Bermuda
July 21, 2017
86 F, Sunny and humid
Finally! WiFi! Bermuda is not a wifi friendly island, but this morning we are enjoying a scoop of freshly made ice cream at Alex and Pete's at the Dockyard with free wifi for 30 minutes. The weather has been great and we are enjoying our stay.
Right now my view is t he British dockyards which were last used for military purposes in as a staging area for the British in World War II. The buildings are made of stone blocks, some covered with moss. The buildings directly in front of me look like barracks. Now they are being used for stores and bike rentals, etc.
Friday, July 21, 2017
LET’S TRY SHOPPING IN BERMUDA!
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Celebrity Summit / King’s Wharf
85 F and humid/sunny
More about Bermuda: those 67,000 residents live within 20.75 square miles, making it the 3rd most densely populated place on Earth. Monaco is first, followed by Singapore. It’s the 5th smallest country in the world, after Vatican City, Monaco, Nauru, and Tuvalu (the last two are located in the South Pacific).
We did not make connections with our friends this morning, so we took the 20 minute ferry to Hamilton. Talk about upscale. Longchamps, Lili Bermuda perfume, the gold, the silver, everything one could want is here. Julie was not kidding when she told us that items were expensive in Bermuda. Tom’s Deodorant was $10.25/regular sized roll on, the small Pringles can was $3.25 ($1 in Erie).
We strolled a park, found out how to cross streets (left side driving confuses me when crossing streets) paid $5.50 for one small bowl of ice cream, looked at pink sand jewelry, and could not access the free Internet. Brown & Co. department store was charming. Shepherd’s Pie at The Hog and Penny Pub was $26.00 and a burger was $21.00. If we thought wifi was reliable there, we would have eaten there, but everyone says the wifi is bad everywhere on the island.
After 4 ½ hours of exploring Hamilton, we got on the Ferry headed for the Royal Naval Dockyard and our ship. The ride was smooth. Today the clouds are fluffy white and do not block the glorious sun. The sea is azure and gentle.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO TK IN BERMUDA! CAVES AND ONIONS AND BIRTHDAYS
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Celebrity Summit / King’s Wharf
85 F and humid/sunny
Tim celebrated a birthday today! By about 9:15 a.m. all fourteen of us were boarding a Winsome bus with our driver and guide, Julie, for a tour of Bermuda.
First discovered by the Spanish in 1511, Bermuda has a population of 67,000 people and we learned that they have strict limits on immigrants. The island is much like islands in the Caribbean, but we are in the Atlantic Ocean. It is coral based with white sand. The island was first settled by the English in 1609 (the Spanish only returned once in those 100 years).
Water is at a premium and if one runs low on water, it can be purchased from the government for $90/1000 gallons. Julie’s water comes from a well, but it is partially salt water. Occasionally she has to buy water.
The average house is $1.2 million, gas is $9/gallon, and bread is $9/loaf. She owns the 14 passenger van and said it cost $100 diesel to fill. Some say Bermuda is the most expensive place to live in the world. She paid $350,000 for her home and it is now worth $1 million ---it seemed like the situation in California.
She also mentioned that they dread hurricanes—because Bermuda is on the Atlantic it can get hit quite hard. She also made a comment on how climate change is affecting the island.
Mayor Bloomberg and Ross Perot own multimillion dollar homes here, as the President’s son. Steven Spielberg keeps his yacht in Bermuda. As we traveled we observed huge mansion-estates, immaculate golf courses, red hibiscus, red, pink, lavender, and peach oleander, and native cedar. In one area the coral reefs go out 10 miles (I was not clear how much of the island this applies to), which is why there were so many shipwrecks (over 300) over the years.
Our first stop was Crystal Caves near Hamilton. We had a very knowledgeable and animated guide! After a very steep walk, we came to “floating pontoon pathways that span a large 55 feet deep azure blue underground lake.” The size of the beautiful stalactites varied from pencil thin to the size of tree trunks. One stalactite under water the “Lighthouse”) looked about 5 feet tall but was really 14 feet tall according to our guide. The top of the water is potable, but a few feet down it is salt water.
