The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 6 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part Six

February 7 (Tuesday, Day 11, Grand Turk, Turks and Caicos) –

We woke up at 7:30 AM and waited for our pre-ordered room service breakfast. We had ordered it to be delivered from between 7:30 and 8 AM. The other time it was delivered at the beginning of the time period so we were kind of counting on that since we were going to meet Judy at 8:15 AM. Breakfast finally came at 7:55 AM and the server brought it in and looked at Snookums and said, “You need to write your room number on the order form.” Snookums then pointed to Pat and said, “She filled it out.” Mystery solved! When Pat filled out the room service breakfast form last night she neglected to fill in the room number. She did, however, write down the last name so the kitchen was able to look that up and find us. Whew!

Grand Turk shoreline
Grand Turk lane
Grand Turk house

Judy came to our room at 8:15 AM and the three of us walked off the ship in order to find a taxi. It was mostly sunny. Grand Turk is an island that is around seven miles long by two miles wide – small! We paid $5 each to take a taxi three miles to Blue Water Divers for our 9 AM snorkel that cost $50 per person for a minimum of four people and a maximum of twelve people. We didn’t end up getting on the snorkel boat until around 10:30 since two other people were supposed to join us from the Westerdam but that ship had a medical emergency and had to drop a woman off at San Salvador. (San Salvador doesn’t have a hospital but it does have an airport which the woman was going to use.) We finally left with just the three of us and our Jamaican dive master.

The first site was in shallower water (depths of less than 10 feet) and we were able to see the reef and marine life up close. It was mostly cloudy by now but every now and then the sun would shine. Snookums saw a turquoise blue and brown spotted triangular fish that she had never seen before and that was neat. Snookums got cold the soonest and headed back to the boat with Pat at her heels. Judy saw those two and got back on the boat, too, but wasn’t cold. Then we went to the second snorkel site which was along the famous Grand Turk “wall”. The wall is actually a coral reef drop-off that begins in depths of 25-30 feet and plunges to depths of over 7,000 feet. It was interesting to see the nothingness when we were snorkeling over the deep water and it was neat to see fish swimming in the middle of the nothingness about eight or ten feet from the surface of the water with nothing else around them. We all got back on the boat after just a few minutes since Pat really couldn’t see anything (she wears glasses) and Snookums was cold again. Our dive master wanted to make sure we were done since we still had 58 minutes of time left, but we assured him we were all good. Then he took us to a site that had a large number of bigger fish that have been trained to feed on sand thrown in the water. (Other dive shops actually throw food in the water but Blue Water Divers doesn’t believe in doing that and the fish think the sand is food and still come towards it.) Snookums and Judy both got in again, minus fins, to just “be” with all the fish. Our dive master told us that sometimes the fish nip at people, but we didn’t experience that.

Turquoise and brown fish
Fan coral and little yellow fish
Among the fish “eating” sand
Pat and Judy snorkeling
The three snorkelers

We took a taxi back to the port and stopped at Effy for the ½ carat topaz pendant and at Diamonds International for the sea horse charm. We dropped off our stuff and then went straight to Lido for a quick lunch.

Snookums returned to the port for the free WiFi outside of “Indigo” and Judy also returned to the port with Dad, in his scooter, joining her. Snookums got both pieces of free jewelry again while Judy only bothered to get the free Diamonds International seahorse charm. We looked at the John Glenn display since he splashed down near Grand Turk and spent a few days at Grand Turk after his mission was completed.

Dad and Judy at the John Glenn exhibit
Judy, Dad and Snookums in front of the two HAL ships

After Snookums returned to the ship she rinsed out all of the snorkel gear and then enjoyed eating a large plate of watermelon. The ship left 30 minutes late but she didn’t care since she was enjoying the sunny verandah since the clouds were no longer around.

Dinner was interesting since Pat’s mahi mahi was “lost” and ended up being served at least ten minutes after everyone else’s entrée. The waiter and his assistant kept apologizing for the lost order as did the assistant maître ‘d. We didn’t care, but couldn’t figure out what happened and in Snookums’s 224 days of cruising with Holland America, she had never seen this before.

After dinner Snookums had a voice mail and letter about the comment card she filled out at the end of the first seven-day cruise. She had commented about the lack of hard ice cream flavors with “things” in them since Lido seems to just serve chocolate, vanilla and strawberry. She also lamented over the fact that other HAL ships have pineapple and mixed berry compotes to put on ice cream but this ship only had runny sauces. The letter from the Hotel Manager said, “… I am also aware that the availability of different ice cream choices has impacted the serenity of your vacation…”. Snookums thought that was pretty funny but was happy to see that mixed berry, raspberry and peach compotes are now being offered in Lido for ice cream toppings. There aren’t always additional hard ice cream flavors, but at least the fruity sauces are there to help with her serenity!

We moved our clocks forward one hour and went to sleep.

Medary.com – The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 5 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part Five

(Remember to click “read more” if you’re looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

February 6 (Monday, Day 10, At sea) –

Pat and Snookums had their normal breakfasts of muesli (Pat) and oatmeal with raisins and cinnamon (Snookums) but ate it outside since it was finally a bit sunny. Snookums took pictures around the ship before returning to the room to read on the verandah. Mom, Judy and Pat went to the 11 AM shopping lecture to get the coupons for the upcoming ports.

Seaview (aft) pool
Lido pool with retractable cover closed due to rain
The gym – the only time Snookums saw it!
The private cabana area on Deck 10
The library
Crow’s Nest
Deluxe Verandah Suite 7057
Deluxe Verandah Suite 7057 handicap bathroom

Snookums was in Mom’s room when they returned and Judy and Pat immediately went upstairs to get Mom a hot dog since Mom wanted to watch the “Ides of March” movie with George Clooney on TV at noon. Judy got a hamburger for herself and Pat got a hotdog. However, Mom was on the verandah in her bathing suit when they returned and opted to stay out in the sun rather than watch the movie. Instead Judy kind of watched it.

Dad actually went to the movie “The Help” at 10 AM but it got a late start due to technical difficulties and was a 2-hour movie anyway so he didn’t get back to the room until 12:30 or so and decided to go to Lido for soup so that’s what he did, on his own.

Snookums was enjoying the sun on the verandah and ordered a club sandwich from room service. She had to reorder it since the first version wasn’t on toast and didn’t contain any bacon. The second version was what she ordered and she happily ate it while reading on the verandah. Later on Snookums went to Neptune Lounge and got a plate of cookies and chocolates for her and Pat. Pat took one chocolate and Snookums ate the rest (three cookies and six chocolates and the cookies weren’t even that good!).

Before our formal night dinner we took another photo in Neptune Lounge and then went to the dining room and everyone enjoyed dinner.

Formal family photo

The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 4 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part Four

(February 3 (Friday, Day 7, Costa Maya Mexico) –

Pat woke Snookums up by saying, “Wake up. It is 8:17 AM and we are meeting Judy at 8:30.” However, Snookums could tell that the ship hadn’t docked yet and since it was scheduled to dock at 8 AM, she told Pat to re-check the time. Sure enough, Pat had looked at the wrong time on her watch that shows dual times. It didn’t matter since room service breakfast had been ordered for 7:30 AM which would have woken Snookums up anyway. And, it was pouring rain.

The plan was for Snookums, Pat and Judy to leave the ship at 8:30 AM to catch a taxi to Maya Palms Resort in order to do a snorkel/beach day for $65 each (plus $40 total for the round-trip taxi). Since it was raining we weren’t in too much of a hurry to get to the cabs so instead we hit the jade store for its free gift (a worry doll from Guatemala), the silver store for its nice free silver charm of the Mayan calendar and Diamonds International for its tacky free charm. We finally waded through the puddles and found the taxi stand. We had been given explicit instructions to take a yellow taxi for $40 total and to pay when we were dropped off back at the ship in the afternoon. We told that to the driver and he was fine with it. We got in the little cab which had almost zero visibility due to the condensation on the inside of the windows and were in for an interesting ride.

A view of the sea grapes and trash at the shoreline of Maya Palms

Costa Maya was created as a port in the early 1990s and really just contains a bunch of souvenir stores and some bars. The real village, Majahual, was about a ten-minute ride away. The resort was six miles from Majahual. However, the dirt road was full of potholes and very flooded in many places from the torrential downpour so it took about 20 minutes to drive those six miles. Snookums thought that the water was going to enter the car at some of the really flooded areas, but it never did. And, we passed lots of shacks and concrete “bunkers” that were for sale. However, when we entered the gates of Maya Palms Resort, we were in for a pleasant surprise. It was still raining so we really just wanted to get inside, but what little we saw of the resort grounds, including the freshwater pool, looked very nice. Snookums and Judy booted up their laptops to use the free WiFi and Snookums also called her husband in South Dakota for free using the magicJack WiFi application on her iPhone.

