Monday, January 23, 2012

At Sea & Grand Cayman January 22-23


Sunday was a beautiful sea day.  We attended the Traditional Maritime Service in the morning.  Always some good hymns that everyone knows – “What a friend we have in Jesus” – and ending with the Mariner’s Hymn.

An interesting lecture on the history of the Panama Canal, which opened August 15, 1914, was given by John Laverick.  A good refresher since it has been 8 years since we’ve been through the Canal.  It is an amazing structure and we will get a chance to see the area where they are expanding it to be able to accommodate the larger container and cruise ships.  Other facts:  Gatun Lake, part of the Canal, is the largest man-made lake in the world; the Chagres River, which provides all the water used to operate the canal (2.1 million gallons are required to operate just one of the several locks) only flowed to the Atlantic Ocean and now flows to both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans; the Pan American Highway Bridge crosses over Gatun Lake.  A voyage from New York to San Francisco around South America is over 13,000 miles and through the Panama Canal it is approximately 5,400 miles.

Every day we receive a Daily Programme which outlines the day’s activities.  There is also a nautical term of the day.  They start off easy and seem to be getting more difficult – like starboard, aft, fathom and ‘cut and run.’  In the program you can also learn something about the next port.  Grand Cayman is a place where you can see turtles, seven mile beach, stingrays and of course shopping.  No taxes and duty free.  There is a seminar on how to buy gems and where to buy them.  Definitely there are a few places to check-out.

Tonight is the Captain’s Reception and the Cunard Ball – dress is Formal.  The evening is fun because you get to see all of the beautiful gowns and the men looking quite handsome in their tuxes.  We meet a couple at the Captain’s Reception where we also learn about the passenger mix from the Captain.  The passengers on the ship represent 35 different countries and the crew is from 55 different countries.  The country with the most passengers is the U.K. around 750 followed by the USA with 560.  And there is only one passenger from Ecuador.

The evening’s show was modern dance and orchestra accompaniment to Jazz, Blues and Rock ‘n Roll.  Steve and I had to laugh because every show so far we are sitting by people who like to talk and some that like to hum or sing along – no matter where we sit in the theatre.  Strangely, it has been some of the same people even though we go all day without seeing them and we don’t know them.  As for the people we boarded with in New York City, we didn’t see until yesterday at breakfast.  Cruising oddity.

Today the ship docked early.  We took the tender to the Georgetown, Grand Cayman pier to do some shopping.  The temperature is perfect for us – 79 degrees.  The shopping is the usual: Diamonds International, Del Sol and many other stores.  We see people gathered and hear a band.  It is the National Heroes Day in Grand Cayman and there is a formal ceremony occurring.  We watch for a bit and listen to the band playing and see men and women in uniform (military?) marching.  Very British looking since Grand Cayman is a British colony.

Back on ship, a little pool time and now an update of the blog.  We sail away from Grand Cayman around 5 pm and head tomorrow toward Cartagena, Colombia, which we reach after a full day at sea (and yet another formal dinner!).  We will tour the Old Town of Cartagena that morning.  This will be our first time to Colombia; very exciting!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

January 20 -21 Just Pix

Waiting for People to relax
Steve Sail Away
Oasis of the Sea
Classical Music

At Sea & Port Everglades January 20-21

All I can say is that the internet is miserably slow, there are a lot of people wanting to use it and then my learning curve on what is the best way to do the blog without using up all my internet time in one session is going to prevent me from making daily updates to this blog.….just wanting to manage expectations.  We aren’t sure about this satellite internet….maybe they are trying to connect with Sputnik?!  We haven’t had connectivity since noon today.

Yesterday, continued sailing along the coastline of the USA to Florida on very calm seas.  The ship stays far enough away from land to let you believe you are far out at sea.  The body of water alongside the coast of the Carolina’s is called the Sargasso Sea.  There is sea grass floating on top of the water.  Also, the Gulf Stream current meets the Atlantic Ocean while heading south and the Gulf Stream is heading north, noticeably slowing down the ship.

Today the ship pulled into Port Everglades (by Ft. Lauderdale, FL) early morning along with at least 7 Cruise ships and several container ships.  The announcement this morning mentions that this is a major fueling stop….must be why so many ships are here for the day.

This is not a new port to us so we are just staying on board, enjoying the ship with fewer people.  And you can watch the crew doing maintenance everywhere.  A server at lunch tells us that the Oasis of the Seas (docked next to us) is the largest cruise ship at sea with 6,000 passengers.  The Queen Elizabeth is just over 2,000 passengers.    