Inside Crystal Cave
The next stop was the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo. Highlights included creatures of the Sargasso Sea like the HUGE spiny lobsters, the colorful fishes, the biggest tortoise that I had ever seen (eating loads of lettuce), the flamingos, and the sea anemones.
We had lunch at Swizzle Inn in Warwick. Most had the fish sandwich, but I had Southern chicken, the freshest chicken, probably without antibacterial injections, very tasty. Some tried the trademark Rum Swizzle.
One of my favorite spots was a sea glass beach. What a glorious sight! We were allowed to collect sea glass here and what a bonanza it was! Three different greens, frosted, amber, and white glass covered the beach. Everyone got into collecting the glass, but we were conservative.
Glorious "sea glass" on the beach!!
Our last stop was St. George. In February 2017 there was an article in Victoria magazine about the Bermuda Perfumery, now owned by Isabelle Ramsay-Brackstone. I had the magazine article and recognized Isabelle and had my photo taken with her! She told me that when Victoria people visited it was a bad hair day for her. The scents were heavenly!
We also got a quick view of St. George Anglican Church, the oldest Anglican church in continuous use outside the British Isles.
On the hour ride back to the ship, Julie filled us in about Bermuda. In the 1700s the industries were shipbuilding and whaling. They transitioned to being pirates and privateers, then agriculture, including the Bermuda Onion! Tourism became a big industry, but now International Affairs and “Re-Insurance” are the money makers. Greg explained re-insurance, but I wasn’t completely clear—sounds somewhat like the housing bubble that collapsed the market before 2010.
We noticed that the Bermudans take great pride in their island and keep it very, very clean. We passed over the world’s smallest drawbridge (and it is in the Guinness Book of World Records) and shortly we were back at the ship, hot and thirsty.
At dinner Tim was given a birthday cake with candles and we all sang “Happy Birthday” to him!
AT SEA / TRIVIA GAMES AND ART AUCTIONS
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Celebrity Summit
80s F and slightly humid/sunny, smooth seas
Today was another gorgeous day. Room service sure rocks! We set our clocks forward an hour, but remembered to order our breakfast (croissants, coffee, and Danish) a little later.
We met Judy and Camille at the Rendezvous Lounge for Trivia. With 15 questions like: How many bones are in the human body (206)? How many acres in a square mile (640 acres)? Napoleon, Early River, and Morello are kinds of what fruit (cherries)? and What was Disney’s first full length animated film (Snow White)?, we did not do very well. We had 6 correct out of 15. The winner had 7 correct!
At 1:30 p.m. we headed to the Art Auction. A lot of Peter Max. After the auctioneer said that there would be 60 pieces of artwork offered in 60 minutes and then placed two frames on easels with the back to us and asked us to “bid” without seeing to make it more fun, I decided that I had seen enough. Seriously?
After dinner Judy, Camille, and I went to the Celebrity Theater to see Jason Neistadt, an impressionist who performed as Jack Nicholson, Sean Connery, Michael Jackson, Elvis, Forrest Gump, and Johnny Carson, etc. This was the best act on the ship so far.
CELEBRITY SUMMIT BECKONS FROM BAYONNE, NJ!
Sunday, Monday, July 16-17, 2017
At Sea/Celebrity Summit
80s F and slightly humid/sunny, rain briefly
on Monday morning, smooth seas
Sunday
On
Sunday morning we reserved the shuttle for the port. At the Airport Ramada
everyone else was headed to airport, so we had an easy ride to the Port all by
ourselves! After easily going through security (TK did have to hand over the
extension cord for his CPAP machine with the promise of its return when we
leave the ship and that our stateroom steward would give us one) and checking
in, we were on board the Summit.