Judy and Snookums decided to go snorkeling and Ken, the dive master, provided Judy with a wetsuit. (Pat decided to stay inside where it was dry.) The three of us (Snookums, Judy, Ken) got in the outboard boat and he took us to the reef just off the beach. It was still raining. We snorkeled for around 40 minutes and really didn’t see many fish. However, there were tons of sea grapes on the surface of the water and they formed large patches of “weeds” that would “attack” you. They were kind of like plastic holly stems all stuck together. They didn’t hurt, but when a patch of them was all around you, it was kind of weird. There also seemed to be a lot of trash, mostly remnants of plastic items, about two feet under the water as well as mixed up in the patches of sea grapes. After the first snorkel spot we climbed back into the boat and Ken took us to another part of the reef. This was only about 8 feet deep and actually had more fish. However, Snookums was cold so she cut this snorkel short and Ken took us back to the shore.

Judy entering the sea grape-covered ocean
Snorkel photo from Maya Palms – few fish and ugly coral

We got out of our wetsuits (Snookums owns a shorty) and it was time for lunch. Mark, the other resort employee, made quesadillas, enchiladas, black beans and rice and we ate inside rather than under the cabana since it was still cloudy and windy. We also had chips, salsa and guacamole. All three of us were hungry and cleaned our plates. The taxi arrived at 1 PM, as ordered, and the rain had finally stopped. There were still plenty of puddles, though, but we got back to the ship much faster since some of the water had drained away and since the cab driver could see out of his windshield.

Judy and Snookums in front of two ships (ms Nieuw Amsterdam is even farther away and not shown!)

After we got dropped off, we walked about a mile back to the ship (the shopping area of the port was kind of spread out and the piers were very long) and it was very windy, cold and a little rainy. Once we got on the ship, though, we went to Lido for ice cream. That seemed to make everything better! It would have been a much better day if it was sunny, but we made the best of it. The Maya Palms Resort only has around ten rooms and while we were there we learned that only two people had been staying there for a ten-day dive trip. Otherwise, it was empty (except for Ken, Mark and two dogs). Talk about private!

Formal night in the Manhattan Dining Room

February 4 (Saturday, Day 8, At sea) –

Pat and Snookums woke up pretty much after breakfast hours. Snookums showered and ran errands (mail postcards, swap paperbacks, get change, deal with “to dos” at the Front Desk, etc.) and then went to the Mariner Reception. The “Building of the ms Nieuw Amsterdam” video was shown and this ship is Carnival Group’s 50th ship. One gentleman has cruised around 950 days with Holland America and his partner has cruised around 600. They met seven years ago on the ms Amsterdam in the Ocean Bar and came on this cruise for their anniversary and celebrated it in the Ocean Bar! Snookums enjoyed her free Caffeine Free Diet Coke.

After the Mariner Reception, Snookums went to Lido (and skipped the Mariner Lunch in the dining room) and thoroughly enjoyed the Indonesian foods from the “Around the World” area of the buffet while reading her book. The food on this cruise has been outstanding and when a food is labeled spicy, it really is. That is very nice since on so many cruises the chefs seem to be leery of using any kind of spice and make most foods bland. Snookums’s lips have tingled several times on the cruise from the spicy foods, in a good way. Snookums sat by the pool, in the warm, humid air, and read her book. It was rainy, cloudy, windy and around 75º outside so the retractable roof was closed which made the inside pool area nice and warm.

Pat ate a salad in Lido and then hurried back to the room to watch the movie “Moneyball” on TV. “Moneyball” was just about over by the time Snookums returned to the cabin and Snookums and Pat then watched “Soul Surfer” which was the movie about Bethany Hamilton and how she lost her left arm to a shark but continued on to become a professional surfer. Snookums fell asleep for a brief nap after the movie and Pat went to mass.

Dinner was the “Master Chef’s Dinner” but on some HAL ships the crew dances and the menu is very limited. This menu was larger but the parade of baked Alaska still occurred at 7 PM. Mom wasn’t feeling quite like herself so she enjoyed her dinner of lobster bisque, oxtail soup and lamb chops in the cabin.

Snookums has been looking forward to watching #4 University of Missouri vs. #8 University of Kansas basketball on ESPN at 9 PM but isn’t sure if the ship’s ESPN channels will cooperate or not. It’s always a crapshoot as to whether you’ll get US ESPN or whether you will end up having to watch European soccer, Indian cricket or rugby instead. She’s hoping for NCAA basketball but who knows. Good news. The MU/KU game was shown and both Snookums and Pat stayed up until 11 PM to watch the entire game. KU missed a last-second shot to tie the game and MU won. It was a great game and the last time in the 104 year-old rivalry that the two would play in Columbia, MO due to MU moving to the SEC next season.

February 5 (Sunday, Day 9, Ft. Lauderdale) –

Snookums and Pat woke up when the announcement was made about the priority disembarkation group. After a breakfast of oatmeal with raisins and cinnamon (for Snookums) and muesli with added fruit (for Pat) outside by the Seaview pool it was time to leave the ship to go through Customs. 1,000 passengers (of the ~2,100) were staying on for the next seven days which meant that all of them had to show passports to Customs before we were all allowed to return to the ship. We didn’t know how long it would take or what the seating situation would be so we made Mom use Dad’s wheelchair and Dad used his rented scooter. It only took about thirty minutes total and Snookums ended up staying in the port building to use the free WiFi.

Back-to-back cruisers waiting to be let back on the ship
Waiting in Port Everglades to return to the ship

Mom, Dad, Judy and Pat ate in Lido as soon as they returned to the ship and Snookums did, too, but didn’t see anyone. Snookums really enjoyed today’s “Flavors of the World – Thai” and its spiciness. Snookums even managed to catch some sun for about 45 minutes before the clouds returned. It has been cloudy and cool (and some rain!) since mid-Wednesday. We want sun!!

Pat being surprised on the verandah

Mom, Dad and Judy received another bottle of champagne and another bottle of Voss water since they are in a deluxe verandah suite and a “new” cruise is starting.

View of Ft. Lauderdale from our cabin – still cloudy

The Super Bowl was being shown in the Showroom at Sea (with spinach dip and hot dogs) and 36 people had the opportunity to pay $100 to watch it in the Screening Room while eating and drinking all they wanted. We were under the impression that it would NOT be on the cabin TVs, but it was so Pat and Snookums watched it and enjoyed Madonna’s half-time show. And, just like last night’s MU victory over KU, tonight we got to see the New England Patriots try to win in the last second and fail so that the New York Giants won.

The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 3 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part Three

February 2 (Thursday, Day 6, Mahogany Bay, Honduras) –

It was pouring rain when we woke up at 8 AM. The ship was scheduled to dock at 10 AM but was delayed 15 minutes due to a squall and heavy winds. Pat and Snookums ate breakfast inside by the pool and watched the docking process and then got ready for the private guided tour that Snookums arranged with Theris Dixon for $25 per person for the day.

Shipwreck at Mahogany Bay

The five of us left the ship and walked through Mahogany Bay which is a man-made port and very touristy. (The older port is called Coxen Hole and both ports are located on the island of Roatán.) There are tons of stores like Diamonds International, a few bars, lots of landscaping, huge concrete walkways and a man-made beach. We finally got “out” of the port and headed for our van. Snookums and Mom took a taxi for $2 per person since there was a large hill to walk up and then down before getting to the tour vehicles. Judy and Pat pushed Dad in his wheelchair. Well, Pat pushed Dad up the hill and then was contemplating how to safely get Dad down the steep hill when a landscaper offered to take over and she gladly let him.

The five of us piled into a large van that other than the driver and passenger seats, had three rows of seats. We had plenty of room! We had a list of things that we thought might be good to do, but with the rain we let our driver (Ken) figure out the plan. We really wanted to go to the iguana farm, but iguanas like sun and if it is shady (or rainy) they hide. So, that was off the list. Ken started by taking us on a driving tour all over Roatán and we saw the former mayor’s house (and Ken liked this mayor that was in office for three years). We saw a shrimp boat that Ken goes out to sea in for 90 days at a time when he tires of dealing with tourists. We also drove by the clothing store Carrion that his wife was just promoted to manage. We stopped at Eldon’s Supermarket in French Harbour to get several things but ended up only buying two gallons of purified water for Mom at $0.98 each. When Pat and Snookums left the store, it was pouring rain! They ran across the parking lot and managed not to get too wet.

