Friday, January 29, 2010

Our bags are packed, we’re ready to go…



Friday, January 29, 2010


4:30 pm… The last post from the road

We are madly packing… stuffing stuff into bags recovered from under the bed… We will have our “last supper” in a little over an hour… sometime tonight we will put our bags outside in the hall… Tomorrow about 8:00 the ship should dock in Valparaiso, and an hour or so later, having cleared Chilean customs we will go ashore to claim our bags, and find Christian our tour guide for our last day of sightseeing before flying home…

There is an island off to Starboard… it is said to have been the home of the Moca Dick, the great white whale on whom Moby Dick was based… These waters are the historic home of the sperm whale… so far we haven’t seen any… (or Blue whales, or unicorns…)

With packing comes our colored luggage tags, embarkation assignments, and the dreaded service questionnaire… This time the questionnaire is easy… the ship’s staff did very well… with a few really minor exceptions we are giving them the highest score… There are compliments by name for several… our wine steward, our room stewards, an officer cadet, Henry Jones, who set up a table with photos and maps and met with passengers and answered questions about Antarctica… The ship’s resident experts… an ice pilot, a geologist, and experts on local culture and Antarctica who’s presence and knowledge elevated the experience beyond just a cruise… It’s easy to fill out surveys when all is good…

I am finishing off my bottle of single malt, Tina her port, no use in letting it go to waste after all…

Now, an hour before dinner… most of the packing is done… Tina’s cell phone is on the charger... we will need it Sunday… We still have a few things to stuff in… mostly dirty socks and underwear… we have our luggage scale out, weighing each bag as we add more, trying to balance the load, and stay under 50 lbs a bag (weight being a bigger issue than volume)… Trying to carry on as little as possible… we have a 4th bag, a duffle bag as a backup… but we are trying to cram all into 3 bags…

Before that we get silly… we have dinner followed by the traditional parade of the Baked Alaskas… We go to the show room for the last show… Name that song… our Toby wins the women’s round… then dresses like Dolly Parton for a finale… Tina gives away drinks… we have punches on our drink cards… it’s a last night party in the best sense…

We return to our cabins… the full moon is up, We stand on the balcony gazing northward…

I take Karin up to see the Southern Cross…
After 20 days we are ready for it to end… to go home… to friends, family, animals, and (gasp) work…

We have gone 6,528 nautical miles… From Rio De Janiero to Valparaiso… We have visited Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Falkland Islands, Antarctica, and Chile… We have seen 5 kinds of penguins… 3 or 4 kinds of whales… We have traveled… I have blogged x times, about 11,000 words (about 23 pages…)

Next… (once home)

I still need post pictures… I need to write a review of the cruise for cruisecritics.com…

And of course, I need to start planning my next adventure… probably Washington DC again… likely mid March… Mostly research, but I need to spend so time in North Umberland County VA… (one of my family origin points…) Tina has us booked on another HAL cruise in November to celebrate our anniversary… Brian and I plan a walk about somewhere in the arid west this summer… Brian and his shipmates are talking about another “Tiger” cruise on his destroyer in a year or so… Tina wants to visit Egypt… Her Step mother wants us to join her in Thailand and Laos in June 2011… Travel will continue… the blog will continue…

Randy

South America - headed home


Thursday, January 28, 2010

Overnight we entered the Pacific Ocean… as expected it was rough… wind speed hit 90 knots, over 100 mph, or 12 on the Beaufort scale… The winds have since dropped to 40 knots or so… Seas have risen to 12 meters… about 24’ or so… the ship is rolling and pitching… but crew tell us it was worse last trip…

Things fell off tables overnight… things continued to fly occasionally today… Yet we are not at danger… It’s life on a ship at sea…

It was a slow, relaxing day… watch the swells, read, watch the head chef demonstrate how to make strudel… (the Chef did call California’s Governor a “Strudel boy”)
They returned our passports today… (they had held them since Rio de Janero some weeks ago… they now have stamps from Brazil, Argentina, the Falklands and Chile… I guess that means we have been there.

The captain tells us that we are moving slowly… the winds and seas are making progress difficult… passengers start to discuss how late we might be in Valpariso…
We are headed north… Weather reports suggest its hot in Santiago Chile… but we see no evidence at sea… It seems the ice of the southern seas are following us…

Friday, January 29, 2010

With dawn we find the seas calmer, the winds now following, and the sun peaking through… It seems we have finally escaped the grasp of the cold and ice…
Today is our last day aboard… tomorrow the ship will dock in Valparaiso, we will disembark with our luggage and stuff, and make our way to Santiago, and the airport for the flight home… We have arranged for a van to pick us up, tour though Valparaiso, Santiago and the wine country… one last bit of touring before heading home…

Due to better winds, and the help of the Humbolt current we are making up lost time… we will probably dock about 8:00 or so, maybe an hour later than planned…
Now we have to think about packing… (no, not packing, but thinking about packing) but that can wait until later… (both the thinking and the packing)

This is likely the last post from the ship... Of course there will be more once we reach home... for for now, goodbye

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Cruising the Staight of Magellian


Wednesday January 27, 2010

Today was quiet… very contained…

We sailed along the Strait of Magellan, and other channels, then up to the Amalia Glacier… then back out to the Pacific…

It was various shades of grey most of the day… It snowed a bit this morning… the fog closed in, the fog receded… It rained sideways, so that appeared to be foggy… 3:30… Rivers of ice, meeting then falling into the sea…

