwiches came with chips so they were a reasonable value. The whoopie
pie was delish. As we walked back down, I found my Acadia Centennial patch and a
maple whoopie pie at Pink Pastry Bakery. It was really good as we ate it on
the trolley later. Our trolley tour went by the Hulls Cove Visitors’ Center,
the sand bar to Bar Island, up Cadillac Mtn. (15-minute stop), a photo pause at
Beaver Dam Pond, Thunder Hole (15-min. stop), around Otter Point for a photo
pause, and lastly a 15-minute stop at Jordan Pond House before returning to
town. We saw a magnificent Airedale Terrier here. We walked out to the middle of the sand bar to Bar Island and then back
to the ship. A nice day in beautiful weather.
Oh, important lesson. Somehow, we had not learned until we arrived that Bar Harbor is named for the sand bar that you can walk or drive across at low tide to Bar Island in the harbor. Hence, Bar Harbor named for a sand bar.
We sailed on time while paging a missing passenger. Once again,
hopefully that was a records error. Dinner was okay. We saw the boat come
alongside to pick up the pilot. If we have Internet, I’ll post this now. We
plan to go to the 8:30 pm preview screening of the expedition video. I might
have something to say about that later or not.
photosMonday, September 12, 2016
Sailing to Bar Harbor, Maine
Monday, September 12, 2016
Last night we gained another hour. That always makes a
restful night’s sleep. Clay went to the gym around 6am and I slept until almost
7am. We went to Lido for breakfast. We went to Palm Court for me to be there
for 9am Gentle Yoga. We saw an NCL ship heading north this morning. Today was
the final Gentle Yoga class. On the 10am morning of Newport there will be a
final combined yoga class. I don’t know if I’ll make that so this may have been
the end for me. I went to final Chair Yoga at 10:15am. Clay went to the
Captain’s Q&A at 11am and I watched on TV from the cabin. I was happy to
hear John Stoll is considering the North East Passage! I suspect he was talking
about doing it with the new polar-rated expedition yacht they have recently
purchased. It may be too far out for me, but I can hope. 2017 is a repeat of
this sailing on Serenity and 2018 they plan to do it with the new expedition
yacht. So, I wouldn’t expect the North East Passage could be a possibility
before 2018. It was interesting that they started planning for this when NYK (a
Japanese company) owned Crystal and it got more feasible when Genting (a
Chinese company) who are less fiscally conservative bought Crystal. Obviously,
we consider this effort by Crystal a huge success. I hope that the majority, or
everyone, onboard feels the same way.
We came out of the Cabot Strait about 7am and it got
rockier. We are sailing along the coast of Nova Scotia and passed by Sydney and
Halifax. The Captain said he didn’t want to visit those ports in order to get
as far south and to fuel and supplies in reliable and affordable ports ASAP so
we are sailing through and by the Canadian Maritimes without any stops. We’ve
probably been to all of these ports anyway including ports like Corner Brook
which passed yesterday so we’re fine with it but they are nice ports and would
be a great contrast with the far Northern communities we visited earlier.
John Stoll just told us to expect a gala greeting when we
reach the Statue of Liberty in NY harbor! It sounds like they are pulling out
all the stops and expect NBC helicopter news coverage.
At noon, the captain made his final noon announcement. We
had American Specialties at Lido buffet for lunch. We could just see Whitehead
Island off Nova Scotia on the starboard side. When we got back to the cabin, we
found every cabin had an envelope outside. In the category of best laid plans
and all, the letter informed us that we were assigned to Group 4 for US Customs
and Immigration clearance tomorrow starting at 9:30am. Clay went down and asked
if we could be in the first group and the guy told him the groups were just
suggestions to keep everyone from trying to be first in line, but to come as
early as we felt we needed to get ashore on time. This has cluster cuss written
all over it. Crystal has done an exemplary job thus far in efficiency in
getting people on and off the ship so I guess we’ll see what happens. This is
the only port where we booked an independent tour. We booked an 11am departure
on Oli’s Trolley Acadia National Park tour. Unfortunately, we’ve been informed
we must check in for it no later than 10:30am and they advise to allow 30
minutes to tender ashore. We’ll just cross our fingers and hope everything
works out. Otherwise we’ll have wasted our money on this one. I am going to
reply to their email reminder to let them know what our circumstances are and
maybe they’ll just let us board at 11am and check us in then and there. We’ll
see. We thought we were allowing a couple of hours when we booked thinking we
anchored at 9am and not considering the US Immigration delays. This could go
either way. Good news. Oli’s Trolleys let us move our booking to 1pm. We will have
plenty of time to get there now.
Today was a pretty lazy last sea day. It was close to 70F
today and the sun shone all day. Now if they’d just clean the windows it would
be a clear day all around. About 5:30pm as we passed Halifax we saw Canadian
Naval ships sailing nearby. That was interesting. Dinner at Prego was good.
Tomorrow we’ll be back in the USA.
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Sailing the Gulf of St. Lawrence
Sunday, September 11, 2016
The seas have calmed considerably when I wake up. I look out
and we are nearing the Newfoundland coast. Around 8am, we turned slightly right
and entered the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. We can see land on both sides. Around
1pm, we saw what will probably be our last ice berg of the trip. Clay says our
last iceberg ever! That’s a bit depressing. We went up to Lido for breakfast.