House of the former mayor

Ken then continued the driving tour in the pouring rain. We drove by a 17,000-square foot house, with only seven bedrooms, that is on the market for $5.7 million and Ken’s sister happened to be working in it as a maid. He was surprised to see her in it. It seemed like he knew everyone on the island and was related to most of them, too!!! We wanted to buy postcards so he took us to Tiki HOT Island Shop since Snookums had read good reviews about it but it was closed and for sale. He stopped at another souvenir shop and Snookums and Pat ran in and only bought two postcards since they were $0.50 each and the ship sold them for $0.40!

Roatán houses
Roatán street

By now it was time for lunch so Ken drove us to a local restaurant that was kind of handicap accessible. This meant that next to the three concrete steps was a muddy path that Dad’s wheelchair could kind of use with a lot of manhandling. But, we made it. We asked Ken to join us for lunch and the six of us enjoyed the $20 per person local buffet of oxtail, fish, conch stew, chicken, pork, beef ribs, beans and rice and a mixture of plantains, carrots and potato-like things. Snookums drank the Caffeine Free Diet Coke that she brought while Mom, Dad, Judy and Pat each enjoyed a different kind of Honduras beer. It was a nice stop and pretty good food, too, even though some of the main dishes were coarsely chopped — bones, gristle, fat and all – and stewed. Pat really enjoyed the oxtail while Snookums liked the pork.

Buffet lunch (Ken, Mom, Judy, Pat)
Enjoying lunch

After lunch we decided that since the rain had stopped we should try to get to Half Moon Bay for some snorkeling while Mom and Dad watched. Ken drove us to West End (ocean front) but couldn’t get us to Half Moon Bay since the dirt road was so full of potholes, ruts and standing water. Mom was nervous during parts of the dirt road ride since passing vehicles got within a whisker of our van.

West End dirt road
Building on the ocean

We decided to go to the Stone Castle Cameo Factory where they carve cameos on shells. It was neat but we didn’t buy anything. Dad stayed in the van. Then we drove through Coxen Hole, the capitol, and saw the street market that catered to the tourists. On the way, we stopped at Coxen Hole Port so that Snookums, Judy and Pat could run into Diamonds International and get the tacky free charm. By now everyone was tired at it was around 3 PM so we told Ken to take us back to the port.

Carved conch shell
Judy, Pat and Mom outside Stone Castle Cameo Factory
The intrepid travelers with our driver, Ken

Mom and Dad got settled back on the ship and Snookums, Judy and Pat dropped off various things and then went back out to Mahogany Bay to do some shopping. We went to Del Sol so that Pat could buy more hair clips. And, for every $10 spent at this Del Sol, you could get a free tote bag with the coupon. Pat managed to get two free color-changing tote bags. We also went to Effy to get our free ½ carat blue topaz pendants and went to the Mahogany Bay Diamonds International to get more free tacky charms just like we got at Coxen Hole. (Judy plans on keeping one complete charm bracelet and then donating the other jewelry to “Prom Boutique” that provides free prom dresses and accessories to high school girls.) Then we “hiked” the 750-foot nature trail over to the beach. By now it was just about all-aboard time so we went back to the ship after our full day of fun.

Judy and Pat at Mahogany Beach, Roatán

The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 2 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part Two

(Remember to click “read more” if you’re looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

January 31 (Tuesday, Day 4, At sea) –

Pat and Snookums slept in and ordered room service breakfast. While cruising within 14 nautical miles of Guantanamo Bay, Pat ate her oatmeal and Snookums had her bowl of mixed berries and a sunshine parfait (berries, plain yogurt, granola). It was around 80º, slightly cloudy and kind of windy but pretty nice on the verandah.

Then it was time for the 11 AM Caribbean Shopping Ashore Presentation. Judy is bound and determined to collect all five free Diamond International charms and now that we know the password (“I love crown of light”), we should be able to make that happen. During the 45-minute sales pitch there were various raffles as well as audience participation giveaways. At one point Gary, the shopping guide, asked if people wanted to win a Del Sol t-shirt. Snookums yelled and jumped up and was the winner. It is the size that Pat’s husband wears so he will get a Del Sol souvenir Cayman Islands t-shirt that changes to a colorful picture on the front when it is exposed to sun. Otherwise, we didn’t win any of the other raffles.

Snookums getting her free t-shirt as shown on the cabin TV

After that the three of us went to lunch and enjoyed our salad bar salads while sitting by the Seaview Pool (aft) in the shade/sun. The guitarist, Brad Brock, was playing nice music, too. While we were doing all of this, Mom was attending the 10 AM movie, “Crazy, Stupid, Love” (2 hours in length) and Dad attended the 1 PM “Meet Your Fellow Veterans”.

Snookums, Pat and Judy also attended the 3 PM Diamonds & Exotic Gemstones Seminar in order to actually get the free ship’s charm. A blind woman won the pretty (and not gaudy) $500 Tanzanite International necklace door prize.

It was formal night and the dining room looked very elegant with its candles and white covered chairs. We all skipped Captain Edward van Zaane’s welcome toast but really enjoyed dinner. Mom, Dad and Pat had the rack of lamb and Snookums had pheasant with walnut sage cream on a bed of braised cabbage. It was absolutely delicious and she had never had pheasant before. Pat had a bite and thought it was really good, too. A towel elephant was on Pat’s bed when we returned to our cabin. A different towel animal is created during every evening’s cleaning by Putu or Herman (our room stewards) for our enjoyment.

Towel elephant

For those of you wondering what there is to do during a day at sea, the following activities happened between 11:00 and 1:30 today:

11:00 – Three Chefs Demo, Culinary Arts Center, 2
11:00 – Plan Your Day Ashore with Ian, Atrium, 1
11:00 – Acupuncture: A Life Changing Introduction, Explorer’s Lounge, 2
11:00 – Caribbean Shopping shore Presentation, Showroom at Sea, 2
11:00 – Spa Seminar: Detox for Health & Weight Loss, Greenhouse Spa, 9
11:00 – Gem Quiz, Merabella Luxury Boutique, 3
11:30 – Basketball Free Throw Shootout, Sports Court, 11 aft
11:30 – Gaming Lessons, Casino, 2
11:30 – Introductory Photo Editing, Digital Workshop, 2 aft
12:00 – Brad Brock on Guitar, Seaview Pool, 9 aft
1:00 – Back Deck Beats, Seaview Pool, 9 aft
1:00 – Caribbean Heat Jerk Pork and Sofrito Mashed Potatoes, Culinary Arts Center, 2
1:00 – Slot Tournament Qualifying Rounds, Casino, 2
1:00 – Meet Your Fellow Veterans, Piano Bar, 2
1:00 – International Beer Tasting $15, Silk Den, 11 midship
1:00 – Team Trivia Challenge, Crow’s Nest, 11
1:30 – Name That Tune, Seaview Pool, 9 aft
1:30 – Live Champagne Art Auction, Ocean Bar, 3
1:30 – Texas Hold’em Tournament, Casino, 2
1:30 – Creative Photo Editing, Digital Workshop, 2 aft
1:30 – Dance Class: Learn to Waltz, Northern Lights, 2

February 1 (Wednesday, Day 5, George Town, Cayman Islands) –

Snookums woke up when room service was delivered at 7:30 AM. Pat woke up around 7 AM. We enjoyed our oatmeal, mixed berries, sunshine parfait and muesli on the verandah. Then it was time to get ready for our port day. Judy wanted to get all of the free Diamond International charms and free Effy pendants and had our shopping spots identified. Snookums had the Eden Rock snorkeling spot identified. We took advantage of our status (4-star Mariner for Snookums/Pat and Deluxe Verandah Suite for Judy) and jumped to the front of the tender line without waiting for numbered tickets.

Grand Cayman shoreline
Grand Cayman street scene

We got to shore around 9:30 AM and hit the shops. It was partly cloudy and 80º or so – very pleasant. We got our free charms, went to the Tortuga rum cake store before 11 AM in order to save 11% and also went to Del Sol so Pat could buy nail polish that changes color in the sun for presents for her teenage daughters. Snookums also found out that the t-shirt she won was worth $25 (which was way overpriced in her opinion!). Then we finally made it to the Eden Rock snorkel spot. We rented a locker for $5 and used the ladders to access the water. We saw some fish and a 2-foot stingray. After twenty minutes, Pat’s mask started to leak and she headed back to the rocky shore. Snookums and Judy continued to snorkel until they both got chilled.