We rose, we ate, we napped, we watched the scenery pass, we ate again… napped again… life at sea…

Late in the evening the winds rose… to 70 knots… gale force… The ship listed to Starboard… things started to roll off tables… We finally reached the Pacific and rough sea about 10:30 pm… the captain had announced that we should check for loose objects… In the gift shop they laid bottles on the floor and started to tape things down…

We expect an exciting night…

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Steam trains, tidewater glaciers and vicious penguins…


Ushuaia Argentina and Punta Arenas Chile

Yesterday (Monday January 25, 2010) we visited Ushuaia Argentina, the self proclaimed “City at the End of the World” (reachable by car, on an island associated with a continent… etc… etc…) Today we visit Chile’s southern most city, Punta Arenas… Both are found on the maze of waterways which mark the southern most regions of South America…

In Ushuaia, everything is known as “end of the world” we rode the “train at the end of the world” we visited the post office at the “end of the world”… (but there is a post office in Antarctica, so maybe some claims are shall we say, wishful…)
The train was cute… steam powered, tiny cars running on 50cm track (about 18” gauge for those of you addicted to the English system of measurement…) It had originally been a 60cm gauge industrial line, carrying inmates from the local gulag into the hills to cut firewood and lumber… It was abandoned in 1947 or so… and rebuild in the 1990’s with rolling stock found in South Africa… Since then they have rebuilt the original South African steam locomotives and built several new steam locomotives, using the designs and principals of Porta, a recently deceased Argentine engineer of rare skill, and great understanding… so, to some of us (at least to me) this was a pilgrimage.

Having ridden the line, we boarded buses to drive the last several miles of the Pan-American Highway, which ends in a national park nearby… there is a gravel parking lot, a wonderful view of a bay, and the post office at the end of the world… It was crowded… we didn’t manage to get inside…

Re-boarding the bus, we rode back to town where we walked about… looked at souvenirs, purchased a couple of maps, then found coffee and pastries…

We were back aboard the ship by noon for sail away… as we sailed westerly in the Beagle channel… past glaciers and ice fields… They tell us there are only 30 tidewater glaciers left in the world (the glaciers of Antarctica and Greenland end at tidewater but are classed as continental glaciers…) We view the Italia Glacier, one of the 30… there are endless others which don’t quite reach tidewater… fog rolls in as the sun recedes… it is spectacular…

Overnight we slip into the Pacific Ocean, then back easterly in the Cockburn Canal into the Strait of Magellan…

Tuesday, January 26, 2010, At dawn we dock at Punta Arenas, a Chilean City on the Strait of Magellan… Its windy, we need two tugs to aid us as we tie up…

Once the ship is secure, the ship’s shore excursions depart… T and I have booked a trip to Magdalena Island… 30 miles or so to the north-east… home of a Magellanic penguin colony… The “local” ferry is a double ended landing craft… with passenger accommodations along one side… It can accommodate 20 or so semi trucks, but today its just the cruise ship passengers…

The wind is strong, the seas are rough if not too high, but the ship is heavy and rides well on the two hour trip to the island… Once there they ground the ship, drop the end door and we walk off onto the island…

Let me tell you about Magdalena Island… It’s just over 200 acres… its windswept… its rocky and sandy… there are no trees, or bushes… and little grass… (Described as “herbaceous vegetation” by the brochure) but there are penguins… maybe 100,000 or so… plus a lot of local seagulls…

There is a path, well marked by stakes and ropes, designed to prevent us humans from bothering the penguins… (there is nothing to prevent the penguins from bothering the humans) it runs along the beach and up to the light house on the ridge… we were not allowed to climb to the light house… the winds were too strong and too dangerous…
The penguins were everywhere… on the beach, near the beach, on the hill side, along the path, and on the path… We climbed as far as we were allowed to… on the way back one of the penguins took exception to Tina… he attacked her… he walked on to the path, around several other visitors and pecked determinedly at her leg… He got her jeans dirty… He left a slight bruise on her leg… Not getting a great reaction he abandoned the attack and wondered off. We have photos… We are considering a song with a three part harmony…

Back aboard the ship… back across the strait… back to the harbor where Veendam awaits… then a cab to town… we walk about… we buy trinkets… we sit in a cafĂ© with beers and the local lomo and hot dogs (with mayonnaise and guacamole, the local style) and tell brave stories of penguin attacks…

It is blowing a gale… it is occasionally raining… we grab a cab and return to the ship… we find that with the high winds they have a tug pushing on the ship as she sits at dock… to prevent the mooring lines from parting… The tug has been pushing against the side of the ship since noon… the ships thrusters are working as well… it is an extreme example of the difficulty in navigating in the southern waters… The tug reportedly costs $5,000 per hour… ultimately it will spend 7 hours pushing against the ship as the ship sits at dock.

About 6:00 the wind died, the tug backed off… Our passengers returned from their shore excursions… at 7:30 we dropped our lines and drifted away from the dock, headed for Valparaiso… The sun sets, the sky the faded gray of the southern hemisphere… Now south west of town, in the strait of Magellan… Across the channel, the Silver Sea is pacing us…

Goodnight

Monday, January 25, 2010

North, to South America



Sunday, January, 24th 2010

In Drake’s Passage

Antarctica is behind us now… we crossed 65 degrees south on our way back about 7:00 am… We plan on reaching Cape Horn this evening.

There is a swell, and the ship is rolling… but little wind, and no white caps… Its cloudy. It is a lazy day, a day to relax and recover. Once again the ship is mostly deserted, or at least seems that way.