We both went up to Palm Court after. We could see a lot of shipping traffic
which has been absent for a long time. I did 9am gentle yoga. At 10am we both
attended the Cineflex talk by our expedition operator, Ron Chapple. It was
fascinating. All the camera equipment he has fitted on the ship is worth about
$500, 000. He told us his company does all the aerial photography for the TV
series Hawaii Five-O. After that I took my nearly completed needlepoint project
to Miyako and at last she offered me another kit. Unfortunately, she did not,
as promised, save me the tablet cover Clay had requested. She only had 3
choices left. I didn’t want to repeat the size I just finished. Choice 2 was a
half-spectacles case, which I had not seen before, but which was a nice size.
Choice 3 was what I had thought was the most coveted, the Crystal logo pillow
top. I had wanted a larger project but I didn’t love this one, plus it wasn’t a
complete kit like the others as it was just a canvas. You have to finish it to
make it anything like a pillow or else maybe frame it. Miyako showed me that
another guest had told her they were putting NWP 16 around the center of
theirs. I liked that idea of making a souvenir of the cruise that could be
framed or made into a pillow. She sold me. So, if finally got a new kit, but not
the one I had been working towards. Oh well.
Today Serenity put on a Sunday Jazz Brunch. What made it a
jazz brunch? There was live jazz playing in the Crystal Plaza where the buffet
tables were set up. There wasn’t any Bananas Foster or anything necessarily food
themed with the jazz motif. Clay went and took photos after they started
serving at 11:30am. We waited until after noon and went to Lido. The captain
made his noon announcement and said we’d be in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence until
we exit at Cabot Strait early tomorrow morning. He says we’re about half way to
Bar Harbor where he expects to easily reach on schedule.
We plan to lounge in the cabin until 4:30pm. We have our tickets
to Magic Castle at Sea in Pulse Disco then. We don’t really know what to expect
other than a 20-guest magic show. We’ll see.
The captain says they are refilling the swimming pool and heating
the water. It has been open more than closed for this sailing actually. It has
seen a surprising amount of use I think. It is probably about 57F outside, but
cloudy and drizzling all day so far. Still the weather is improving for us! Around
3pm we spotted several whale blows. We still haven’t seen any whale parts other
than those bowhead tops by Smoking Hills.
Back from Magic Castle at Sea. It was just a fairly standard
magic show. I’m not sure why they keep the audience so small. It would have
been as effective to me with twice as many in the audience, but then I really don’t
like magic. I think it is too sneaky.
Dinner in the main dining room tonight. Nothing exciting on
the menu for either of us. We plan to go to the popcorn movie tonight.
Hopefully tomorrow will be as calm as today was. Tomorrow is our final sea day.
It is also our 2nd and final formal night. We have reservations at
Prego. We still have to dress up.
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Crossing the Labrador Sea
Saturday, September 10, 2016
We did hit very rough seas in the Labrador Sea overnight and
though the wind’s died down, still rough seas. Clay feels its calmer, me not so
much. We went to iLuminate’s The Tourist. It is a seldom used entertainment
staff show. We enjoyed it. It was a clever use of equipment choreography using
a very dark theater and lighted suits. It had to be very difficult for the performers
in the rolling conditions in the theater. It helped us stay up late to look for
the aurora borealis. The CD came onstage at the end of the show to tell about
viewing it the night before. He said he’d show some passenger photos on today’s
morning show and he did. The skies were not clear last night. In fact, there
was actually fog! So, that was the end of aurora possibilities for us this trip
we’re told. Badly done Crystal for not finding it worthwhile putting aurora
notices in the e-alert program. There is always someone on the bridge watching and
so there is a person working for Crystal who knows when the aurora is visible.
I realize that the e-alert system may have been a tool of EYOS Expeditions and not
Crystal but come on, work together and make it happen if it is important to
guests. They all knew it was important to us as there was enough talk about it.
Anyway, lost opportunity. I am grateful that we had seen them before at least.
We ate breakfast and lunch in the main dining room. I have
stayed low in the ship and mostly in the cabin. We had a lecture today from the
diver who was aboard Shackleton until we left it. He showed video and photos of
what we didn’t see during the North West Passage. It was cool. He has at least
one more presentation. I have made a lot of progress on the needlepoint and am
more hopeful that I can get the kit Clay has requested. Dinner in main dining
room tonight is not expected to be very good for me based on the menu. I’m not
too hungry so that’s OK. Tomorrow we have 4pm Magic Castle at Sea tickets.
Really hoping it gets a lot calmer as we near Newfoundland. During the noon
announcement, the captain said he planned to use an inside Newfoundland passage
to get to Maine. The nav map looks like he is headed further west than the
initial track shown, so we are hopeful for a calmer and more scenic next couple
of days.
Friday, September 9, 2016
Nuuk, Greenland
Friday, September 9, 2015
photos
Clay was up early this morning for his small boat excursion.
Too early as it turns out. Originally it was set for 7am as that was our
scheduled docking time. They changed it to 6:50am. We were not docked til after
7am and Clay figures they left at least 45 minutes after the 6:50am time. I
don’t know why they would make the tour times earlier since all but one of our
tours has left later than posted. The one was not on time early, it left early
thus mixing late comers for that tour with early arrivals from our time. It
seems to be a universal truth that the weakest part of every cruise line is
Destination Services or the Tour Desk. The Panoramic Nuuk we booked was 1pm on
the ticket. A few days ago they notified us it had been moved to 12:20pm.