Snorkel photos from Grand Cayman:

We kept our stuff in the locker and continued our shopping for more free charms. Snookums also managed to steal a free WiFi signal and checked email and called Filbert using the free magicJack application. She could hear him just fine but he said that she was cutting out. Snookums is interested in how it will work on Friday at the resort that has free WiFi. Filbert said it was sunny and 62º at home in Kansas City which is unheard of in February! At least it was nicer in George Town!!

Gecko

The three of us headed back on the 1:30 tender and immediately ate lunch since we were ravenous. After catching up with Mom and Dad, Snookums and Pat returned to their cabin for showers and their own “sail away”. There were a total of five ships anchored at Grand Cayman today which made for a bit of a ship traffic jam. After a little bit of relaxation, it was time for showering and dinner.

Ship traffic at Grand Cayman

Dinner was at Tamarind which is HAL’s $15 per person Asian-inspired restaurant (but only $7.50 for 4-star Mariners which Snookums is). Snookums really enjoyed it on the ms Eurodam in August/September 2011 and wanted to share that experience on this cruise. Everyone really enjoyed the soups, appetizers, entrees, side dishes and desserts that they chose and are looking forward to returning on February 9 when HAL is giving it to us for free since we booked a back-to-back cruise (two 7-day cruises as one 14-day cruise).

After dinner Snookums and Pat were invited to the Captain’s cocktail party and for 45 minutes enjoyed free drinks after going through the receiving line. Snookums realized that Captain van Zaane was the captain on the ms Eurodam in August/September 2011 for the Baltic/Greenland cruise. Snookums ordered a sugar free raspberry lime fizz and was shocked when it came with rum in it since it was on the non-alcoholic menu. After Pat finished her red wine that the waiters were passing around, she enjoyed Snookums’s alcoholic fizz. Snookums then was given a non-alcoholic one and wasn’t too impressed with it, but drank it. It was sweet and had a lot of ice cubes in it. Then Snookums ordered a choco-mint drink from the non-alcoholic menu and that one was much better – almost like a chocolate shake! It doesn’t take much for HAL to keep Snookums happy – just a free $3.95 drink.

4-star Mariner reception

After the cocktail party Snookums and Pat stopped in to see Mom, Dad and Judy. Judy was just finishing mending Snookums’s wetsuit and snorkel bag and Mom and Dad were already in bed. We turned all the clocks back one hour and enjoyed talking a bit before finally saying good night at 8 PM! Tomorrow is a big day – a private tour for the five of us of Roatán, Honduras.

The 2012 Caribbean Cruise, part 1 of 9

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

Text and pictures by Snookums, webification by Filbert

Part One

January 28 (Saturday, Day 1, Flying to Ft. Lauderdale) –

The Itinerary

Note – Filbert isn’t on this cruise. He is attending South Dakota State University basketball games in Brookings, South Dakota and also hosting good friends of ours at home. Snookums’s cruise roommate is her sister, Pat. Pat’s husband isn’t on this cruise and neither are their seven children. Pat is ready to party! Filbert drove Mom, Dad, Judy and Snookums to the airport. It was sunny but right around freezing. We arrived in Ft. Lauderdale on time at 3 PM. After a short wait for the Sleep Inn Dania Beach shuttle, ten hotel guests loaded onto the shuttle. We all had luggage, too, including our five checked bags, two rollaboards, one walker and one wheelchair. Somehow the driver managed to get everyone’s luggage in the van (with no attached trailer) and we got to the Sleep Inn. Snookums checked into our two rooms and was surprised that Pat hadn’t already checked in since her flight landed one hour prior to the Kansas City flight. Snookums wasn’t worried, but wondered what had happened.

Snookums wheeled the FULL luggage cart to the hotel room and right then Pat walked into the Sleep Inn. She had been waiting at the airport for the four of us and after about an hour decided not to wait any longer. She called the hotel for the free shuttle and when she was asked “What airline?” she realized that Ft. Lauderdale had multiple terminals! She is actually a very experienced traveler but was in vacation mode and just wasn’t thinking. And, she was really enjoying her peace and quiet. Delta and Southwest are at different terminals.

We quickly said our hellos and did some basic unpacking and then Snookums, Judy and Pat went to the Publix across the street to purchase the alcohol for the cruise. Three boxes of 3-liter Franzia box wine were purchased. We wanted to get Scotch for Dad, but Publix is only allowed to sell beer and wine. Then we walked back across the street to Walgreens (24-hours and next to the Sleep Inn) to get several cases of water and Snookums’s 12-pack of Caffeine Free Diet Coke.

Back at the hotel Mom and Dad had a chance to review the menu from Pancho’s Backyard and were ready to go eat. The restaurant is also across the street in the same complex as Publix. The five of us had a great dinner and Mom said her fried red snapper was the best fish she had eaten in several years. Judy and Snookums enjoyed the ropa Viejas (shredded beef), Dad enjoyed his grouper and Pat ate her fish tacos. And, the pitcher of Dos Equis Amber was enjoyed by all, too.

January 29 (Sunday, Day 2, Boarding ms Nieuw Amsterdam) –

ms Nieuw Amsterdam

We were scheduled for the 11:30 shuttle to the port. This time the driver had to load up nine passengers, TWO wheelchairs, one walker, thirteen of our bags (we added three cases of water and Pat’s luggage to our original count) plus other luggage. Somehow he managed to get it all in the van. The first stop was for a Carnival ship and then we finally got to Holland America’s. Boarding the ship was uneventful and we managed to go directly to the dining room for lunch at 12:55. (It closed at 1.) After lunch we went to our rooms. No one’s luggage had been delivered yet. Pat and Snookums explored the ship and got back to the cabin (7029 – Deluxe Verandah Ocean-view – 2 lower beds convertible to 1 queen-size bed, bathtub & shower, sitting area, private verandah, floor-to-ceiling windows, ~213 sq. ft. with verandah). (One thing to note on the Nieuw Amsterdam is that in order for the cabin lights and TV to work, a key must be put in the key slot next to the door just like in most European hotels. This was not the case on the Eurodam, the 1-year older sister ship to the Nieuw Amsterdam.) We started to unpack and then it was time for the lifeboat drill. Snookums’s last Holland America lifeboat drill was on November 28, 2011. The Costa Concordia ship disaster occurred on January 13, 2012. Snookums noticed several differences in this lifeboat drill. For one thing, during the announcement five minutes prior to the actual drill, it was stated that not attending was grounds for disembarkation. During the actual drill, every stateroom was announced and the passengers had to raise their hands. At the November 28 lifeboat drill (and the August 12, 2011 one) the crew didn’t appear to have a list of passengers and the cabin numbers were certainly not announced. And, during today’s drill, the announcer was talking about the lifeboats and made a point to say that the lifeboats could still be lowered during a power outage and even if the ship was at a severe tilt. The 32-minute drill was much longer than normal, too.

Verandah stateroom 7029
View of Ft. Lauderdale from cabin 7029

We returned to our room and continued to unpack until it was 5:30. (Snookums’s parents like to eat during the early sitting so dinner will be at 5:30 every night.) Mom ordered the cobia (fish) and said it was also one of the best fish dinners she had eaten in several years. She is two for two with fish so far! Dad ordered the veal chop and said it was the best veal he had ever had. After being a prisoner of war in World War II, he certainly enjoys all food but rarely says that something is “the best” so we knew that he really enjoyed it. Snookums and Judy liked the pasta with tomatoes and pancetta and Pat enjoyed her mushroom risotto. After dinner Snookums and Pat continued their ship tour and Snookums found five $1 bills on the floor of the show lounge. The casino should have been the next stop, but Pat and Snookums ultimately went back to the cabin and chilled out. Mom, Dad and Judy went to their suite reception and enjoyed the free drinks. Mom had said that she was exhausted but she and Judy even managed to attend the 9:30 “Listen to the Music” show featuring the Entertainment team. After the show Judy stopped by our cabin and gave Pat some popcorn since Judy and Mom stopped at the theatre, too, and picked some up. Pat has a theater-like industrial popcorn popper in her living room and loves popcorn. Snookums was asleep by 10:30 PM.

January 30 (Monday, Day 3, Half Moon Cay, Bahamas) –

Snookums woke up when the Travel Guide, Ian Page, announced that the tenders were starting to take people to Half Moon Cay, Holland America’s private island. Snookums took a shower and by then Pat was awake. We put on our beach clothes and went to breakfast. Snookums had her normal HAL oatmeal (with raisins and cinnamon) and a raisin bun. The raisin bun wasn’t too good since it didn’t have too many raisins in it. Pat enjoyed the muesli with added yogurt.