Patrick Toomey, the Ice Pilot, gave a talk on where we went in Antarctica (and why it was or wasn’t where we planned to go…)

We are in Drake’s Passage… Sir Francis Drake was here 450 years ago… Magellan had been here earlier… Darwin, aboard the Beagle was here later… they were all aboard wooden sailing ships… without benefit of charts, weather forecasts, or GPS…

Now 7:00, pm…

Just after 6:00 we could make out land… by 7:00 we were just off Horn Island… the Cape Horn of legend. We picked up two Chilan Pilots, who would stay with us through Valparizo… we circled Horn Island… the seas were calm, the weather good, at least by the standards of Horn Island… we had fog, some clear skies, and later rain… the wind, calm at first grew in intensity… a cold dismal place given to extremes of weather, and we saw the best it had to offer…

We retired to the dining room for dinner, the islands of the Cape all around us…

Goodnight

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Antartica...


Thursday, January 21st 2010


A quick note: The satilite and so the internet was unavailable frequently when far south... this post covers 3 days...

Up a bit before 5:00… we are in Antarctica… It’s been light for hours… I don’t see anything when I get up, but 10 minutes later, after my shower there are ice bergs on both sides… We go from nothing to lots of bergs, tabular ice bergs, growlers, and burgie bits (these are all technical names for various sizes of ice burgs…)
I claim chairs in the Crow’s nest bar… Tina, Sig and Toby join me… It will be our base of operations all day… At least at first It’s overcast, but not foggy like yesterday… Then the fog closes in… then, it starts to snow… at first it’s a sharp icy snow, almost hail, then it begins to change… to real snow… lots of snow… a blizzard… a summer blizzard in Antarctica… Over the course of the day we get over 6” of snow… the passengers are making snow men… the crew is having a snow ball fight… all as the islands of the Antarctic peninsula pass by… the crew is shoveling snow… we see a few whales, apparently humpback whales… we see penguins on ice burgs… we see a seal on an ice berg… we see penguins swimming in the ocean…

On the pool deck the retractable roof is covered in snow… it is colder than normal there… cold air and the hot tub and warm pool are creating their own weather… it is foggy… as foggy inside as it has been outside.

The naturalists on board say we may see blue whales, then all explain they never had… It seems that blue whales are the unicorn of Antarctica…

I take pictures… but the camera is having issues… It can’t focus in a world of white, light gray and more white… I have to hand focus.

We visit Deception Island… an active volcano, a former whaling station… the old caldera a harbor, Port Foster, but there is a rock in the entrance, so it’s too narrow for us… we can see into the mouth of the harbor but not far inside… too much fog… A Patrick O’Brien novel takes place on a similar island… with a similar name… There are ghosts here, real and imagined…

We continue to watch the scenery as it goes by… One of the naturalists is reading the Antarctic Treaty over the PA… no one thinks it strange… We still haven’t seen any blue whales or unicorns…

Now almost 10:00 pm… still light… I’m tired… I am going to bed…
We have two more days of cruising in Antarctica… They say the best views are yet to come…

Friday January 22nd 2010


They said today would be better, and it was…

Again, I got up early, too d@#% early, showered and went upstairs to establish a base… this time we have enough space for all 6 of us… Sig was up soon after, followed by Tina (bringing a cup of coffee) and Toby…

Today was mostly (but not always) overcast, but not foggy, and the sun shone through with some regularity… we started by crossing Dallmann Bay. It was calm… dead calm… better to see the whales as they spouted and dove… around us were ice bergs and glacier covered islands… It is a land locked in winter in the middle of their summer…
Today, there were other boats and ships about… a small research ship, two different expedition ships, no less than 5 sail boats (editorial comment: I would really like to come here on a expedition boat… but I think the folks on the sailboats are flat crazy), and finally a second research ship… (and still later another expedition boat)
Yesterday was all about icebergs… today we are seeing Antarctica… Mostly it is white… white show fields, white glaciers, white fog surrounding the peaks… but there is rock peaking underneath, dark black rock, and by mid day rock peaks were visible as well… peaks the very reminiscent of the Grand Tetons… But younger Tetons still wrapped in a glacial embrace… strangely one pair of peaks were recently formally named Una’s Peaks… the whalers had named them 50 years or so ago after a young lady from the Falklands… Then they were not Una’s Peaks, they were Una’s T&%#’s (you know). Una later married had children and now lives in Australia…

Today we also saw research stations… An Argentine station, a Chilean Station, (in Andword Bay) a British station, now restored as a historic site and tourist stop?
We saw penguins swimming… We saw penguins on ice bergs… We saw seals on ice bergs… We saw penguin colonies… Penguin colonies can be identified from a distance by the red stain on the ice from the algae growing on the ice fertilized by the penguin poop… Frequently there are paths high onto the face of the snow mount, across snow fields to breeding areas hundreds of feet up. A couple of times we were close enough to smell the penguin colonies… (no, the cold does not prevent the odor…)
We try to pass through the Lemaire Channel, but have to turn back due to ice… in the process we reach 65 degrees 4 minutes south longitude…

Late in the day I saw a glacier calf… it was a small ice fall, but it was a glacier calving…

As I write this it’s about 5:00 pm… T & I are back in our room… I will take a shower soon… Antarctica is going by outside our balcony window… It continues to be spectacular… Nothing about this place is subtle… it is black rock peaking through blindingly white snow… gray blue seas, bright blue skies… sharp edges of glaciers and bergs, soft edges of snow fields and fog… shadows and glaring bright… It doesn’t get old. At times it is difficult to tell what is a snow covered peak, and what is a cloud… thinks here are deceptive… We are back in Dallmann Bay where are day began… there is a chop so it’s harder to see whales… there is still 6 hours before sunset.