Reflections today which is supposed to be the most up-to-date information had
it back at 1pm. I went down to the Hollywood Theater to find an excursion
person and she told me it is 12:20pm. I didn’t take Reflections with me so she
didn’t believe me. Clay got mad when I told him because the assumption is that
we’ll show up at 12:20pm and they won’t depart til after 1pm because of
Reflections. He took the page out of Reflections and went down again. When he
showed her Reflections she got on her radio and told someone and they said they
would broadcast voice mail to all ticketed participants to be in the Stardust
at 12:20pm. We’ll see. They have a regularly running shuttle bus here and in
hindsight we should have saved our money here and not bought any tours. Clay’s
tour which was clearly advertised as whale-watching months ago has been
verbally re-advertised as a fjord cruise ever since the tour people started
talking about it. The first we heard that was as we understood it long past the
cancelation with refund date. It was $250. We are both on Panoramic Nuuk at
12:20pm or 1pm, however it happens. It will end before the ticketed time most
likely unlike the morning tours because all aboard occurs before the time on
the ticket. Obviously, whenever it departs we will get a truncated tour. We
should have just done some research and assumed there would be a shuttle to and
from the pier and planned our own day with a map. It would have saved us $100s
and been a better use of our time. Live and learn.
I slept in til 8am. I got up to take a shower and there was
no hot water and no cold water. I used the cold water from the sink to wet my
bed head down and went to the Concierge as per Reflections request to arrange
our departure time in NY. He already had us scheduled for 8:10am and that was
perfect. I told him about the water and he said his screen had just gotten a
message that they were turning it back on and I should try again in 10 minutes.
I had to go sit an hour in Bistro for the cabin to be serviced now anyway. Clay
was expected back at 9am but it was closer to 10am when he got back. He said it
was a nice boat. It was too hot inside so he sat outside with the daughter of
the father/daughter boat team and randy older expedition guide. He said it was
a nice sunny scenic morning, but no whales or other animals. He said a woman on
with the rest of the 10 passengers said she had been up late last night as it
was very lively for one night with the zodiac drivers from Shackelton aboard
for the night. She was thus out after midnight and saw the aurora! We have to
gain an hour tonight so we will plan to either stay up or to set an alarm and
go out. We are below the Arctic Circle now, but still pretty far north at 64
degrees 10’ N so with clear skies and a moderate chance of northern lights
maybe we’ll get lucky. We’ll see.
We went to the library about 9:30am, a half hour after
opening to get our Magic Castle at Sea tickets. This was announced in
Reflections that you each have to go get your own ticket. The show evidently
only seats 20 people at a time. We never heard of this before booking Crystal
but people rave about it so when in Rome. Evidently it is based on
magiccastle.com, a private club in Hollywood, CA. We got tickets for the 4pm
show on day 2, September 11. We have 3 sea days starting tomorrow, before 4
days in US ports followed by disembarkation on day 2 in NYC.
At 10am or so we went up to the Late breakfast in Tastes. It
was our brunch. Since we both had a bite early and we’ll be on tour during
lunch.
Before I go for now, I want to comment about our cabin 7042.
We are fine with it really and have been comfortable but we wouldn’t pick it
again. One it is too far forward for our comfort. This is one of the few ships
we’ve been on that didn’t have a distinct aft vibration when at speed. The
rougher the seas and the higher the ship’s speed the more stable it feels the
farther back you go. Good to know, but too late for us. We wouldn’t book
forward of the mid ship elevators again if we returned. The other thing is 7042
is backward facing. Every other cabin would be. This means that in bed, sitting
at the desk or on the loveseat that you are facing aft not forward. We just
don’t like that. We’ve gotten used to it, but it wouldn’t be our first choice.
We didn’t have a lot of choice when we cleared the waitlist but we also didn’t
have the information about cabin configuration. We have been happy enough with
Crystal and our time on Serenity that if the right itinerary came up we’d
return. That said, we are probably more suited as Oceania cruisers where it
isn’t so formal. As I’ve said we haven’t been to a tea or a show so much of
what Crystal offers is just wasted on us.
Today we are docked on the starboard side and there is a
rather unattractive dock to view. Our port side has a bunker ship alongside so
not too scenic here either. We are pretty far from central Nuuk out here, so
best bet was just to take a shuttle into town and spend the whole day.
It is 2:40pm and we’re back. It was actually worse than
expected. We got a ride for an hour around the suburbs which are all new and a
drive by the airport. We were dropped outside the National Museum. Our guide
was not Danish or a Greenlander. He never said where he was from only that
people moving here were making Nuuk a faster growing city than Beijing or
Shanghai. He liked it here so he’s staying. If you can say he was speaking
English, it would have to be at least his 3rd language and we only
understood about 3 of 10 words he said. He was laughing a lot though so I guess
he thought it was funny. We did get a late start but it was before 1 and after
12:30pm. He gave us a farewell and thanks for visiting Nuuk speech as he told
us to get off the bus, tour ends here. Our Crystal rep on the bus rushed after
him saying the tour ends at the ship. It was our understanding as well, also
that we’d paid for admission to the National Museum. I asked the local guide
about the bus and he agreed the bus would be here in one hour if we didn’t want
to just take any shuttle bus. I asked him about the National Museum and he
agreed it was right there and we could go in if we wanted. We walked in and
were asked to pay the 30DKK admission. We had the conversation that we’d
already paid for admission for the tour and the ticket guy didn’t respond but
asked again if we were going to buy tickets. I said no, I’m not going to pay
twice. We walked around the water front and through a souvenir shop and back to
find a waiting shuttle bus so we left. The people on the bus sitting behind us
said they had a good guide, but she hadn’t told them the museum was included
either. Like us they went in and were asked to pay so they did. After they got
inside they found another group who told them their guide had told them to
enter and tell the ticket guy they were on the ship’s tour and they wouldn’t be
charged. I don’t think the ticket guy got that memo. Anyway, $109pp and a
wasted day. That on top of Clay’s non-whalewatching $249 tour. We really messed
up here in Nuuk. To add insult the woman behind me on the bus was sick and
coughing all over me!