We
already knew that good friend Judy (from Florida, formerly of Nebraska) was
delayed at the Jacksonville airport-the plane’s battery was dead and either
another plane or a battery needed to be flown in. Communicating through texts,
we knew this could be a difficult situation!
The ship
is beautifully appointed, but not that much different than any other cruise
line that we use. Lunch was available in
the Cosmopolitan Dining Room so we went there after we found Cindy and Greg in
the lounge for those who have suites.
By 1
p.m. we were in our stateroom #8134 and by 3:15 we were experiencing the
required safety drills. After reading Dead Wake recently, a book about
Cunard Line’s Lusitania and its sinking in 1915, I knew there was a time when
safety drills were not done at all on ships. I think I paid more attention than
usual.
At 6:30
we all gathered for dinner—our group now numbers 14! Originally, the group was
Cindy, Greg, their daughter Jennifer and Dustin and their children Ben (9 years
old) and Sarah (a junior in HS), Judy, Camille (Cindy’s Maid of Honor), TK, and
I, BUT their other daughter Sue, her husband Richard, and their children Max (10)
and Ethan (12) surprised them by coming too! Cindy really wanted us to sit
together as one family, so the dining room servers accommodated us.
Lots of
conversation and remembrance mixed with prime rib, escargots, salmon, chocolate
cake, and apple pie. Let me mention, those three boys are very, very big eaters
with lots and lots of energy!
The
Comedy Show was nothing to write about and everyone was tired.
Monday
If only
we could get room service with croissants, Danish, coffee, juice, and an
omelette at home!! I love waking up to that!
At the
Cruise Critic Meet Up, we met the Captain, Alex Papadopoulos-Greece, and other
officers. Notably, Hotel Director Danuta Nosidlak (Poland), has four stripes,
equal with the Captain. One does not see such high ranking female officers on
cruise ships.
At 10:30
we took the galley tour, one of my favorite things to do. Things I learned,
things I saw on the Summit:
·
The executive chef is Singh Deoraj who was born
in Guyana. His signature dish is lobster.
·
There are 700 food and beverage crew aboard the
ship who either work in the bar, the restaurant, or in the 11 galleys. They
work every single day, ten hours a day, broken up into 7 hours and 3 hours or
six hours and four hours. A crew member has a contract for 4 months, with 2
months off. There are 53 different nationalities in the food and beverage crew!
·
Forty thousand meals a day are prepared on board.
One hundred fifty chefs work as a team in the galleys: areas include pastry
shop, bakery, main galley, crew galley, prep rooms for butchers and fish
preparers, pantry, and sushi cook.
·
Public health regulations are followed and every
morsel of food is accounted for. Leftover food and related items are ground up
for fertilizer (I believe the Chef said it is returned to the U.S. port of
call).
·
I always love the statistics-here are a few
consumption figures for a week: 6 tons of beef; 1 ton of pork; 1965 pounds of
turkey; ½ ton of sausage; 11 tons of fresh vegetables; 15 tons of fresh fruit;
3621 pounds of chicken; 3.5 tons of potatoes; two tons of rice; 3000 tea bags;
4 tons of fish; 1125 pounds of coffee; 3500 pounds of sugar; 9000 liters of
beer; 9225 bottles of wine.
After
the brief talk and a ride down the escalator, we toured the spotless galleys in
groups.
·
Juicy, sizzling burgers on a grille
·
Shiny stainless steel everywhere
·
Huge bin of large capped mushrooms
·
Cold galley: delicately slicing tomatoes; loads
of lettuce
·
Breadsticks were being rolled in the pastry
galley
·
Full, clear kitchen bags filled with flour; 8
quarts of butter in a tub
·
Slicing cantaloupes
·
Carefully icing cakes with a flourish
From the
galley we went through the Tuscan Restaurant galley with fresh pasta of all
lengths, and widths drying. The pasta machine was about 2 ½ by 3 feet in size.
