Thursday, March 12, 2009

Hiroshima, Japan






Friday, March 13 8:00 am (it is 5:00pm in Denver). We are approaching the port in Hiroshima - it is gray, foggy, and raining. COLD Part of our scheduled tour is a 2 mile walk… I’m debating whether to go…. I really want to ride the bullet train, but the walk doesn’t sound appealing.

Our weather was beautiful yesterday, cold (35F) early and about 50F at 1:00 when we returned to the ship but the sun was shining. Last night we cruised the Inland Sea which would have been great in the daylight with all the islands, boats and towns along the way.


There were 60 people on our tour and divided into two coaches so they weren’t full. We left the ship and went directly to the train station for our bullet train ride to Iwakuni to visit the Kintai Bridge and Samari houses. The train is fantastic - comfortable and quiet; no clacking along the rails. Our ride was only 20 minutes and there were many tunnels through the mountains. The speed was about 200MPH. Amtrak needs to go this way and maybe people will actually take trains again… I probably would.









In Iwakuni we had a short coach ride to the bridge which has three large curved spans and two smaller ones. The frame is built without nails. Very impressive. It was raining and the sky was very gray and foggy but I took a number of pictures - the umbrellas sort of added to the ambiance. We crossed the bridge and wandered a bit among some shops and houses and then returned to the bus to get out of the rain.

We then went to the Aki Grande Hotel for lunch. The lunch was completely laid out for us when we arrived and consisted of many different little dishes… kind of a taster meal. It was quite good. Jim even ate the sashimi… he said it was like fish flavored bubble gum. (He’s one of those that wants food cooked!)


After lunch we had a ride through the countryside back to Hiroshima and a stop at Peace Park for the A-bomb dome. There isn’t much that can be said about the dome; it is a silent reminder of the power of nuclear weapons. Then we went back to the ship. Good ship tour - I’ll give it an A. The weather was bad but so far we have been very lucky and our bad weather has pretty much been sea days.

Osaka, Japan

We got in line at 7:15 this morning for immigration and customs - it was already very long even though everyone had specific times to report. As I looked around us I saw people holding 8:00 and 7:45 time sheets… you know how that goes they feel they are so special they don’t need to wait for their time. Anyway, we got processed in plenty of time for Jim to grab a bite of breakfast and then we met the bus for our tour.

I hate to admit that I wasn’t listening too carefully to our guide in the bus, but I was fascinated just looking out the windows. But a couple facts I did pick up - the prefecture of Osaka has 8.8 million people; the city was virtually flattened in WWII. There are beautiful sky scrapers and many bridges. The road system is amazing in some areas there are stacks of 5 or maybe more roadways curving in all directions.

Our first stop was the Sumiyoshi Shrine. This Shinto Shrine is a Japanese Treasure. It was a wonderful place for photographs. It wasn’t too crowded and many of the people were not tourists; they were there to pray. I did quite a bit of “shoot from the hip” as I didn’t want to impose on their worship.


The other stop was at the Osaka Castle. I wish we were two weeks later… they cherry trees were just about to bloom; the buds were big but not quite ready to open. The castle itself is a museum and was rebuilt in 1931. It is exactly what you picture for a fairy tale Japanese castle; White with the dark green/black roof with the upswept corners and lots of gold trim and it is surrounded by a moat. What’s not to like there?? I’ve always wanted a moat around my house. The whole park area is huge and includes a baseball field, playground, band-shell and beautiful gardens and bridges.

We had a fair amount of time at both stops to wander and take the photos I wanted so I was pleased with the tours.

This is the Royal Princess’ maiden (inaugural) call in Osaka so there was a band playing on the pier as we arrived and there will be a ceremony at 5:00 for the presentation of the plaques with city and ship officials followed by a ninja show.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

At Sea

This is the last of our 3 sea days between Guam and Osaka, Japan. We filled out and returned (to the Purser) our immigration and Customs paperwork yesterday. We will report to the lounge tomorrow morning at 7:15 to be processed. This will include face to face interviews, photo and fingerprinting for all passengers. We will leave at about 8:00 for our morning tour.

Last night was really rough. It kept us awake until about 2:00 in the morning with the ship slamming into the waves and swells. It felt like the ship was slamming into a wall; each time there was a slam and then a ripple shudder through the ship. This is the first time in 30+ cruises that the sea has ever kept me awake! It is much better this morning, but we slept until 7:30 - our room service steward said he wondered what happened to us.