We set sail on time at 4pm. The captain came over the
loudspeakers to warn us of strong north winds and heavy seas when we leave the
harbor. He said we need to average 18.5 knots to make Bar Harbor on schedule.
We made private touring plans in Bar Harbor, now I guess we’ll regret that
because neither of us can remember hitting speeds anywhere near 18 knots in the
past nearly a month. So we don’t think we have a chance of making it on
schedule. Oh, well. Sometime before 5pm we got another voicemail from the
excursions desk. They were letting us know they were refunding 50% of our tour
price this afternoon. Either Crystal has professional quality complainers
onboard for these rapid group refunds or else their tour escorts must really
let them know the same feedback we would give if we could bear it. It doesn’t
make overpriced, excursions that don’t meet the description in the first place
OK but I guess once it’s done you can’t give people back anything other than
money, not time.
Not looking forward to dinner or the next 3 days with the rocking
we’re doing already! The skies are still pretty clear so we’ll probably try to
go out late and look for an aurora. Clay said the woman said deck 13, so I
guess he knows where the dark spot is that we need to go to see it if possible.
Fingers crossed. Last chance for an aurora according to Tim Soper last night.
We spent the afternoon watching a movie about 2 old men
taking a driving trip around Iceland. Clay has a new item on his to do list.
Iceland is next to Greenland. Greenland is the world’s largest island. It is
considered part of Europe economically and part of North America geologically.
I thought a lot of the land around Nuuk resembled the land in parts of the
Canadian Maritimes, like around Peggy’s Cove. I’ll post this now if I can.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Sisimiut, Greenland
Clay slept from about 7:30pm last night to almost 7am this
morning! I was rudely awakened at 6:50am or so by a monstrous lower leg muscle
cramp! When it was over I fell back into bed and Clay proceeded to tell me how
rough the sailing had been and he hadn’t slept all night. He sure did lay
quietly for almost 12 hours then! It has been an exhausting trip somehow. The
yoga teacher was talking about it. She thought it was the 6 lost hours of sleep
over the past couple of weeks coupled with the low gray skies and though we’ve
seen the sun, it hasn’t really been shining on us when we’ve been able to be
out. We’ve just had a lot of clouds and precipitation and although we’ve been
weeks above the Arctic Circle, no aurora borealis because of low clouds and
precipitation. With all the lights on the ship, I don’t know if you could see
the aurora anyway. That has really been the only disappointment and it is
weather. You get what you get.
We were still moving slowly when I looked out. The TV’s nav
map was broken. The bow cam showed it was 38F and the Shackleton was before us
in a cove surrounded by a small town of colorful houses arrayed up the
hillsides. It was not raining, but rain was forecast all morning with an
expected 10F or so degree temperature rise. It was partly cloudy with some low
clouds. The town of Sisimiut has a crooked triangular peak towering over it and
in the misty clouds it looked like Whoville from Dr. Seuss. The clouds mostly
cleared up over the course of the day and more blue sky and sunshine and the
weird mood went away.
We had been advised during the briefing that we should check
to tender schedule and try to avoid tour times since they take precedence. Clay
went and checked and we were shooting for 10 to 11am or noon to 1pm. Last
tender back is 5pm and we sail away at 6pm. We went to breakfast in the main
dining room a little after 8am. I had banana buckwheat pancakes. That was new.
I don’t think I like buckwheat. It looked like tiny buckshot in my pancakes.
After we went up to Palm Court and used the big binoculars to scout the lay of
the land and tenders and shuttle buses. Since it seemed to be clearing and not
raining, we decided to head on ashore if we could get in the cabin. Peace was
just finishing up so we got our teeth brushed, got suited up for the cold and
possibly the rain and headed out before 10am. We took the mid-ship elevators
directly down to deck 4 and walked right out onto a waiting tender with about
15 people who were already there. That seemed to be too good to be true and it
was as they were just holding that tender for a soon to follow tour group! It
was still a very short wait and they all got off together too. The tiny harbor
was well sheltered. The tendering was fine. The going ashore from the tender
was a little tricky. Tim Soper told us they had leased some kind of floating
barge to act as a tender platform ashore and they had. It was fine but there
was a very rotten, flimsy, bent looking wooden ramp/footbridge tied up between
the barge and the shore that they had to limit 1 to 3 people at a time
crossing. It still swayed and bent and flexed when I was alone on it! That
slowed things down both loading and unloading, but it was fine. The shuttle bus
was welcome because while it was a short walk between things, the uphill grade
was steep. We walked back down. There was a shuttle bus waiting when we got ashore
so we boarded. It didn’t leave until the next tender had unloaded. We just
waited. The first stop was the Sisimiut Museum. We had originally booked a
complimentary community visit here that was cancelled due to a lack of
transportation. The tour department instead issued us free museum tickets.