There were tubs of ricotta. Everything smelled good! Now if only I could cook!
Judy,
Camille, and I had lunch in the dining room, then spent a good part of the day
reading at the Spa Pool area with Tim.
We fourteen mixed it up at dinner and I sat by Cindy and Greg’s
daughter, Susan, who sailed on a schooner out of Woods Hole for six weeks, not
only as a part of college, but as crew.
She was a biology major and now works for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. We compared notes about our experiences aboard the two masted U.S.
Brig Niagara and the schooner, _________________.
The
ship’s professional singers and dancers provided entertainment, but we were
late after dinner and there were no seats.
Please note: The
purpose of this blog is to help remember day to day, as well as to keep in
touch with friends and family. I try not to be mundane and describe every
little thing we do, believe it or not!
We need to get a U.S. National Parks pass—we lost the ones we purchased
at El Morro in Puerto Rico.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
REMEMBERING 9 11 2001 IN NEW YORK CITY
Saturday, July 15,
2017
Ramada
Inn/Newark Airport
Newark,
New Jersey
80sF and
slightly humid/sunny
Tim
drove quite easily from the DoubleTree to the Liberty Port area so we could
catch a ferry to Liberty Landing Marina in Jersey City, New Jersey to Greenwich
Street, New York City. The ferry ride was smooth and the port area/park was
refreshing.
We saw the Statue of Liberty in the distance
We could see the World Trade Center and other skyscrapers,
including the Empire State Building. We
thought this park was a good spot to place B2’s rock that she painted for “Rock
Out Erie” after a quick photo with it.
A beautiful rock for ROCK OUT ERIE! Thank you, B2 and B1!
From
there we walked through an exclusive mall (Brookfield Place) into another exclusive
mall to get to the reflective pools and stunning waterfalls that are in the
center of the memorial walls where each person killed that day, whether in NYC,
Shanksville, or the Pentagon, is honored.
9 11 Reflective Pool-Oculus in background with skyscrapers
Tim and the Reflective Pool
I knew this was going to be an
emotional day for both of us. There was a fairly long line to enter the museum
(10:30 a.m.), but it moved fast. The
museum was cleanly designed on part of the footprint of the original World
Trade Center. When one goes deep within the complex, the footers of the
original are visible.
Footer of one of the original World Trade Center buidlings--note the photo of the
two tallest buildings in the back of this image
Tortured, twisted steel columns stand firm, columns that
once supported the structure along with others. The museum was quiet,
occasionally we heard the sound of a bugle and Taps. The memorial area inside
the museum helped tell the individual story the victims of the 9 11 tragedy
with artifacts and video of people speaking of their loved ones. It was
difficult to see Ladder 3, a firetruck that was crumpled when one of the towers
fell.
Ladder 3
Artwork in the museum
In June
2001, Tim and a few other firefighters from Erie travelled to New York to
attend the funerals of three firefighters who were killed in a Father’s Day
fire. At that time they met a Gannon University graduate who was an FDNY
firefighter in Harlem. He invited Tim and the others to his firehouse in Harlem
and they struck up a friendship. When 9
11 occurred, the Erie Firefighters contacted their friend, who survived, but he
asked the Erie men to return for funerals if possible as there were so many services
and their presence would help honor those firefighters who perished. Tim and
few others did return to NYC twice to attend the ceremonies in September and
October. Firefighters honor their fallen
“brothers and sisters.”
We
viewed the museum with hundreds of others of all ages and everyone was very,
very respectful. A friendly docent told us about the “Survivor Tree,” a pear
tree that stood in the landscape of the World Trade Center and survived 9 11. According
to him, “The
tree endured the September 11, 2001 terror attacks at the World Trade Center,
although it was severely damaged, with snapped roots and burned and broken
branches. The tree was removed from the rubble and placed in the care of the
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. After its recovery and
rehabilitation, the tree was returned to the Memorial in 2010. New, smooth
limbs extended from the gnarled stumps, creating a visible demarcation between
the tree’s past and present. Today the tree stands as a living reminder of
resilience, survival and rebirth.”