So far today I have taken 409 photos… thank God for digital… I have already deleted 50 of them… I will delete more tonight…

We are currently too far south to get a reliable satellite internet connection… so I will keep writing until I can post…

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Up early again… after a night at in the Pacific Ocean off the Antartic Peninsula, we returned to the peninsula near Anvers Island… we picked up a dozen visitors from Palmer Station… We stood off while they came out in zodiac rubber boats… Having picked up our passengers we continued eastward in the Bismarck Straight…
As usual the views were magnificent. There were whales, humpbacks, Orcas and minke whales…

The scientists gave a talk… On the station, on their work, on other work being done in the Antarctic. It was so popular that it was repeated…

The cruise continued, turning about and heading back west… We dropped most of the scientists off at Palmer station, but five stayed aboard as their season was done and they needed to get back to Argentina and flights back to the US…

As we reentered the Pacific the swell increased… The sea is not angry, there are few white caps, but there is a swell, maybe two different swells from different directions. At the bottom of the earth there is little land to get in the way of the sea. The ship’s movement increased… some are suffering from Mal’de maire… So far T and I have escaped… The ship seems deserted… I suspect those not suffering various ailments are taking naps…

About 4:00 the bridge announced that we would be passing the last two big ice bergs we would see… at 5:08 we passed the “last” ice berg… 90 meters tall, 380 meters underwater… We are leaving the land of ice… headed north… We should reach Cape Horn, the tip of South America tomorrow morning early…

The Internet is up again… I will need to hurry down and post this…

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Blind in the Coolest Place on Earth - South America report 10

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010



By 7:00 am we were at 55 degrees south, nearly even with the southernmost tip of South America… I keep a chart of our position as we travel… This morning, we are literally nearly off the lower edge of the map. Today is a transit, near due south, towards the Antarctic Peninsula. It is expected by day’s end we will be seeing ice bergs… for now we see the sea, the sky, and clouds.

Yesterday, Tuesday, we were in the Falkland Islands… an enclave of Brittan in the south Atlantic... It was rough as we anchored in the outer of the two bays that make up Stanley Harbor… rough enough to make the tender ride from the ship exciting and a bit wet… Stanley is a small town, 4 blocks deep, a mile or so long, stretching along the edge of the inner harbor. It is very English, with low stone buildings with sheet iron roofs, brightly painted… There are few trees but several very nice gardens… Red English phone boxes, land rovers and pubs…

But we were not there for a bit of England… We were here to see penguins… We had made arraignments in advance with Patrick Watt, a local guide… He had booked 28 passengers from the ship on a trip to Volunteer Point, penguin rookery, with Magellanic, Gentoo, and King penguins… Volunteer point is about 10 miles from where the ship was anchored, but it probably 50 miles by road, or lack thereof… the last 11 miles being overland, over the peat moors… a trip which can take 2.5 hours, and 2.5 hours back… Given time with the penguins (that after all is why we came) the trip takes more than 7 hours… We are scheduled to be in Stanley for just over 8 hours…

But first we had to get off the ship…

Stanley is a tender port… instead of docking, the Veendam anchored in the outer of the two bays, then dropped 4 of her boats and ferried or “tendered” the passengers ashore… each tender carries about 90 people (in an emergency, used as a life boat she carries 150 passengers, we hope we never experience that…) The trip into town takes about 10 minutes or so, so each boat can only make two trips an hour… math suggests it could take as long as three hours to get everyone ashore… Cruise ships make money by selling the passengers stuff… everything from drinks, to spa treatments, to drinks, to art work, to drinks, to photos of you as you walk down the gangway, to more drinks, to shore excursions… Of course the ship would prefer you book their shore excursions, and we had not… we had booked a local excursion… The ship gives their excursion guests priority on the tenders… We need to get off early… There is conflict… Those on ship’s excursions go to one theater, those without the other… There are rumors… people or fidgeting… there is no ship’s crew available to answer questions for the independents… We (and 22 others) manage to get on the first tender…

It is an exciting tender ride… it is rough, some of the waves are splashing over the tender… the roof is leaking… we arrive at the dock, find Patrick then wait for the others booked on our tour… the next 6 or 8 tenders only carry official ship’s excursion guests… The ship’s tour departs. Patrick sends five vehicles ahead while we wait for the rest of the group. A few more of Patrick’s guests find their way ashore, and finally, still a few guests short we depart for Volunteer Point… We are lucky… we get to ride with Patrick.

We leave town, towards the hills which were the battle ground during the Argentine invasion and expulsion… There are mine fields… 27 years later… There is a team from Zimbabwe working to clear the mines…

The war haunts the place… Patrick points out the place where a British tank was destroyed by a Argentine mine… there is a cairn and a cross atop the hill… marking where two of the Royal Marines fell retaking it… Further along radar installation can be seen atop another hill, part of the new defensive installations. In the valley nearby the burnt remains of an Argentine helicopter… One of several destroyed nearby by British Harriers… It’s not just the artifacts; Patrick and many of the islanders we meet lived through the invasion… Their memories are still fresh…

We leave town on a paved road, then turn onto a good gravel road, built since the war… This is sheep country… but not the sheep country of home where shepherds and dogs trend the flocks… here they let the sheep loose to graze, then round them up a couple of times a year, much as cattle are run across the aired west of Nevada… the gravel roads get a bit smaller and rougher as we turn off once again… then, at a sheep farm the road ends and we set off across the moor.