Since we were there, we got off. The 2nd shuttle stop was a shopping
area/Post Office. I had already dropped Mom’s post card at Serenity reception
not realizing we’d be at a Post Office later. Oh, well. The first thing I had
seen on the Sisimiut City Map they were handing out ashore was a store called
Qiviut. This is the Inuit word for yarn made from musk ox undercoat. We have
seen it everywhere since Nome but not at Pond Inlet. We knew it was expensive
and hadn’t seen a lot of yarn for sale but high priced knitted goods. The
briefing last night told us to look for it as it would be a good product to buy
here since a lot of what they make here we can’t bring into the US. It turned
out that the Qiviut store was on the grounds of the cluster of buildings that
made up the museum. We heard the organist playing in the old church and saw a
mask dance demonstration as well as a peat house and the oldest kit house from
Denmark in Greenland (I think that is right.). There was a whole room dedicated
to the polar bear that came to Sisimiut in 2014 and hung around the airport,
when he headed for town he was killed. It was evidently a pretty big deal and
his skull was there. We bought what we were told was enough Qiviut wool to knit
two neck gaiters. The yarn was at 65 Euros for each but the knitted gaiters
were 169 Euros, so I thought we were saving money. Clay considers it the most
extravagant yarn purchase ever. Both. Clay also asked and got t-shirts put out
on the porch there. He bought one. I
don’t know what part of the museum the building across was but they put out
vanilla crème and chocolate crème filled doughnuts for us. The expedition guide
for that corner asked us to help ourselves. Clay had a vanilla half (they were
cut in half) and I passed. After we came by on the way out, I had a chocolate.
As the guide was telling how and where to go now, she pointed out that the
Senior Center across the street had just put out a sign inviting us to visit
for music, arts & crafts and snacks. She felt bad that they were putting
this on for us and no one was going over. Can’t have that. We carefully crossed
the street. An older man sitting at a picnic table outside saw us cross and
read the sign and he ran up and gestured us to the back door. It was a mud
room/cloak room. We tried to take off our coats and shoes. He practically
dragged me on through the next 2 rooms and past the kitchen into a room filled
with elderly Greenlanders. One man was playing music. There were women sewing,
cutting out fur pieces, beading and I don’t know what else. It looked like they
were trying to sell what they were making. There was one woman who spoke some
English and she struggled to tell us about what they were doing and to feed us
Greenlandic cakes and coffee and tea. She couldn’t say no. We ate a buttered
slice each. Then she pointed out the round slices and said they were made with
eggs (ours hadn’t been) and her friend sitting at the table had made those
round ones. We didn’t go back for seconds to their disappointment but it was
too much! Clay drank a cup of tea and I a cup of strong coffee mostly because
we didn’t get a bottle of water to take ashore and we were thirsty. We wanted
to make a contribution to defray their costs and help their center. Clay was
looking for something like a donation box and a woman wearing a seal skin came
up to him and he handed her our bag of leftover DKK. She seemed surprised but
took it. She probably didn’t even realize what he had handed her until we were
gone. He had managed to leave his coat in the cloakroom and a cheer went up in
the room we had left. We still aren’t sure if they were cheering because we had
visited or because we had left! As we left another shuttle bus was coming to a
stop across the street. We went over and got on for stop 2.
We didn’t find anything in the grocery store, sporting goods
store or fish market except fish smells. We didn’t go in the Post Office but
starting walking back down to the harbor. I found a unique long sleeve knit top
with silhouettes all over it of ulu knives, ice bear heads, whale tails and
what I was told is an old Greenlandic woman’s head. I thought it was
extravagant. Clay said it was about $65. I broke my rule about new clothes and
I’m wearing it. I like it. I found it in the very back corner of a store called
Anuni. They had some unique locally themed fabric patterns in coats, pants,
scarves, and tops as well as some women’s t-shirts. The problem was that the
store was well back from the road even though it was probably as close to the 2nd
shuttle stop as the Post Office. It was on the other side of the road and we
walked past it to the cemetery before turning around and seeing the side porch
of it with a rack of shirts and a stack of shoe boxes. We walked back and even
then, the stuff visitors would be looking for was buried back in the farthest
corner from the door. I got lucky. We walked on back downhill carefully since
it was a surprisingly busy street for a town of under 6000 and there were no
sidewalks. We went in a bookstore/office & art supply store and one other
store along the way selling Greenlandic jewelry. There were some nice gold or
silver local design pendants but I didn’t need anything like that. We stopped
at the boat house of the museum that we had missed earlier. We turned before
the harbor and walked along the water way. We went in the Artists’ Workshop and
the Spar store. We checked out the qajaq (kayak!) club. We walked back and got
on the next tender back to Serenity. The sun was shining, there were blue skies
visible and the Serenity was surrounded by hundreds of birds.
We went to lunch at Tastes to close them down at 2:30pm. As
I type these notes up and consulting the local map we got ashore, it seems we
missed a great photo opportunity across the bridge from the town to the
airport. It shows a statue on a point of land and has a photo of a statue of a
fisherman in front of a ship in the cove. It looks like it was taken on the
other side of where the Shackleton is sitting. If we had noticed it before we’d
have made a point of walking over there! Of course, the map also shows there is
a statue at the point of land where we visited the qajaq club and we didn’t
find a statue there, of course we weren’t looking for one so maybe it was there
and we missed it.
We went to the last expedition recap & briefing at 5pm.