After three hours in
the museum (we probably spent more time than most people), we went to Engine
House 10 across the street where Tim was invited and he purchased two FDNY
t-shirts for him and another Erie firefighter. Shortly after, this firehouse
had a call about a block away, probably syncope.
Engine 10 Ladder 10 Firehouse
We walked to a
nearby subway station and started an adventure of another kind. A friendly lady
helped us purchase tickets (there is a dearth of signs—I like maps, directions,
information about cost, etc. I guess in NYC that is too much information. I also figured out that I do not like
standing near those tracks. Scenes from the first or second season of House of Cards came to mind. We ended
up following two couples from Missouri onto a train and off we went. They said
to follow them! On the train I observed a few interesting things, like a new
way to apply eyeliner. I did ask myself why some of the riders bothered to wear
clothes. We did get to Times Square, where we wanted to go. That is when I discovered that the scantily
clad girls on the subway were perhaps overdressed because it wasn’t long before
we saw three girls with virtually no clothes. People who paint their bodies and
pretend that is clothing are sort of mistaken. Ah, New Yorkers!
As tourists, we felt
very comfortable going into a Starbucks and buying an NYC mug in Times Square. There
is so much to see and so much going on in these few city blocks, it is almost overwhelming.
Lights, theaters, video screens, buses, cars, taxis, police, sirens, hundreds
of people, so hard to focus. And I kept thinking, ‘I need to be aware of my
surroundings.’
And no one would
follow us around to find gourmet restaurants. Bubba Gump had fine fried shrimp
and hush puppies. I have to eat conservatively anyway and I have said before
simple food does not affect my stomach. We sat on the 2nd floor
across from the ABC TV studios and watched the headlines scroll along. Right next to that screen another screen
announced that yesterday “A city that caught 16,618,878 Pokemon yesterday must
be one swell city.”
We decided we better head back to the port. This time I
found a map in the station, figured out that we needed to follow the R-Yellow
line, and I knew we needed to get off at Cortlandt/9 11 Memorial. Now I felt in
control and knew what I was doing. No need to follow other tourists blindly!
Our ferry soon
arrived—we had spent seven hours in the city—and before we knew it we were back
at the car. Tim very good at remembering directions, but we had just a little
snag when exiting the thruway and so we had a very personal tour of Newark. It
was not long before we found the Ramada and checked in. A great and memorable
day in NYC with my hero.
TK’s Takes: While waiting for the subway train back to
the port, Tim discovered that the train tracks were full of rats. We both were
able to take photos of the creatures scurrying around, including the young
ones. Tim was thinking of the TV series that starts again this weekend, The
Strain. I don’t think there are vampires in NYC, but there sure are
rats.
Check this out!
MJ’s Notes: I loved the quotation in the museum, “No one
shall erase you from the memory of time.” ----Virgil
I bought a t-shirt
with that quote.
We will board the Celebrity Summit tomorrow about 10 a.m. I will not have wifi until Tuesday. I will try to access wifi in Bermuda.
We will board the Celebrity Summit tomorrow about 10 a.m. I will not have wifi until Tuesday. I will try to access wifi in Bermuda.
World Trade Center today-the tallest building
We will never forget.
343
Friday, July 14, 2017
A BERMUDA ADVENTURE BEGINS AND NEW JERSEY'S ODD WELCOME
July 14,
2017 / 80F
Bastille
Day!
DoubleTree
by Hilton/Newark Airport
Newark,
New Jersey
Because dear friends from Connecticut wanted to cruise to
Bermuda starting on July 16th to celebrate their 50th Wedding
Anniversary and 70th birthdays, they invited us to travel with the.