It has rained heavily the day before. The moors are wet and the tracks treacherous…
We pause to open and shut gates… we follow the existing track at first, driving wide, onto fresh ground where the track crosses bogs, now deep with mud churned by the tires of previous vehicles. Patrick has 10 vehicles out today, in two groups of 5… the ship has group of 20… there are at least a couple more… It is important to travel in groups… so we can drag each other out if we get “bogged.” Patrick has chosen the “old winter track” which hasn’t been used in a couple of years. It has the advantage of being less churned than the common route. Our group gets bogged twice… the first time the last vehicle gets stuck in one of the churned spots… the second time it was Patrick’s turn… It was at a gate, with a known deep bog… we had stopped to place a couple of loose fence posts and 5 sand bags in the hole before trying to pass… It was spectacular… one tire sunk deeply in the muck, two in the air… They drop a fence, the rest of the vehicles drive across, tow Patrick out, and we are on our way. We later find out the 20 vehicles of the ship’s tour bog 30 times on the way in.

We arrive at Volunteer Point about 15 minutes behind the groups that had left an hour earlier… There are penguins everywhere… The Gentoo and King Penguins are gathered in separate breading colonies… standing in large groups, while the Magellanic penguins are scattered along the beach and in their burrows…
The breeding areas are marked with white rocks to keep visitors out, but the penguins frequently don’t respect the rocks and wander among the visitors and the occasional sheep.

We spend about an hour and a half wandering among the penguins… Many pictures are taken… we eat a picnic lunch (egg salad sandwiches) then load back aboard the Land Rovers and other vehicles… The ship’s tour leaves first, 15 minutes ahead of us. This time Patrick’s 10 vehicles travel as one group. Again, we take the old winter track… this time we only have one vehicle bog once… we can see the ship’s excursion on the ridge as they pull at least one vehicle out as well. Our route is shorter… we reach the sheep ranch and the gravel road ahead of the ship’s tour.

We pause a couple of times on the way back for photos… photos of the “rock rivers”, curious cascades of broken rock, left over from long ago glacial events… we stop so I can take a photo of the burnt wreckage of the Argentine helicopter, a variation of a large flightless bird… I take a picture of one of the too frequent mine field signs…

Back in town, Patrick takes us to see the Lady Elizabeth… a 1878 iron hulled square rigger, which limped into the Falklands 100 years ago after a bad trip around Cape Horn… abandoned by her owners, she was a dockside warehouse until 1934, when in a storm she broke loose and grounded at the eastern end of the harbor… she has sat there since, stuck in the mud… She still carries here lower masts and one spar… truly a ghost… nearby are the grounded remains of a 100 year old tug and several whale ships… fragments of more ships are found closer to town… Ashore is the remains of the bow of a wooden sailing ship… drug ashore to preserve the remains… The carvings around the bow houser holes surviving to show how graceful she once was…

Nearby they are blowing up some of the mines… you see the explosion several seconds before you hear the blast… It's a very visceral reminder of the war.

Patrick drives us through town along the waterfront… This is his home… with all the memories of past and hopes and pride in its future… past new buildings being built to support the new oil drilling efforts, We visit the whale bone arch, the war memorial, the Centennial memorial, drive past the government building and the Governor’s home…

We get to the pier to catch the last tender (there will be several more tenders, for a late ship’s tour.)

We make our way to the “Crow’s Nest” (it’s a bar at the high on the bow of the ship with a wonderful view) to watch as we sail away…

Now Wednesday, 11:00

The fog has closed in on the ship… We are sounding our fog horn… This has been a very quiet day with most of our fellow passengers taking their time getting up…
The seas are growing, while the waves are not great, the ship’s movement much more pronounced… Passengers now tack down the halls, swaying as if drunk… Blue sky is showing, but visibility at sea level is down less than 100 yards.

It’s now nearly time for lunch, as we abandon measurements of time, substituting meals in place of hours… Visibility decreases to zero… We are completely enveloped in fog... Tina doesn’t like it… She says it best… “We are in the coolest place in the world, literally and figuratively, and we can’t see an F’ing thing”

Monday, January 18, 2010


Sunday, January 17, 2010




Tina and I spent the day at the Penguin rookery at Punta Tonbo south of Pueto Madyrn…
We expected to see penguins… we didn’t expect one million penguins… we didn’t expect it to be so dry, so desert like… The colony was 2.5 hours south, mostly on a 2 lane highway, but the last 20 kilometers on good gravel road. You hike (walk) from the parking area (with restrooms and a gift shop) about a mile along the coast… we expected a mile to get to the penguins, but two were waiting at the entrance of the parking lot to greet the visitors…

It was hot… not unbearably so, but hot… we were carrying jackets and wind breakers… after all everyone knows penguins like cold… except for Magellanic penguins who summer in Argentina and winter in Brazil…

At first the path is a wooden walkway… then gravel marked by white stones… it soon becomes obvious that there are penguins everywhere. This is a desert coast, with low drought adapted bushes… and under each bush was a penguin burrow, with anywhere from 1-3 penguins in residence…