Congrats to the chef! Last night was formal night and we went to the dining room. I ordered the prawns and lobster for the first time in years… The lobster was perfect although about the same size as the prawns. I quit ordering it a long time back as it always seemed poor. There really is no way to cook that much seafood and expect it to be really good. Another benefit of the small ship!

Monday, March 9, 2009

Guam

Ben - See comments.

We were in Guam on Sunday. Our only plan was a trip to Kmart. The there was a free shuttle from the ship to the Duty Free mall in the Resort area of Tumon and then there were local shopping trolleys that you could hop to go to different malls and hotels. We decided to taxi from the ship to Kmart and then trolley to the DF mall. $50 for the taxi to Kmart - aaack!… but we got there fairly quickly and did our shopping. I now have undies with elastic, some scissors for hair trimming and a few other assorted things we had on the list including POTATO CHIPS. I’m all better now, my craving for chips is fixed!

This was a short port stop - only 5 hours. We were back in about 3 hours and the air conditioning felt good. At 5:00 a group of local children boarded and did local folkloric dances. They were very good


Monday was another of the laid back sea days for us. We didn’t do anything of note except attending one of John’s lectures on the Normandy (the ship, not invasion as some of the passengers were expecting).
The temperature in Guam and Rabual was near 90 with very high humidity. Hot, Hot, Hot. We are now headed northwest to Japan and it is noticeably cooling - temps there will probably be near 45. They we head to China where it is very cold. The temps we have been seeing for Beijing are in the 30s.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Rabaul, Papua New Guinea




This was the best stop so far. Rabaul has been a German, Australian and Japanese possession. It is best known as the huge Japanese base during WWII. It included 5 airfields, a seaplane and submarine base and support facilities for up to 100 ships with 200,000 personnel. To escape the Allied air attacks the Japanese dug hundreds of tunnels in the surrounding mountains.

It is also in the Ring of Fire, the harbor area is actually a caldera formed 1400 years ago… the last major eruption in 1994 buried the town and surrounding area in 8 feet of ash. The people escaped, but returned a few days later to find only the tops of the tallest structures visible. Most people relocated to Kokopo, a town further around the coast from the volcano, but some remained and have dug out some of the buildings or built new ones on top of the ash. Prior to the eruption, this was a large thriving town and tourist center; today it is quite primitive.

We booked a private van at the market; Helen was our guide and Richard our driver. They were both completely bilingual as both English and their native language are taught in the schools. They took us to the island (separated from the mainland by a sandbar which we were able to drive across) where she lived prior to 1994. Nothing will grow in the ash so the people that are trying to live there make their slim living by fishing. The houses were ramshackle, built of whatever could be gathered. It was heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time; the people were so friendly and the kids very cute and shy.

They also took us to the tunnels built by the Japanese and we were able to go into a couple of them and we visited the site of a Japanese airfield. One aircraft has been dug out of the ash (WWII - over 60 years ago). After that we went to the earthquake monitoring center on the mountain above the town.

They only get 6 cruise ships in a year, so our visit was one of the real exceptions to their daily routines. After our return we spent the time on the balcony watching the volcano and some of the local people circling the ship in their dubout canoes until our departure at 2:00 (short port stop!).

Today (Friday, March 6) is the Equator crossing ceremony for the new pollywogs onboard. Jim and I became shellbacks when we crossed the equator some weeks ago and “Golden Shellbacks” when we crossed the dateline on the same voyage. Wow, aren’t you impressed??

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

  • Let’s start with Superb:
  • The breads, pastries and desserts; the best I’ve ever had. I have never had a great sweet-tooth but I am eating so many of the desserts I might actually gain some weight. (In my case that is a good thing).
  • The best desserts are actually in the buffet at lunch time (on sea days). They have a whole table of beautifully presented desserts to choose from.
  • John Maxtone Graham’s lectures. He is truly the best speaker I think I’ve ever heard. We have really enjoyed getting to know them better.
  • The library. I have been getting a new book almost every other day - there are 4000 to choose from and it is a beautiful room with comfortable furniture too.
  • Brunch. It is beautifully presented and has a great choice of breakfast and lunch foods and, of course, the desserts.

Good: Most everything.