That was a bit sad. The end really is in sight. We met a new member who has
been diving and operating an ROV from Shackleton all during the trip! He is
going to give a presentation sometime on the way to New York and that is
exciting. At 5:30pm, they asked everyone to go to decks 12 & 13 forward to
have a champagne toast to Shackleton’s departure. Shackleton had moved beside
and nose to us as we sailed away and it stayed behind! It was rather anticlimactic.
Dinner was 6pm at the main dining room. We didn’t like
anything on the menu and both ordered from the mainstays section. Clay had
ribeye steak which he wasn’t wild about and I had a surprisingly moist chicken
breast. We had another 40+ minute wait for our meal. Clay says he is going to
ask not to be seated there anymore. It is too bad.
Tomorrow we are in Nuuk. (Say Nuke.) It is the capitol of
Greenland. Today we got the message that our excursions’ departures had all
been moved forward by about 15 minutes. It won’t matter that much and they
probably won’t leave early anyway since every one has been late. Anyway. Clay
has an early start and at the briefing they warned that this $250 excursion
should be properly name fjord cruise and not whale watching cruise. Exactly
what Clay has been saying as he worried about this since we boarded Serenity.
But he never did look up the cancelation deadline, so he’s going now. At
12:20pm to 4pm or so, we have Panoramic Nuuk together.
We are sailing south along the West coast of Greenland again
and being on the port side we have been in view of the coast. During the day
today, we mostly had a view out to sea.
photos
photos
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Missed Ilulissat
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
photos
photos
photos
We were up at 6am today. Clay skipped his morning treadmill
time. We were scheduled to sail into Disko Bay about 6am and it is supposed to
be an impressive place to sail in and out of. Since we are in Silk Road without
open windows at 6pm, our sail away time, we were eager to see it this morning.
The low clouds/visibility were with us again and besides icebergs everywhere we
really couldn’t see much. We went up to Lido for a quick breakfast. It is 37F
and raining. The predicted high is 40F or 41F and it should continue raining
all day. We are ticketed for a complimentary community visit at 8am and a
Scenic Walk to Sermermiut at 12:30pm. We are contemplating staying ashore if
the tour people tell us it is possible. We got back to the cabin to gear up for
zodiacs and rain all day with a lot of walking in the cold and wet. We were
watching the nav map and bow cam and it looked like we were making loops in the
bay at about 4knots. We were not slowing down. According to Reflections, tours
should have begun departing at 7:20am. Clearly that was not happening. Clay
decided to go downstairs and see what was going on in Stardust, our meeting point.
He showed our 2 sets of tickets to the woman manning the door and she told him that
all tours except Icefjord Scenic Cruising are canceled. He came back and told
me if I was quick that I could change and make the 8am combined yoga class. Or
I could do laundry today. I was exasperated after getting ready quickly and
early in all those layers so I just sat on the bed. He asked what I was doing
and I told him I was waiting to hear from the captain. He told me there is a no
public announcement policy. I agreed Crystal has a written no announcement
policy, but Captain Birger doesn’t, he makes plenty of announcements. Sure
enough at 8:04am he came on the speakers. He said that there was a pretty solid
wall of ice blocking the entrance to the harbor. He said Shackleton had been
monitoring the ice overnight here and thought it was building up due to an
unexpected wind and advised against going in as we might not be able to get
out. He said he had still searched the ice wall himself for the past hour
trying to find a crack that could be used to tender us in and out but hadn’t
found one and also had to consider that he had to get us back out by day’s end.
He said they had canceled all excursions except Icefjord Scenic Cruising as
they had been able to arrange for the local boats that were scheduled to do it
to come out and pick up at our tender dock instead of in town at the dock. He
said they had arranged a ferry boat or something like it locally to come out
and pick up all the overnight and overland excursion guests. He said once he
found the right spot that he would put the ship into dynamic positioning mode
and we would spend the day here. They spent the next 2 or more hours
precariously trying to get passengers over into various local boats with and without
success. They dropped one of our lifeboats/tenders and although there was still
a lot of bouncing they matched up at a level and they then took passengers in
our tender to a ferry. I watched a bit of terrifying passenger transfer from
tender to ferry as the boats bobbed up and down, not in sync! I followed that
ferry until it disappeared at the harbor ice wall. The captain said he had us
to within 7 miles of either the ice wall or the dock in harbor, I’m not sure
which. We are at 69 degrees 12.81N and 51 degrees 27.96’ W if that helps. During
that 2 + hours, they got the Cineflex up and running, put on a slate of 3
lectures and added art, knitting, needlepoint and bridge. They delivered an
updated daily schedule to the cabins. At about 11am, another ship wide
announcement was made that they could not transfer passengers to local boats
and had decided to run all the Shackelton’s zodiacs from the ship instead for
scenic ice cruising. I can see them now. They are not going to the icefjord.
They are cruising here in Disko Bay up to the ice wall across the harbor. That
is not like seeing the Jakobshavn Glacier calving. It is one of the most active
tidewater glaciers in the world, so this is hardly a fair substitute for those
who paid to cruise the icefjord. I am disappointed but they are bobbing around
in the rain on zodiacs, paying extra to see what I can see from here.
Hopefully, they explained to each ticketed tour participant what they were
substituting and gave them an option of being refunded instead. I know the
local fleet must be really unhappy. They had enough boats out here around the
ship this morning that you’d have thought they emptied the harbor to answer the
call to come out and shuttle Serenity’s passenger back and forth to the
icefjord. I assume that they’ll have to be paid something for coming out
whether they get paid in full when it didn’t work out or not. Clay went to use
the treadmill and I have done the laundry for what should be the last time this
trip.