Judy came to the cabin at 10 AM and we headed for the tender. Half Moon Cay has double-decker tenders but the open-air top was full so we sat downstairs. Our ship was the only HAL ship anchored here today so the beach wasn’t crowded. It was partly cloudy and the water was very clear. We found three empty chaise lounges and after awhile Snookums ventured into the water to check out the snorkeling. It was a very easy snorkel spot and there were several sunken concrete thingies (that looked like hen and chick planters) that the fish darted in and out of and there was also a large patch of sea grass that the fish liked. It wasn’t that large, but there were ten or so species of fish and it was a good first snorkel. Snookums went back to the beach and convinced Pat and Judy to brave the cooler water. They put on their borrowed snorkel gear and slowly walked in until they could deal with the water temp. They finally immersed themselves and did just fine. Pat last snorkeled around 29 years ago and Judy snorkeled two years ago.

Snorkeling pictures:

After our snorkel we enjoyed the island BBQ. It seems that hamburgers, hot dogs, coleslaw, potato salad and fruit salad never taste as good as they do after a snorkel when you are all sticky, salty and hungry! After lunch we enjoyed more time on the chaise lounges before getting on the tender and heading back to the ship. Half Moon Cay has beach wheelchairs available and we decided that if Dad wanted to join us next Friday, we would take him ashore.

Half Moon Cay sand sculpture

Half Moon Cay beach:

We dropped Judy off at her room and heard about Mom and Dad’s day. Dad spent a lot of time on deck 11 (the top) in Crow’s Nest and Explorations Café (the library) while Mom went to “Glee – The Movie”. Since lunch wasn’t being served in the dining room, they ate hamburgers and lamb burgers at Terrace Grill. They also enjoyed sitting on their verandah getting some sun.

After showering it was almost time for dinner. After another very good dinner, Judy, Mom and Dad went to the production show while Pat and Snookums enjoyed watching “August Rush” on TNT.

The 2012 Caribbean Cruise

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise, Holland America ms Nieuw Amsterdam

January 28 – February 12, 2012

Text and Pictures by Snookums, Webification by Filbert

LINKS BROKEN!!!

The 2012 14-Day Eastern & Western Caribbean Cruise (from Holland America)

This is the table of contents for the online version of our trip journal. Here are the chapters:

Part One – Ft. Lauderdale and Half Moon Cay

Part Two – George Town, Cayman Islands

Part Three – Mahogany Bay, Honduras

Part Four – Costa Maya, Mexico and Ft. Lauderdale

Part Five – At sea

Part Six – Grand Turk, Turks and Caicos

Part Seven – San Juan, Puerto Rico

Part Eight – St. Maarten

Part Nine – At sea and Ft. Lauderdale

The 2011 Amazon Explorer Cruise, part 7 of 7

The 24-Day Amazon Explorer Cruise 2011, November 26–December 21, 2011, Holland America Prinsendam
Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Seven

December 11 (Sunday, Day 16, Alter do Chão, Brazil) –

A dip in the Amazon

We woke up and didn’t bother to shower. We enjoyed our Sunday brunch in Lido rather than in Neptune. Snookums made an egg McMuffin and Filbert enjoyed eggs benedict. We took the tender to Alter do Chão which is 12 miles from Santarém and has a population of around 1,400. Alter do Chão is actually considered the “Caribbean of the Amazon” since it has nice white beaches and the people of Santarém flock to it on weekends. We didn’t see any packed beaches and decided that the locals come in the afternoon. We went shopping at the various temporary tables since we still needed to buy the souvenir painting for our travel wall. We haven’t seen any paintings other than very large paintings of parrots and bright tropical flowers and we didn’t want anything like that. We ended up buying a magnet that is made out of half of some kind of seed or pod and it has a painting of the “hill” (the alter, hence the name) that is very visible on the beach on it. The woman wanted 7 real for it and Snookums gave her a 20 real. The woman didn’t have change and saw that Snookums had a 5 real note and took that instead. After the experience with the pedicab driver, we are starting to think that Brazilians don’t seem to really understand the concept of money! We still had 70 real burning a hole in our pockets and also bought two t-shirts that show the map of the Amazon on them and then they are also hand painted on top of the printed map. They were a total of 35 real ($18).

After we shopped we went to the beach and waded into the Rio Tapajós which is the clear water. Well, clear as compared to the Amazon River. When we were submerged up to our shoulders, we could only see our mid-thighs. The water was pretty warm but not as warm as the Rio Negro when we were with the dolphins. We got out and took the tender back to the ship.

When we got back in our suite, Snookums realized that we hadn’t read the information that we brought with us about Alter do Chão so she read it and realized we didn’t even go INTO the town! We shopped at the tables near the dock and went swimming and never bothered to continue walking past the dock to the town. Boy do we feel silly. Now granted, most of the other HAL passengers only looked at the tourist stuff near the dock and then went back on the tender, but we like to think we’re not like most HAL passengers! We dropped the ball on this port, though, that’s for sure. According to the information there isn’t that much to see, but still, we could have walked a little bit more and seen some houses or something. Oh well, maybe we’ll have to come back. On that note, it is interesting to know that Amazon cruises only stop at the ports that we are stopping at and then maybe one more (Belem, a port at the Atlantic Ocean entrance to the Amazon). So, once you’ve done one Amazon cruise, you’ve seen what there is to see.

Today’s port was much less humid than the previous two (Manaus and Parintins). In fact, all of the ports (except for Manaus and Parintins) have been relatively comfortable. Hot, yes, but bearable, especially in the shade or when it is cloudy. Manaus and Parintins, though, were very “thick” which made them more uncomfortable. It was so nice that after lunch we sat on the verandah and watched the world go by. It was so nice that even Filbert didn’t complain about the heat.

Tonight was formal night and Snookums decided last night that she didn’t want to dress up so she told the tablemates that we wouldn’t be there. At least three of the four weren’t going to be there, either. We ordered room service and enjoyed our casual dinner.

Sunset Dec. 11

There was a beautiful full moon over the muddy Amazon River water and Filbert spent 20 minutes on the verandah trying to get a good picture. Although the ship is very steady in the river, there is still some movement which made a lot of the shots blurry. He thinks he got a decent one, though. (And he didn’t get bit by any bugs, either, and we had been told that they come out at night.)

Amazon moonrise

December 12 (Monday, Day 17, Cruising the Amazon River, Crossing the Equator)

A sea day! We spent the entire morning on the Neptune Lounge verandah. After our normal breakfast, we watched Macapá from the port side as we cruised by around 10:30. That was our first port stop one week ago and we wanted to see it on the way out of the Amazon. The ship’s horn sounded three times as the pilot boated away. (We had two Amazon pilots on the ship during the last seven days to assist the captain with the river navigation.) At 12:05, the ship blew its horn one time to indicate that we were crossing the equator. The captain came on the PA system and informed us that we would be in the Amazon until 10 PM or so.

Snookums read the two reviews written by HAL passengers about the Barbados rum tour and had Filbert read them. They were both very bad reviews and Filbert decided to cancel his tour. In the meantime, Snookums read the “Barbados Travel” book in the ship’s library and it said that Barbados had excellent snorkeling so Snookums used some internet time to find an excursion. If HAL won’t offer one, we’ll find our own and we did!

We headed for lunch and then back to the suite for a leisurely day. Filbert spent all of it on the verandah listening to BBC on his shortwave radio and Snookums read a paperback inside. Snookums met with the shore excursion manager at 3 PM regarding the piranha fishing tour and the shore excursion manager offered 20% back on the tour tickets since no cooked piranha was offered. It was more of an ordeal than Snookums expected (1 phone call with an employee, 1 voice mail from the manager and then the meeting with the manager), but she thinks it was finally understood that when tour documentation says “crew will offer you cooked piranha” and that doesn’t happen, it’s a problem!

Snookums went to the gym around 6 PM and then it was time for dinner. The purser and his wife, Jan-Volkert Leeuwenberg and Tammy Lee Fortier, joined our table. They are friends of friends we cruise with (Gary and Charlotte) so we had wanted to meet them. Brazil requires a lot of paperwork so the purser was very busy up until now. Jan called us Sunday to figure out when we could meet and we decided on tonight. Dinner was very enjoyable.

We went on the verandah after dinner to check on the color of the water and it was still muddy. However, around 10:30 PM the ship started rolling a bit from ocean swells so we made it to the Atlantic safe and sound and survived our eight days in the Amazon!