I had assumed we wound see penguins, I didn’t assume we would need to be careful not to step on them… at several points there were long low bridges to allow the penguins an easy path across the walkway… the penguins used them as shady spots to gather… As we worked our way into the site, there were penguins headed from the burrows high on the hills to the water… We found a beach covered with penguins… penguins wading in the surf, penguins in the water playing, penguins well out at sea… penguins, and more penguins, and yes, more penguins…

We spent an hour and a half or so with the penguins… then back on the bus for the two and a half our ride back to the ship… When we returned, it was departure time… so we didn’t get a chance to explore the town… I suspect this port is a water shed… until now the trip has been about the Cities we have visited, Rio, Buenos Aries and Montevideo… now it will be about the natural world… the penguins, the whales, the ice and the southern cross…

Tina, Sig, and I went topside just before bed… we looked at the stars, lots of stars… we were looking for the fabled “Southern Cross”… we realized that we didn’t know the southern skies… We need to look at star charts and talk to the people aboard… but that will wait until tomorrow.

Now Monday, January 18th, 2010

In the South Atlantic, headed for Stanley, the Falkland Islands…
Once again it’s a sea day… The weather is changing… its still clear, but its getting colder… there are whisps of clouds to the west, likely the leading edge of a front..

We continue to stare at the ocean, looking for whales, so far without success.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

South America, Day 8, bring on the wildlife

Saturday, January 16, 2010

At sea,

Sea days force one to admit they are on vacation, with sitting about, reading, talking, and doing little in place of the “up early we need to get started if we want to see everything” pace we sometimes subject ourselves to…

This morning it was foggy, the high overcast found along the shore line… by 10:00 we were in a dense fog, visibility limited to less than 100 yards, that white fluffy all encompassing isolation… the ship was sounding its fog horn, a sound familiar but now rarely heard.

By 1:00 the fog had burned off and we found ourselves in a world of blue, clear blue skies, with a dark blue sea… only the occasional white cap to act as an accent.
The day has been a slow one, up for coffee, then after Tina got up we went to breakfast, attended a talk on the Antarctic, then a talk on sea ice, lunch, a nap, occasional bouts of reading, and a talk on whales (“there be whales her’ Capt’n”) It there are whales nearby I haven’t see any (yet) but I believe they are here…
The dress is formal tonight, so I have my dinner jacket on… soon it will be dinner, then?

Tomorrow is Puerto Madyrn, a Welsh/Argentinean town on the south edge of the Valdes Peninsula, home of a Argentine National Park, and our first penguin colony… This is a moment of transition on the trip… so far we have visited cities, now we are looking for nature and wildlife… I am changing from my small “urban” camera to the larger DLSR with multiple lenses… We will probably carry jackets tomorrow…
The town is supposed to be a strange outpost of Wales with Italian accents in Latin America… It is something of a beach town for vacationing Argentines… and it has an aluminum mine. A friend who has been here before tells me that the fishing fleet is picturesque… South American has been narrowing as we have worked our way south, and the guide books describe it as being in the Andean foothills.

For now I think I will stare at the ocean and look for whales… probably in vane…

Now 10:00 pm… dinner is complete… we watched the show… now in the cabin… There is a lighting storm ahead and to the east… it covers a little more than 90 degrees of the horizon… sheet lighting, lightning bolts, high, between clouds, low, illuminating the sea… it’s a grand show. The seas are still calm… I don’t see a squall line, but it is dark…

We gained an hour this evening… so while the clock now says 11:30, it’s really 10:30… we will probably lose an hour going to the Falklands in a couple of days, then regain it again a few days later… it’s all vacation so for the most part time isn’t an issue. Earlier we gained an hour going to Buenos Aires, but lost that hour going to Montevideo…

Now, Sunday, January 17, 2010

We turned westward and entered the Golfo Nuevo about 7:30 am… It’s windy… you can see land now on both sides of the ship… a few passengers are top side looking for whales… this is the first place that they are likely to be found, but we are a bit late for the local “high” whale season… Of course, most passengers are either in bed or headed for the Lido for food…

We have a shore excursion here, to the penguin rookery at Punta Tonbo on Valdez Peninsula.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

South America Day 7, Uruguay



Friday, January 15, 2010


We docked at Montevedago late…

At first glance, this is a different, older style of port, while there is a modern container dock nearby this is an old port, with warehouses now unused some junk equipment about and the like… Much more like a classic romantic sea port.
Mantevedago also has a reputation as an easy port to visit… you dock at the edge of the old city, you walk off the boat among collected artifacts salvaged from the German World War II battle cruiser Graf Spee… Scuttled in the River Plata early in the war…

We (Tina, Sig, Toby and myself) walked off early, maps in hand and followed the route marked… It was a tourist friendly, but not a tourist city… there are streets where cars have been banned in favor of pedestrians… lots of open market stalls, mostly vegetables and other local needs, few catering to tourists… the architecture is old, a mix of colonial and second empire (French Victorian)… with new buildings sprinkled in… Many buildings were deteriorated, some merely facades, some undergoing restoration.

We followed the route past the port market, up to the first of three squares. We wandered to the second, which was undergoing renovation… There was a McDonalds and a Burger King on the street nearby… the Cathedral is here… On the far side were craft and antique dealers, with silver, books (mostly in Spanish) and strangely, older kitchen goods… if you have ever wanted an antique meat grinder Monevedago is the place to look… Many items were intriguing, but none called our name.