We went up to Lido for lunch as it offers the best views and
best selection. You can order from Trident or Tastes to eat in Lido which
increases the selection. So from up there and Palm Court and the detailed
navigation map outside Palm Court, we have a better idea what we’re seeing. It
does look as if we are 7 miles offshore not from the ice wall. The other thing
is that we might be well outside the entrance to Ilulissat harbor and closer to
the point of land that separates it from the icefjord of Jakobshavn Glacier.
The ice wall appears on the map and it extends across both bodies of water.
That said the zodiacs aren’t rounding that corner. They are loaded chockfull
and run out to the wall, around and among the bergs and down or up the wall a
mile or less and then back to the ship. Port side drew the view again today as
we are facing the view and the tender action. Starboard side today got open
water and a random distant iceberg. It was 37F this morning and predicted to
warm to 40 or 41, but it has dropped to 34F by 1pm. It is still raining, the
cloud cover is heavier and lower and the chop on the bay has increased as the
day has gone on. It is 1:15pm and the captain has just come on loudspeakers
again and announced that due to deteriorating weather and sea conditions he has
canceled all further zodiac activity. He said once the zodiacs out get unloaded
and back on Shackleton that we will depart early for our next port and hope for
better luck next time. The captain said that the port side should have a view
of the mouth of the icefjord for the next 15 to 20 minutes as we sail south
down the coast.
Well, we have 2 more ports in Greenland. Hopefully we’ll get
to set foot on land somewhere in Greenland. Whale blows were spotted just beyond the
icefjord mouth. We were on our way south by 3pm. Thankfully although Disko Bay
was unexpectedly rough, when we arrived back out in Davis Strait it was calm.
We had the 5pm recap & briefing where they described all I have written up
here with some additional details and explanations. We heard some more about
Sissimiut and learned that we will depart from the Shackleton there. The
expedition portion of our North West Passage cruise will end in Sissimiut. We
are told we can expect to go ashore there even though the local tour operator
has canceled a hike due to snow that accumulated there recently. Fingers
crossed.
Dinner is shortly in Silk Road and hopefully it will be as
good as last time. It was. Bed gift when we got back to the cabin was ironic. A postcard of the colorful houses of Greenland, which we haven't seen. On the plus side, it had 15DKK postage attached, so I'll mail it to Mom. It made me wonder again though about Crystal not printing and delivering milestone certificates. Like crossing the Arctic Circle on a ship makes you a Blue Nose. What about completing the North West Passage? I guess it is not exclusive enough. Crystal's motto is "All exclusive" and that just rankles. Forgive me but it is written on my keycard right by my name and photo like it has something to do with me or that I approve of the concept even. Anyway. Hoping for a better day tomorrow and first visit to Greenland, a new country for us.
photos
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Cruising to Greenland
We have been rocking and lurching and bouncing since yesterday
afternoon. We lost an hour last night. Before Clay came back in this morning, I
was already awake. I was woken by Crystal’s binoculars falling off the shelf by
the desk near the foot of the bed being tossed off onto my feet and then the
floor. It is 37F outside and mostly cloudy all day with little change from
start to finish. We’ve seen tons of icebergs. I saw a fishing boat nearby
during chair yoga. I stayed low in the ship all day. So 3 meals in the main
dining room and I skipped gentle yoga in Palm Court and went to Chair Yoga in
Stardust. Maria came in to teach from upstairs and said they had seen a
gigantic sperm whale surface and dive with its huge tail straight up in the air
on the big TV screens behind her. I’ve spent hours staring at those screens
without seeing anything remarkable! The day I skip, I miss something new! So, I
have made a lot of progress on the needlepoint. Tomorrow starts a 3-day
stretch in Greenland. Should be a busy time! Hopefully all our sailing will be
after dinner for next 2 nights anyway!
There was nothing on the dinner menu that either of us
wanted tonight. Clay was agonizing over whether to try the roast suckling pig
or the lamb curry. He really didn’t want to have the curry, it was causing him
worry. Ha! I didn’t want to order the turf without the surf but was considering
it. In the end, we were seated with a new to us waiter, Vinod. Who was our best
server yet. Clay ordered the lamb curry and loved it. He ordered the yuzu
trifle for dessert and loved it. I decided to ask if they could serve the pasta
without crabmeat in the sauce and they could and I really liked it. So, we
ended the miserable day on a high note even though the seas have not calmed and
we’ve heard it should rain all day tomorrow! They won’t find out before we
arrive at the harbor off Disko Bay what ice conditions are and if we can tender
or have to zodiac tender. I guess at this point with the rain, it won’t matter
since we’ll have on waterproof pants anyway.
photos
photos
Monday, September 5, 2016
Cruising Sam Ford Fjord on Baffin Island
Monday, September 5, 2016
We had a short night last night with the time change and we
lose another hour tonight. So, while Clay was still in the gym at 5am and he
didn’t come back until almost 7:30am, I was still sleeping. It had been a
little rough for the past few hours cruising south in Baffin Bay along the
coast on the starboard side. It was rough enough that I was having some trouble
getting up and around and changed my answer to Clay’s question yesterday of
whether I still felt I could do next spring’s waitlisted cruise around
Australia with Oceania. It may not be up to us to decide as we haven’t been
offered a cabin yet. Anyway, around 8am we started turning into Sam Ford Fjord
and it got a lot calmer. As we reached Walker Arm around 10am, we found Le Boreal
ahead of us! Le Boreal is the ship we took to Antarctica, so we’re fond of her.