I have known them since 1967 when we studied in France together. Another
schoolmate, originally from Nebraska, is also joining us. We have remained
close and this chance to travel together again sure sounds fun. Cindy, Greg,
Judy, and I enjoyed the French Riviera, including Nice and Monte Carlo, with
two American soldiers a long time ago. Now Bermuda beckons, Cindy and Greg’s
honeymoon location. Tim and I have never been to Bermuda, nor have we cruised
on Celebrity, and we are always game for another adventure!
Thank goodness Tim is a travel planner second to none. He was
packed and ready to go a day or so ago. This time I packed on the fly - not a
good idea. I did have a list, but it was not very well thought out. I packed
“stuff” for my hair, teeth, and face, but forgot to wash clothes I had planned
on packing until last night. Wet clothes do not pack well.
I think one gets the picture here. The bottom line is I did
get packed and was ready at takeoff time today, 11:00 a.m. Directions for plant
watering for Brian and B1, a few emails regarding publicity for the Erie City
Garden Tour and ESGR 45th Banquet, remembering all the technology
and the chargers, and we were off…at 11:09!
I knew that we were taking my car this time, but I did not
know that I was going to be driving. I had my magazines, a good book, and my
USA Today crossword puzzles, but Tim was already in the passenger seat. I
forgot to tell him that if I was going to drive he would have to be silent. hahaha
Today was a sunny day, a little humid, but I-79 was dry and
not too crowded. I believe in going 7 miles over the speed limit. Tim does not.
Oh well. For the first easy 100 miles he did keep quiet and he was playing with
the controls of the new car and figuring some things out. He already had set
the GPS for our hotel in Newark.
I thought we were sharing the driving, but after about 200
miles, Tim told me to stop at a Pilot gas station—that had no gas pumps. On I
drove. We stopped at a rest stop in Pennsylvania on I-80 to eat our tuna
sandwiches on a clean picnic table. Tim, of course the excellent planner, made
these great sandwiches and packed the Diet Pepsi and water. I was still
driving. I-80 was getting busier and busier and Tim was getting more and more
vociferous. He did not like the stories on Radio Classics, my fall back plan
when we do not have audio books. He started having opinions about every driver.
I was fairly content at 7 mph above the speed limit when possible and whizzed
by two different police cars with radar guns. Finally, 4 ½ hours later, we
stopped for gas, successfully this time, and Tim said he would drive. I think
his patience was melting away with the miles.
I settled in to read my never yet read Oprah magazines and
paid no attention to his driving. By the time we got to New Jersey we both
needed a rest area. He pulled into the first one in NJ. We got out of the car
only to see a sign on the window that it was closed—open from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Are they kidding? He spotted 4 porta-potties at the end of the parking lot, the
foulest smelling porta-potties that I have ever experienced. We had no choice.
I will not elaborate, but New Jersey did not make a good impression at this
rest stop.
With Tim’s skillful driving (eyeroll here), we got through
the heavy traffic and arrived at this night’s hotel. By the way, his driving
time was 1.5 hours. Our hotel for tomorrow night is next door. Tim’s super
planning using our hotel points and hotel packages meant that the hotel we are
staying in tomorrow night has very reasonable rates for parking our car for
seven days. The DoubleTree did not have reasonable parking rates, but we are
here on points tonight!
Tim’s plan is to catch the ferry to Liberty State
Park/Manhattan and into NYC tomorrow morning and we will spend the day there.
TK’s Takes: That rest stop! That was a welcome center too!
Ha! There was lots of traffic as we got closer to Newark.
MJ’s Notes: I will admit that Tim drives his truck skillfully
to Florida every January and then home again. He will not allow me to drive his
truck.
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
BERMUDA, HERE WE COME!
Yet again, we are preparing for a cruise!! We are leaving on Friday for New Jersey where we will catch a Celebrity Summit cruise--7 days with a three day layover in Bermuda! The exciting part is that we are joining friends who went to school with me in France in 1967-1968!! What fun we will have!
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