We worked our way to the third square, the largest… Plaza Independence, complete with its statue of Jose Gervasio Artigasa (and his mausoleum) and the old city gate. Plaza Indepencia is the divide between the new and old city… At the far side is the Palacio Salvo, a really strange high rise from the 1920’s, incorporating every bad idea found in the architecture of the time… imagine a high French second empire building with a large Moorish tower on one corner… It was at one time the tallest building in South America. Words do not do the building justice… It is awkward, it looks like it is ready to topple over… It has gone condo (at least if my limited Spanish has not abandoned me…)

We worked our was slowly back to the ship… Monevedago is a city of book stores… It is a city of government buildings and embassies… The city has modern conveniences, but also men with horse carts picking through the trash in search of recyclables. We found the city museum… Near the port, we went to the Port Market… we were expecting vegetable stalls, we found a very much gentrified 19th century building with local restaurants… Sig and Toby went back to the ship… we chose a restaurant and had local beef steak, papas fritas and local red wine… Our fellow diners were Uruguayan…

After lunch Tina and I walked along the port road… It was still the old city, but not the city of tourists… we found more of the original city wall… we saw buildings being rebuilt… we saw another horse cart… We returned to the ship…

We sailed from Monevideo about 6:00… then due east through the River mouth before turning south-west towards our next port, Puerto Madyan… with its nearby National Park, and our first Penguins… But first we have a day at sea.

Friday, January 15, 2010

South America, Day 5, Immersed in the Myth of the city

Thursday January 14, 2010 Buenos Aries

I awoke with the sun, about 6:00, took a shower and went up to find coffee and watch the ship dock… we were about two miles off the port of Buenos Aires…

By 6:30 we had reached dock at the container port, a very modern container port. The ship entered the breakwater and gracefully spun about, and with the help of a tug backed into a one of the spaces… ropes were thrown across to the dock but at first no one came to catch them… Two men walked up, and took one rope, then were chased away by two more, who arrived by truck, these wearing orange floatation vests, and finally took the ropes. Having tied to the pier we boarded the Argentine authorities.

The excitement of docking finished, I joined the family for breakfast…
The announcement that the ship had been cleared by Argentine authorizes came quickly, and we gathered, and walked off to the waiting shuttle bus. We were docked at a container dock, an industrial area with cranes, trucks, and such all moving about busily. There was one difference from an similar facility in the United States… there were dogs running about among the hubbub… dogging cranes and trucks.

The shuttle took us to the port office, as usual with lots of security, gift shops and an internet center. We met Jessica our guide at the gate. Jessica was a ex-pat, who had come to Buenos Aries to study Spanish for a few months. She has lived here for nearly 3 years… and loves it.

Our walking tour started with a taxi ride across the south end of the city past the Puerto Madero to the San Telmo neighborhood. San Telmo was the original rich neighborhood full of casa chorizo, sausage houses… named for their design, a long skinny house consisting of a series of courtyards linked together. The wealthy and powerful abandoned the neighborhood in the late 19th century, and it became the neighborhood of the new immigrants, the casa chorizos becoming tenements. Now the neighborhood has been gentrified, the buildings now given over to antique shops and apartments.

She led us through several of the buildings, then through the produce market (many stalls now given over to antique dealers, but some produce stalls remained) San Telmo claims to be the home of the Tango, but other neighborhoods claim that as well. It was a neighborhood rich in graffiti, including a mural of the Che’ complete with a tattoo showing a disgraced but loved soccer hero on his arm…
We walked through the Monserratt neighborhood past a church with the grave and monument to General Belgrano, one of Argentina’s founders (a cruiser, named Belgrano was sunk by the Brittish during the Faulklands war… that war will haunt this trip). The church spire was marked to show battle damage from one of several wars of British occupation (or attempted occupation in 1806/07).

From Monserratt we walked to Centro, with its Plaza de Mayo, where the Casa Rosa or Pink Palace stands. The Plaza was the home to the Mothers of the Disappeared as well as other groups including a group demonstrating against drugs, and an encampment of veterans of the Falklands war. The Casa Rosa is the office of the President, and from its balcony Juan and Eva Peron would give speeches… a nearby ministry shows the pot marks of the bomb which was dropped nearby killing 300 Argentines when during the coup which caused Juan Peron to flee into exile.
Also just off the Plaza sits the Cathedral Metropolitana, with the crypt of General San Martin, the second of the great Argentine heroes of independence, an honor guard standing watch.

From the plaza we worked our way up the Ave de Mayo, walking and taking the subway, on our way to a mid-day snack at CafĂ© Tortoni, the most famous of the Argentine coffee houses. For a tourist destination the cafĂ© was truly genuine… we sat with coffee and pastry, and relaxed.

Having regained our strength we continued our walk… We soon reached the Avenue 9 de Julio (Argentina’s day of independence) the widest street in the world… at 140 meters, with 16 lanes of traffic… it is impressive. We jumped back on the subway headed north to the Retrio neighborhood. The new neighborhood of the rich… full of once grand homes, now government buildings, hotels and embassies… We had lunch, empanadas and cervisa in a local cafĂ©, then explored the City cemetery.

The cemetery is holds the body of Evita, along with much of Buenos Aries once rich and important… We spent time walking among the crypts… then caught a taxi back to the ship…

That evening they showed Evita (the movie) aboard… we watched it… Sometime after 9:00 we set sail for Montevideo Uruguay…

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

South America, part 4

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

It has been a slow day at sea. Overnight the seas got rougher, not really rough, but rough enough to bother many of our fellow passengers.