Here are some Amazon facts:

– Source – Lake Lauricocha in Peru
– Length – 4,195 miles (from Peru’s Ucayali River which joins the Maranon [Amazon])
– Tributaries – 15,000 known tributaries and sub-tributaries (4 are over 1,000 miles long)
– Area – The 2,722,00 square-mile Amazon rain forest represents 40% of Brazil
– Volume – 46,000 gallons per second at the river’s mouth (6,000% of the Nile’s volume)
– Width – Varies 1 to 35 miles (excluding flood). Mouth is more than 250 miles wide.
– Depth – Most of the Brazilian section is more than 150 feet deep. Near the mouth depths of 300 feet have been recorded.
– Temperature – 79°F (daytime)
– Geological Age – The rainforest is estimated to be 100,000,000 years old to be the world’s oldest rainforest.

December 13 (Tuesday, Day 18, At sea) –

Snookums woke up and read on the verandah in order to get some sun and to enjoy the green ocean. (Our verandah will be sunny in the mornings from now on.) Then she went to Neptune Lounge for breakfast and Filbert came awhile later. It was back to the room around 11 AM for more book reading. Then Snookums took a 3-hour nap followed by a very late lunch. After that it was a DVD (The Money Train) and time for dinner. Filbert read/write most of the day. Sea days are hard and tiring…..

After dinner we got to watch the last ¾ of the game between the #6 Tennessee LadyVols and #11 Rutgers. The LadyVols got their first road win of the young basketball season. We were hoping that we would get to see it on ESPN2, but on the ship you can never be sure what ESPN feed you’ll get. We end up seeing lots of soccer in Spanish and other sports that don’t come on ESPN2 at home. It was a good day!

December 14 (Wednesday, Day 19, At sea) –

This morning we awoke to a blue ocean. After a full day on the verandah (shady Neptune’s in the morning and then shady 001’s in the afternoon), we reshowered for the pre-dinner show of “Moments to Remember” by the Prinsendam Singers and Dancers. The show was okay and when we showed up for dinner, we saw that our table was set for 8. Our waiter told us that the Chief Engineer and Shore Excursion Manager were joining us. Free wine for the table!

The Chief Engineer, Jaap Wisse, has worked for Holland America for 41 years and when his contract is up in March, 2012, he is going to retire. He said that he’s been to around 450 ports and on this particular contract (November, 2011 – March, 2012) he will add seven new ports to his list. It’s hard to believe that someone that has been cruising for 41 years is STILL going to new ports!

The Shore Excursion Manager, Judy Hu, used to work dockside in Vancouver for HAL and our tablemate, Anne, asked her if she knew someone that used to work in the same place and she did. It is the mother-in-law of Anne’s son! So, Anne was able to tell Judy what Brigitte has been up to for the last two years. Talk about a small world.

Formal night dinner was fun and when we returned to our room we were happy to see that we got to gain an hour, too.

December 15 (Thursday, Day 20, Bridgetown, Barbados; 1 BBD = $0.50; $1 = 2.00 BBD) –

We woke up, had breakfast in Neptune and got ready for our snorkel trip. HAL didn’t offer any snorkeling trips but Snookums found one online that looked good. It even included transportation. For $90 per person, we had a 5.5-hour catamaran snorkel trip on Cool Runnings with two snorkeling stops. Our first stop was with the sea turtles and there were around 8-10 turtles that seemed to be four feet long. The crew member fed the turtles and there was a ray lurking around, too. The turtles were everywhere and were very easy to pet. Snookums’ mask was fogging up so she swam a little bit away from the group and while treading water (without fins on), she defogged her mask. Well, she inadvertently kicked a turtle, too, and her foot hurt. Those shells are tough!!!

After the snorkeling with the turtles it was time to get back on the catamaran to sail to the next stop. Unfortunately, Snookums managed to step on a bee while walking on the catamaran. A crew member used a credit card to scrape the stinger off her foot and she survived. It didn’t actually hurt that much, but was an odd sensation and certainly unexpected!

Petting a turtle
Turtles everywhere
Turtle closeup

The next snorkel stop was at a shipwreck and a reef. The water was kind of murky and there were a lot of fish, but not that many pretty ones. But, there is no such thing as s bad snorkel.

Back on the catamaran to the third and final stop for swimming in front of “Shady Lane” which is the $1,500/night resort where Tiger Woods got married. A typical Bajan lunch was served on the catamaran, too. It consisted of tossed salad, potato salad with raisins (?), ramen noodles with collard greens, green beans, cabbage and corn, rice pilaf with red beans, chicken in a flavorful tomato sauce and filets of king fish. It was very tasty and Filbert enjoyed lots of the incredibly hot pepper sauce on his fish and washed it all down with a glass of draft Banks beer. Dessert was carrot coconut cake with cream cheese frosting. Filbert enjoyed several glasses of rum punch, too, and Snookums enjoyed her Coke Light.

Snookums found a Barbados penny on the ground while walking to the van. She seems to find foreign currency in every country. We got back to the ship around 2:45 and took quick showers and then headed to the cruise ship terminal for the free internet.

Dinner was a Caribbean BBQ outside on the Lido deck and the cooks manning the paella skillet and jerk chicken grills were having a great time. The food was okay, too, and it was nice to eat dinner outside. Our verandah doesn’t have a light on it or else we would probably eat some of our dinners outside on our verandah. Other HAL ships have lights on the verandahs, but the ms Prinsendam does not. Oh well.

The BBQ

After dinner we chose four of Filbert’s photographs and three of Snookums’ to enter in the ship’s photo contest. The four categories are landscape, wildlife, portrait and miscellaneous. Snookums didn’t even realize that she took photos, but she did and her piranha one is her favorite. (See Dec. 6, Day 11 to see it.)

When we got back to the cabin ESPN was showing NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball Semi-Finals so we enjoyed watching some great volleyball. The finals (UCLA vs. Illinois) are on Saturday and we probably won’t see them since we never really know what “channel” of ESPN we’ll get. We seem to get a mix of ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN South America and ESPN Europe. We get a lot of soccer….

Snookums also looked at an old journal entry since she knew that Barbados had been a cruise port before. Sure enough, on December 13, 2009 we were here and snorkeled with the turtles! The amazing thing about it is that when we were doing it today, neither of us remembered ever being this close to turtles and touching them and everything. However, the journal for the prior cruise visit is almost identical to today’s write-up, including Shady Lane and everything. It was still a great day, even if we had done it before!

December 16 (Friday, Day 21, Bequia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines; 1 XCD = $0.37; $1 = 2.70 XCD) –

We woke up and had our normal quick breakfast in Neptune Lounge and got ready for our HAL snorkeling trip. We took the tender to Bequia which is one of the islands of the Grenadines. Its population is 5,000 ha s 30% unemployment. It is a sleepy little island and is 8 miles away from St. Vincent which is the largest island.

On the tender ride to Bequia we saw a passenger we hadn’t noticed before. He looked to be our age and was very overweight (as was his wife). He wore a safari-type hat, a knee brace and carried a cane. And he was obnoxious and couldn’t keep still. Filbert nicknamed him “ADD Guy”. His wife slid into the bench seat in front of us and this man then proceeded to take up the rest of the room on the seat (and he wasn’t that big). He was using his cane to bang the seat and the floor and he was just loud. Another passenger boarded the tender and the obnoxious one gave him about 8” of the seat. Then he gave the passenger a bear hug when he sat down and it didn’t appear that they knew each other! When the tender got to Bequia, he kissed his wife for a really long time and said things like “Hot, hot, hot”, “Sexy babe”, etc., etc. His wife was just sitting there during the entire tender ride and looked like she wanted to just disappear.

We boarded the catamaran along with around 40 other HAL passengers which made it much more crowded than our 19-passenger trip in Barbados! One of the crew talked to us about Bequia, but ADD Guy kept using his hands like drumsticks and his beating on the catamaran’s railing was louder than the crew. When he quit his drumming, he started talking/yelling. We sailed for around an hour and passed some rather unusual homes set in amazing natural rock formations and arches in an area known as Moon Hole. One of the buildings was a hotel built in the 1950s that has gone to ruin. It’s too bad since the area is spectacular. We snorkeled for about 45 minutes and the reef had a lot of sea fans and sponges as well as a large variety of fish. We saw a 5-foot (at least) beige and black diamond backed sea snake on the ocean floor, too, which was neat. Filbert’s camera wasn’t working too well.

After snorkeling the mango rum punch started flowing and Filbert enjoyed it. Snookums enjoyed her water. Then we were dropped off at Princess Margaret Beach. It is called that since the royal patron dipped in at the beach during her island honeymoon. It was a fabulous beach and had lots of shade and sun if you wanted it and the sand was great, too. The waves were very gentle so it was ideal for swimming and just treading water and that kind of stuff. We saw our tablemates at the beach, Anne and Jim, as well as Jan. Gord isn’t a beachcomber and he stayed on the cruise ship. Anne and Jim vacationed at Bequia at least two different times many years ago and they enjoyed seeing the changes. They used to be able to hike a path from the harbor to Princess Margaret Beach but when they tried that today, they found that it was blocked off. They had to take a water taxi instead for $3/per person each way. So much for progress.