  • The ship is very clean and our steward keeps our room in good shape.
  • Morning room service arrives in 5 to 10 minutes each day.
  • Food is good with a couple meals even better.
  • Entertainment. We haven’t seen many of the evening shows, but the reports from others are that they are quite good. The daytime activities are good and we have attended a number of them ranging from trivia to lectures.
  • Ship staff. Since this is such a small ship, the crew and staff have to perform many extra duties; the dancers also act for the cruise director hosting things like trivia and meetings.
  • Passengers - almost all are very friendly and well-traveled. Many of them have done long cruises like this before. People are willing to share ideas and experiences. This is not a ‘beautiful people’ cruise and other than formal evenings dress is extremely casual (perhaps too casual as in the very large ladies in the tiny bikinis at the pool each day - oh, perhaps that should be below in the section below).


The Bad:

  • The bed. Even though Princess is supposed to have replaced all the bedding on all the ships the mattress is bad. We have a 2 inch foam topper and it now feels like foam on concrete. The linens are nice.
  • $60 for a haircut. I went up to the salon for a haircut expecting $30 which was what I paid for my last onboard haircut (different cruise line). I about fell over when she said it was $60. Since I have really short hair right now I thought that it was ridiculous but since I had already been cut I was stuck (lesson: ask first). I’ll just get shaggy from now to the end, or trim with nail scissors.
  • Our room steward’s attitude. He keeps the room nice and clean, but he is the surliest person we have ever met on any ship. He acts as if he hates his job.
  • The chairs in the Cabaret Lounge. They are really back-killers and because of their barrel shape you can’t curl up at all to get comfortable. It isn’t just my complaint - everyone agrees.
  • The laundry. It’s hard to complain when we have free laundry service (elite benefit) but they are ruining much of what we have sent. T-shirts come back stretched several sizes larger and the elastic is completely stretched out on all my undies.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Great Barrier Reef

We docked yesterday morning right near the city center of Cairns, Australia. It is a large city, but has no high-rise buildings.

At 8:00 we went directly from our ship onto the Reef Magic catamaran for the 90 minute trip to the reef. The boat was really big with air conditioned / enclosed upper and lower decks as well as some outside areas. Jim decided he would do the Resort Dive Course (for first time divers) and took part of the instruction while we were heading to the reef. The Reef Magic platform at the reef is huge - there was plenty of room for everyone without any crowding. They provided snorkel equipment free and also rides in a semi-submersible sub. Diving cost extra. There were also helicopter rides (for a considerable fee) which we passed. A buffet lunch was also provided.

I wasn’t sure how my legs/pelvis/back would hold up to using fins so I stayed pretty close to the platform and did quite well. There were many many bright colored fish of all sizes. I followed one bright blue parrot fish for quite a while as he swam through the reef in search of nibbles. I couldn’t see what he was eating, but he seemed to find plenty of it. There was much coral right near the platform. We were lucky here that we took the ship excursion as we heard from some others that had booked private excursions that the coral was way too deep to see and that there were almost no fish.

Jim made it through his first dive and was exhausted and very pleased with himself. They put him and one other lady in the last class as neither of them were good swimmers and had no experience diving. He said he loved seeing everything but didn’t feel like he could relax at all. We bought a picture of him with Wally; a huge blue Maori fish that is very friendly. I got to pat Roxie, a smaller Maori that was in the snorkeling area. I assumed that the guides fed these fish to bring them in, but they said no - since it is a protected area they don’t feed them at all except in a special “feeding” (right before we left) and the food type (all fish) is strictly controlled - no scraps. The Maori fish just like people and come to socialize. They have to realize that they are pretty much the stars! It was as much fun to watch the people as the fish as the fish would rub up against you and nudge you if you didn’t pay attention to it. I wish I could post the picture of Jim and the fish, but it is hard copy and I don‘t have access to a scanner. It will be in the slideshow video we will post a couple weeks after the trip. There will be a link from the Luxury Cruise & Travel website.

We ate a sandwich supper right after getting back on the ship and had a cocktail on the balcony as we left Cairns. Then I hit the bed completely pooped out.

This evening we will have dinner with John and Mary Maxtone Graham. We realized that they will be off the ship in Hong Kong when we return from our overland tour to the Great Wall in a couple weeks.
We have two sea days before Rabaul.