We have met passengers on this ship from all over and traveling to all over the world.  There are people who actually boarded in Hamburg and are disembarking in Florida.  There are others who are getting off in San Francisco; some will be on the Queen Elizabeth until Sydney and then change to the Queen Mary 2 to travel to Japan and others who will get on in Florida, San Francisco and Sydney.  For some people this is their second or more World Cruise. What way to travel without flying!

There are plenty of activities onboard the ship to keep you busy all day if you choose: classes and lectures, music and games, entertainment and casino, exercise or sleep.  With the weather warming up since leaving NYC, walking the promenade deck is an option or even sleeping in a deck chair.  Activities for us include:  exercising in the gym, classical music concert, evening shows and a lecture on Captain Morgan and the Battle for the Caribbean (avast!).  The flutist on board is absolutely outstanding - Gillian Poznansky – she’s accompanied by Mark Tanner on piano.  The lecturer, Richard Cowley, made Captain Morgan’s story quite interesting with how he won over the Caribbean from the Spaniards.  Both Gillian Poznansky and Richard Cowley are on the ship until San Francisco.  Tonight, Tian Jiang (world renowned pianist) will be playing in the Royal Court Theatre.

Some of you may be curious about our unpacking.  Everything fit into our room’s closets and/or under our bed in our suitcases – a pleasant surprise.  There has been only one semi-formal evening.  Tomorrow the ship will be at sea and there will be the Cunard Ball – our first formal attire evening.

A few musings—Not many disabled wandering around, only a few people that we have seen in wheelchairs.  Norovirus advisory letter in our room, who has it?  The crew? Why are they serving the food, shouldn’t we be handing it to them?  Someone tells us that they weigh themselves in every port so they know whether or not they need to curtail their food and drink when the ship is at sea.  Sounds like a good idea!  Guess this explains why the gym is always crowded on cruise ships.

There have been some changes to our future excursions – no Napa Valley tour in San Francisco (don’t know why exactly) and the evening at the Opera in Sydney was changed to the second night because of a Cunard World Passenger Gala/Ball at the Sydney TownHall.  We are told by some friends who have done the world cruises before that the dinner in Sydney is not to be missed.  Something exciting ahead…….

The ship will sail away today around 5 pm and head to sea for one day.  Then we arrive in Georgetown, Grand Cayman.  See you there!

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Day 1 Pictures


Queen Elizabeth NYC
Upper Pool Deck


Safety Drill
At Dinner Day 1

On Board and At Sea Day 1

Our trip to New York and then on to the ship went very smooth.  Thank you Fred & Geri for taking us to the Tampa Airport.  We arrived, checked into the Waldorf Astoria and then met Lesley & Mike at the Bull & Bear before heading to Ciano’s for a delicious dinner.  Next morning, a walk to the Discovery Museum to see the Dead Sea Scrolls Exhibit.  This exhibit is definitely worth a visit.  Afterwards, walked through Times Square, along Fifth Avenue and then to hotel to board the shuttle bus to Pier 90 at 50th & 10th where the Queen Elizabeth was waiting.

Once onboard, the first day is busy.  A safety drill, luggage arrives and unpacking starts and finally a lovely dinner.

Now, Day 1, we are at sea; cruising along the East Coast of the USA.  As I write this, we are sailing just across from North Carolina, ships speed 14.5 knots, temperature outside is 45 and it’s sunny.  We’ve enjoyed a breakfast, lunch and a workout in the gym already.  We are still familiarizing ourselves with the ships layout.  Queen Elizabeth is a smaller ship than the Queen Mary 2 and yet we are still getting our sea bearings – aft or starboard – where is the theatre, where are the shops, where is the restaurant and where is our room?  We are in state room 8126, on the port side, and have a verandah.  Right now, we are heading south so we awake to the sunrise.

Later today we are going to a classical concert and relaxing before a semi-formal dinner.  We’ve met some interesting people.  Some are just doing the New York to San Francisco segment of the cruise and some are doing the world.  Several are on their second or more world cruise.  HHMMMM, sounds like this could become addictive!

P.S. The internet is VERY slow --am having a problem loading pictures.  I will load some later......

Monday, January 16, 2012

Almost on Board!

Last night we had a delicious dinner at Pattigeorges and knew immediately why we enjoy cruising.....This was the view from our table!  And now you know why we love Longboat Key!

Tomorrow we fly to New York to have dinner at Ciano with Lesley and Mike.  Wednesday we board the Queen Elizabeth.  Here is a website that shows the ship's location in the World along with the itinerary.


Our trip blogging starts soon~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Bags on their way!

Our bags just left the house and are on their way to the Queen Elizabeth!  The FedEX driver said he has in the past picked up luggage from a couple in Venice who shipped 8 bags.  Only 4 bags are leaving here.  We depart next Tuesday!

Bags waiting for FedEX