She was disabled and nearly sunk off the Falklands a year or so ago. So while
we knew she did NWP cruises, we weren’t aware that she had been brought back
into service and it was a happy surprise to see her speeding along our fjord.
The captain announced where we were and what we were doing around 9:30am. He
said this was a particularly scenic fjord and had clifftops at over a mile
high. You could realize the enormous scale of things when we saw Le Boreal.
Prior to that size check, it had seemed we were in pretty tight quarters. Of
course, we are a big ship and it actually was tight quarters for us as many
places you couldn’t see water beyond the ship before seeing a rock or scree
face. There were glaciers, tidewater glaciers, hanging glaciers, etc. The cloud
deck was low and it was raining hard all morning. It was about 35-37F all
morning, so cold but nowhere near freezing. It was all clouds and rain. As we
reached the furthest point we could travel in, there were some brief breaks in
the clouds and a little light and blue patches of sky visible as we did a 180
degree turn, though we both swore he spun in a complete circle once before
coming back around and heading back out the way we came in. The clouds were
even lower and heavier on the way back out. The captain came on at noon and
apologized that the weather hadn’t cooperated, but that as we went back by the
next bend to watch the starboard side for a lone polar bear that he had made
eye contact with on the way in. Now that is the side that Clay and I and mostly
the Cineflex had been watching on the way in and we hadn’t seen a polar bear.
In any event, we checked the now starboard side. Cineflex focused for a long
time on a little whitish blob on the hillside and we were told later that was
the polar bear. I guess that emphasizes the sheer size of things again. The
captain said he thought we were leaving polar bear areas and that would be our
last one. I guess Greenland has no polar bears? I guess Baffin Island has no
musk ox? They have been seen most every day since Nome but we found no Qivuit
for sale in Pond Inlet and no musk ox have been spotted. They seemed ubiquitous
before but the people of Pond Inlet seemed more focused on seals and narwhal,
neither of which we saw there. Evidently the people who went out on zodiac or
fast boat among other excursions yesterday saw animals in addition to birds as
the wildlife checklist had them listed for yesterday.
After breakfast and yoga this morning, there was a sale of
RRS Shackleton souvenirs in Crystal Plaza. It was well attended and possibly
better stocked than the Inaugural NWP Cruise souvenir sale. Clay got a $32
t-shirt. I decided to pass. They had a lot of jackets, polo shirts and I don’t
know what a long sleeved, cotton-collared polo-type shirt is called, but they
had those and fleece hoodies. There were no prices on anything, but as I was
handling a long sleeved shirt I heard a price come back to a woman near me and
it was over $100. I don’t know what she had asked about, but I figured I didn’t
need anything priceless on that table and gave it up. There were long lines to
pay again.
They are having a special Mozart tea in Palm Court this
afternoon. We haven’t attended any tea on Serenity so have no idea if the daily
event is special or how this differs. We had tacos and goulash at the Lido for
lunch. There is for me a really disgusting sounding menu in the dining room
tonight. We hope to try to get our remaining entitled reservations made between
5 and 6pm today and we’ll hope one can be tonight.
There is no Internet today. I will assume it is because of
the close high mountains and that as we cross Davis Strait this afternoon and
tonight and all day tomorrow that it will return. We are about 450nm from Illulissat,
Greenland. We have a complimentary community visit scheduled there for 8am and
a paid excursion at 12:30pm for a Scenic Walk to Sermermiut for $178 for both.
We have watched on TV the destination/excursion talk on Illulissat and they
don’t know whether we will dock or anchor and tender. The general feeling is
that it won’t matter for excursions somehow. They have been requiring a ticket
of some kind to get a ride off this ship since Nome. I don’t see how that won’t
change if we are not docked. Anyway, I guess they think whether we dock and
walk off, or tender to a dock that both docks will be in general proximity. I
guess from that perspective maybe it won’t matter. We’ll see. I’d hate to have
to tender twice!
The ride was rough once we got back into open water this
afternoon. So, after lunch at Lido we spent the afternoon in the cabin. We
watched a string of icebergs for a while with a random sailboat thrown in! They
were having a rough day! Clay went to the library and checked out “Aloha” which
he didn’t remember seeing in the theater. He managed to watch it all today. I
am still working hard on the cross stitch to try to get the kit Clay picked out
before it is too late. I am down to almost only white left to do, but it is a
big section. We’ll see. Clay went out again after 5pm to try to get the rest of
our specialty restaurant reservations. Success! 4 reservations made at 6pm at
Prego and Silk Road. I don’t know why they had to make it so hard and just
couldn’t do this one of the first 2 times we asked.
There was nothing we really wanted from the dinner menu
tonight but Clay couldn’t get us in another restaurant tonight so off we went.
I had the braised oxtail and Clay had perch. Both were good, probably better
than we expected. Also service returned to norm tonight after our 2-night
absence. We can only hope it holds. I jokingly told the waiter who wondered
where we’d been that we had better service in one restaurant and worse service
in the other. Both waiters wondered what I had to say about them, but I wouldn’t
say. The senior waiter decided he has 12 days to become my number one waiter.
Hopefully he will actually earn that spot! We didn’t break it to him that we
had 4 nights of reservations elsewhere!
Clay got Internet after dinner when it has been unavailable
all day so I’ll try to get this posted now. We’ve already turned the clocks forward
an hour. We should now be on Greenland time.
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