Then it was time to get back on the catamaran and the shore excursion was officially over. A woman on the catamaran volunteered to take our snorkel bag back to the ship with her so that we could walk around without lugging that around. She was a lifesaver.

We wandered around the 3-block long main street and saw two different vegetable markets and went in two or three grocery stores. Snookums found a Eastern Caribbean penny on the ground! Filbert purchased three bottles of hot pepper sauce (two reds and one green) made on St. Vincent’s to use when we get home. He also bought two bottles of local rum punch for gifts and two cans of local beer. There were some t-shirt and crafts stands, too. It was very laid back and the people were very friendly.

We took the tender back to the ship, washed our hands and went to lunch. We were hungry. ADD Guy and his wife were at lunch, too, and it took him about 20 minutes to get his food since he had to speak to everyone and anyone. His wife was just quietly sitting at a table eating her lunch the entire time that he kept walking around getting his food. He finally sat down after he got his bowl of ice cream (and his lunch was sitting on his table waiting for him to eat it). We finally left Lido after he sat down since the show was over. Then it was time to sit on the verandah and watch Port Elizabeth. There were a lot of live-in small sailboats moored in the harbor and it looks like a lot of people rent boats for a week or a month or so and live in them. It was very picturesque. We listened to St. Vincent’s radio (107.5 FM) and laughed at the 2:30 news update that came on at 2:50. That’s island time for you!!

We set sail around 5 PM and that meant it was time to shower. Dinner was in Pinnacle Grill (our second free dinner there) and we had reservations to eat with Anne and Henry, the couple we met during our very first lunch on the ship. We had a wonderful dinner and learned that Henry was born in Vienna, Austria (he still has the accent). He had a visa for the US, but the Germans invaded before he could get out. He was in a German-run labor camp from the age of 18 to 21. He lost his parents and at least one sibling to the concentration camps. He said that when the train pulled up to the labor camp, the Germans counted out 300 men and he was number 298. The rest of the men that weren’t in the 300 were then sent to Auschwitz where their destiny was the gas chamber. He also thinks he was the only one of those 300 that lived to be liberated. He had an older brother that went to the US prior to all of this and his brother served in the US Army during WWII. After Henry was liberated (and he says that he has two birthdays – the day he was born and the day he was liberated), he went to Belgium and ultimately the US and now lives in Miami. He and Anne met on a cruise around ten years ago and have been a couple ever since. They are definitely young at heart and live every day to the fullest. They are also the most fashionably dressed passengers on the ship! Hopefully we look and act as young as they do when we are in our mid-80s.

December 17 (Saturday, Day 22, At sea) –

We did our normal thing – shower and eat a light breakfast outside on the Neptune Lounge verandah. Then we went to the 10:45 Mariner Society Pre-Lunch Reception and sat with Anne and Henry. We enjoyed our free drinks while watching various passengers get their 100-day and 300-day medallions. One couple on this cruise has the 700-day medallions and two couples have the 500-day medallions. After this cruise, Filbert will have 190 days and Snookums will have 210 days. (Snookums cruised on HAL prior to marrying Filbert.) Medallions are awarded at the 100, 300, 500 and 700 days levels. After the reception we were supposed to attend the Mariner Lunch in order to get our tile. However, we had Pinnacle Grill scheduled and we never really like the two menu choices offered for the Mariner Lunch so we didn’t go. (Our tiles were delivered yesterday.)

We enjoyed our Pinnacle Grill lunch immensely. We think lunch is actually better than dinner. Our last two Pinnacle Grill lunches (on two different ships) were great whereas the dinners were spotty with service issues and lukewarm food. Lunches are never packed, either, whereas dinner reservations tend to fill up. Our hamburgers and French fries were top notch and Filbert’s antipasto starter was great and Snookums’ grilled shrimp bruschetta with corn relish was fantastic. Dessert was a chocolate brownie decadence that was like a loose vanilla custard with a little bit of chocolate taste with a chocolate cake-like topping. It was different, but very good. We were stuffed.

Snookums took a 3-hour nap after lunch and Filbert listened to BBC on the verandah before some sprinkles sent him inside. It was cloudy and warm most of the day but there really wasn’t much rain. After Snookums woke up she started updating the journal and Filbert decided to take a 1-hour nap prior to dinner.

For those of you wondering what there is to do during a day at sea, the following activities happened between 11:00 and 3:00 today:

11:00 – Fresh From the Sea, Culinary Arts Center
11:00 – Bridge Instruction, Half Moon Room
11:30 – Cruise Classics: Paper Tower Challenge, Crow’s Nest
1:00 – Foodie Fight: Culinary Trivia, Explorer’s Lounge
1:30 – Boi Bumba DVD Screening, Showroom at Sea
1:30 – Learn to Dance: Line Dance, Ocean Bar
1:30 – Texas Hold’em Tournament, Casino
1:30 – Duplicate and Party Bridge, Half Moon Room
2:00 – Spa Secrets: Phyto for Healthy, Shiny Hair, Explorer’s Lounge
2:00 – Blue Diamonds Jewelry Raffle with complimentary champagne, Signature Shops
2:30 – Cruise Classics: Triple Wicket Croquet Shoot, Sports Deck
2:30 – On Coronations and Corgis with Travel Guide Frank, Showroom at Sea
3:00 – Afternoon Tea with the Rosario Strings, La Fontaine Dining Room

Around 7 PM we decided that we were still stuffed from lunch and instead went to Neptune Lounge to put together a vegetable tray for dinner. Snookums also went next door to Crow’s Nest to see if Jan and Gord were there enjoying their pre-dinner cocktails. They were so she told them that dinner was being skipped. She chatted with them awhile and also took the two kinds of nuts from their cocktail table for the night’s in-room “dinner”.

December 18 (Sunday, Day 23, Oranjestad, Aruba; 1 AWG = $0.56; $1 = 1.79 AWG) –

We booked our own snorkel excursion so we made sure we were the first people off the ship at 8 AM. (Filbert’s underwater camera was still malfunctioning.) The $1.20 public buses weren’t yet running so we took a $14 taxi to the snorkel office on Malmok Beach. We were then told that the trip was canceled due to the bad weather yesterday. We decided to walk along the beach, in the direction of the ship, and see if we could find any other snorkel trips. We found two more but ultimately decided not to go snorkeling since it was very overcast and if the rain was bad yesterday, the water was probably going to be murky. So, we continued to walk along the beach, in the surf in our bare feet, until we got back to the ship! The beaches were beautiful and were not busy at all, maybe due to the closeness of the Christmas holiday. We walked on Palm Beach which is considered to be one of the top 12 beaches in the world. An area of the beaches between the high rise hotel district and the low rise hotel district was actually dead coral (or volcanic rock?) and looked like what you would find on the moon. It was very sharp (we put our flip flops back on) and had many blow holes that would spurt water when the waves were just right. It took around three hours to get back to the ship and we probably walked five miles. Along the way we stopped at an ice cream shop and Snookums bought a Diet Coke and Filbert bought a 7.5 ounce bottle of Balashi beer.

We decided to order room service for lunch and ate on the verandah. Our side of the ship looked out to the Caribbean Sea and there was a sandbar with a tree on it kind of in the middle of the sea. It was very picturesque and added to our lunch ambiance!

We also had a message from Anne saying that she and Henry wanted to join us for dinner tonight at our table so Snookums called Cahren (Neptune Lounge concierge) and asked her to notify the dining room about setting our table for eight people.

We set sail from Aruba and Filbert decided to use up some of his internet minutes to listen to the last three minutes of the SDSU at Washington men’s basketball game. He was thrilled to hear them beat this PAC-12 school 92-73 and had to continue to listen to the post-game radio show.

Dinner was a fun event with Anne and Henry joining our table. At 9:45 PM the fun broke up and we headed back to our cabin and went to bed.

December 19 (Monday, Day 24, At sea) –

We enjoyed our normal breakfast on the Neptune Lounge verandah and have noticed that it seems like only one other couple (Diane, grew up in St. Louis and a graduate of University of Missouri, and George) really come to Neptune Lounge for breakfast. They eat inside, though, and we have never had anyone else out on the verandah when we’ve been out there. Cahren said that most suite guests eat breakfast in Pinnacle Grill since that is one of the suite perks. Snookums did a few errands, including mailing a bunch of Christmas cards, and also found out that none of our photographs were voted as winners.

The passengers in all 19 suites were invited to an exclusive Indonesian luncheon honoring Holland America’s Indonesian heritage with a special “Rijsttafel” (rice table). We met in Pinnacle Grill at 11:30 but the actual lunch was IN the galley. It was really neat since they made a really long table and we were seated on either side of it (and there were place cards so we had assigned seats). One side of the table looked at a wall and the other side of the table looked at the working galley. We got the “good” side and got to watch the cooks at work. The galley was even decorated for the occasion with Indonesian regalia and the stewards wore their own Indonesian shirts. Filbert was seated directly in the middle of the long table and sat across from Linda Minnikin, the Cruise Director. Snookums sat next to him and was across from Diane, the woman that frequently eats breakfast in Neptune Lounge. Her husband, George, was getting over being seasick (the night was a bit rough) and didn’t come.

The starters that we received were:
– Kerupuk (prawn crackers)
– Bumbu Gado-Gado (steamed assorted vegetables with peanut sauce)
– Soto Ayam (chicken consommé with coconut garnished with vegetables and quail eggs)
Then we were served a plate containing all of the following entrees:
– Nasi Goreng (Javanese fried rice)
– Sambal Udang (shrimp in spicy chili sauce)
– Daging Rendang Sumatra (stewed beef Sumatra style)
– Pisang Goreng (banana fritter)
– Sambal Goreng Buncis (chile spiced green beans)

None of the dishes were spicy (really, they weren’t) and the condiments included Serundeng (roasted peanuts with toasted coconut), Ketjap Manis (sweet soy sauce) and Sambal (spicy chili sauce). We used a lot of the sambal! The maitre ‘d apologized to us for not having any fresh sambal but the ship ran out of fresh chili peppers. The jarred stuff had to do.

Dessert was Pudeng Nasi (rice pudding with brown sugar sauce) and it was an awesome rice pudding with HAL’s huge raisins in it and it was served in a martini glass and the runny brown sugar sauce had been placed on top of it much earlier so that it soaked into the rice pudding. It was absolutely delicious (and rich).

Red and white wines were also free flowing and Snookums ordered a Caffeine Free Diet Coke. Filbert and some of the other guests were sweating during most of the lunch since the galley was hot (and we could see the steam coming from the stoves and steamers as the cooks were working) but it was a lot of fun and a really neat experience. Since the Prinsendam is small and only has 19 Deluxe Verandah Suites, it can offer these more intimate experiences to its suite guests. When we were on the Amsterdam, with its 52 Deluxe Verandah Suites, the suite lunches were in the Crow’s Nest and you had to juggle your plate on your lap. Even Pinnacle Grill isn’t big enough to hold the passengers from 52 suites.

After lunch Snookums met with Tina, the future cruise consultant, to book three more cabins for the ms Amsterdam’s 14-day Alaskan Explorer cruise in 2012. When Hotel Manager Craig Oakes upgraded us to Suite 001 on this cruise he created a suite monster in Filbert and as a result, Filbert requested that Snookums book a Deluxe Verandah Suite for the Alaska cruise! Snookums’ parents will also be in a Deluxe Verandah Suite. Two of her sisters will be in an inside cabin very close to her parents’ Deluxe Verandah Suite and her brother and sister will share a verandah suite (but not a Deluxe one so they won’t have Neptune Lounge access) somewhere on the ship. It should be a fun trip with eight of us going.

ESPN was showing Saturday’s replay of UCLA vs. Illinois Division I Women’s National Championship and Snookums enjoyed watching UCLA win while Filbert was on the verandah.

Later on in the afternoon Snookums went to an “invitation only” event. The invitation stated “As a travel agent, group escort, valued Mariner or business partner, you are invited to this cruise’s question and answer session” and since Snookums had never seen this kind of invitation before, she went. She found out that it was a focus group-type meeting and the Hotel Manager, Cruise Director and Shore Excursion Manager were there to listen to the kudos and complaints from a small group of passengers. There were around ten passengers there. Free sodas were passed out, too!

Snookums’ only comments were that it would have been nice if HAL would have notified the passengers in advance about the possibility of having to conserve water while on the Amazon (and therefore shutting down the public laundry facilities for eight days) since this seems to happen on EVERY Amazon cruise. She also suggested that the Captain’s 1 PM daily announcement either be taped and replayed on TV like the lectures are or even typed up and posted at the Front Desk. If you are eating lunch in Lido and the Captain comes over the PA, you can’t hear him since not everyone shuts up. She also requested that there either be a larger internet package sold or even an unlimited one sold. Right now the largest internet package is 250 minutes for $100. Filbert used two packages on this cruise and Snookums used one. Unlimited internet would be awesome!

Tonight was the sixth and final formal night and we decided yesterday not to attend. We enjoyed room service instead. The steward brought our appetizers (escargot, seafood bisque and salad for Filbert and shrimp cocktail and penne pasta with pancetta for Snookums) and then said he would come back in around 15 minutes with our entrees so that they would be hot. That was a first and much appreciated. He brought Filbert’s surf and turf (lobster and filet mignon) and Snookums’ parmesan crusted veal. Filbert enjoyed his white wine and Snookums ate chocolate decadence cake for dessert. It was a nice evening.

Our stewards (Yekti and Amin) came in and serviced our suite for the second time (they come every morning and evening). When they left we noticed that they left a certificate on the bed that proclaimed that Snookums and Filbert cruised the Amazon while in Cook’s Suite 001 and a picture of Captain James Cook and a little of his bio was on the certificate, too. We assume that only 19 of these were handed out (one per Deluxe Verandah Suite since each Deluxe Verandah Suite is named after someone which is not the case on the ms Amsterdam where they just are numbered). This is just another example of how the Deluxe Verandah Suite passengers on the Prinsendam are treated. It’s nothing big, but it is kind of neat. We’ll post it on our basement wall along with the equator crossing certificates we were given earlier in the cruise.

We turned on TV and saw that Monday Night Football (Steelers at San Francisco) was delayed due to a power outage. That doesn’t happen too often! We also moved our clocks back one hour.

We both woke up around 12:30 AM due to the motion of the ocean. We didn’t feel sick, but the ship was rocking and rolling and listing a lot. We turned TV on in case the football game was still on, but it wasn’t. We listened to the post-game show, though, and found out that San Francisco won.

December 20 (Tuesday, Day 25, At sea) –

We woke up around 7 AM and were tired from the bouncy night. We showered and went to Neptune Lounge for our normal breakfast. Maybe tomorrow we’ll eat in Pinnacle Grill for our last breakfast. When we returned to our clean suite Snookums updated the journal and Filbert wrote his Christmas cards.

We went to lunch and Snookums ate her dessert with Anne and Henry and talked for a couple of hours. Snookums learned that Henry gets a pension from both Austria and Germany and also might get some reparations from France since he was captured in France. It’s the least that these countries could do.

Then it was time to pack. It’s always much easier to pack at the end of a cruise than it is at home. At the end of the trip you just have to empty out all of the drawers and closets in the cabin. Easy.

Snookums went next door to Bill and Marykaye’s room and asked if they could email a photo of yesterday’s Indonesian lunch in the galley since Snookums didn’t want to buy one from the ship’s photographer. She was told “Yes”! That photo will go in this journal, with the proper credit given to Marykaye.

December 21 (Wednesday, Day 26, Ft. Lauderdale, FL) –

We woke up and enjoyed a leisurely breakfast in Pinnacle Grill. It was nice being served a hot meal for breakfast. We saw two ambulances pull up and waited to see what was going on, but after thirty minutes we decided to call it quits. We did see some passenger luggage being put in one of the ambulances so we know that a passenger was sick, but we gave up and went back to our cabin.

We left the ship at 8:30 AM and got to our airport gate at 9:20AM. That had to be a record of some kind. Snookums also found $1.36 as she was going through airport security. The flight from Ft. Lauderdale to Chicago wasn’t too full and we managed to have an empty seat between us. After a quick bite at O’Hare, we boarded the flight for Kansas City and arrived 20 minutes early. By the time we got our luggage, Snookums’ brother was at the curb ready to pick us up. Nothing like ending the cruise with a no-hassle day of travel!!

We traveled about 1,000 miles of the Amazon (Macapá to Manaus) and that was enough to get a taste of this 4,200-mile long river. It was a great cruise, but from what we can tell, there are only seven ports of call in the Amazon and we traveled to six of them. I don’t think we need to go on another Amazon cruise just to visit the other port, Belém!

Another cruise’s end, another sunset

Co