Today was another lazy day; reading (Chasing Che, A Motorcycle Journey in Search of the Guevara Legend by Patrick Symmes), eating, attending a class on tapas, more reading, drinking, more eating, a lecture on Argentina, still more reading…

We have continued south along the coast, leaving Brazil behind about noon. By 4:00 the cliffs of Uruguay could be seen to the west. By 4:00 the seas calmed. By 5:30 the ship turned due west as we entered the wide estuary of the river Plata, where Uruguay and Argentina meet. We are much closer to land, and can now see individual buildings along the shore… The water is changing color from a pure cobalt blue, gaining a touch of green as we begin to see the affect of the shore and river…
Having read more, we are now thinking of eating again… this will be dinner so we should change into something better than shorts and a tee shirt.

We will take on a pilot for the passage through the estuary soon… We will take on a second pilot, the harbor pilot about dawn. These are shallow waters, the channel is narrow at times. It was in these shallow waters of the Rio de la Plata that the Germans scuttled the pocket battleship Graf Spee when cornered by the British Navy in World War 2. We should see salvaged parts of the ship Thursday in Montevideo.

9:49 pm… we just took on the estuary pilot… there are 12 ships nearby…

Tomorrow we visit Buenos Aires

Bye for now, Randy

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

South America, the third post

Tuesday, January 12, 2010, 8:00

At sea,

We are nearly 250 miles off the coast of southern Brazil, in calm seas, traveling south-west at 18 knots. The skies are full of broken layered clouds… now more blue than the grey of an hour ago… at dawn the colors were much more muted… steel grey for the seas lighter blue grey for the sky, with streaks of very light grey, almost white…

The ship is slowly waking up… without a port call few passengers feel a sense of urgency to rise, and many are still complaining of fatigue from the journey to Rio from where ever home is.

The sea is gentle… a few white caps showing…

Last night at midnight we were awakened by to find a light on the horizon… a ship of course, but too far away to be seen… then there was lighting… sheet lighting illuminating the skies for a brief moment… The storm was fleeting rather than dramatic… the thunder a very soft growl lost within the sounds of a ship underway…
Now, mid morning, the storm continues, but the lighting is invisible… the passengers are stirring… generally towards breakfast or the pool… A few sit at tables at the stern, with coffee, pastry and a book and sit…

It is about 1,000 miles from Rio to Buenos Aires… by noon we had gone a little over 300, with 700 miles left… We are now closer to the coast of South America, just under 100 miles away.

Sea days are strangely relaxing… It’s a self imposed exile on a ship, 100 feet wide, 800 feet long… I get up, and go upstairs for coffee while Tina sleeps in… then after she gets up we go to breakfast, then walk about… we watched a cooking demonstration, then think about lunch… we had our meet and greet with the other cruisers from Cruise Critic, (a discussion website, www.cruisecritic.com) then went to a talk on Antarctic wild life, then went looking for a snack, now I am sitting with Tina and the sisters, they talking, I working on my Marketing plan for work, and now updating the blog… Soon we will start preparing for dinner, it’s a formal night, so we need to clean up and get dressed.

Now after 11:00... Dinner is over... the Internet cafe is quiet... I don't have to shore the slow connection which makes using the internet tolerable..

Tomorrow we are at sea again... I might finish my marketing plan...

Monday, January 11, 2010

South America Continued


Monday, January 10, 2010


Now aboard, today was much less frantic… I got up with the sun… Tina didn’t… I went up to the Lido, had a croissant and coffee and read… I didn’t see any of my fellow travelers… Tina got up after 10:00, showered, and we walked off the ship… Having toured the day before there wasn’t a specific destination we needed to visit…

The local jewelry maker offered a shuttle to their shop at Ipanema… It worked for us. We toured the shop… where they were cutting gems and making settings… Tina ended up with an unexpected pre-anniversary gift, an amethyst ring… After shopping we walked the two blocks to the beach… The Brazilians, both men and women do wear somewhat abbreviated swim wear… The beach was unexpectedly dirty… but beautiful, we took pictures… then back via the jewelry store shuttle.

We ended up finding the sisters and Sig (and Toby) had lunch, then turned out for the mandatory life boat drill… Holland has simplified the drill… you no longer have to bring your personal floatation device…

Following the drill we stopped by the cabin to grab the camera, then went upstairs for the sail away… we took photos of the City as we sailed, we took photos of Christ the Redeemer from the harbor, we took photos of the Brazilian Navy (they have an aircraft carrier!) we took pictured of Sugar Loaf from the sea, we took pictures of the colonial sea coast forts, we took pictures of the beaches, we took pictured of the square rigged ship entering the harbor, and we took photos of a submarine that followed us out… suffice it to say we took too many damn pictures…

Having taken pictures we retreated out of the wind to the Crow’s Nest (a bar at the bow of the ship) where we had Pisco sours (yes, we know Pisco Sours are Peruvian, and this isn’t Peru, but they are both in South America and that worked for us... strangely, the ship is using Machu Pichu for a background on some photos... they seem to be similarly geographically challenged) courtesy of our travel agent (Laure of Skyscraper tours, a really good cruise travel agent) who had “drink cards” in our state room when we arrived…

Having drank and talked we retreated to our rooms… I took a nap (I never nap) Tina watch TV aimlessly (she never watches TV aimlessly) and with that the trip became a vacation as well… Its now after 7:00 local time… we have both showered and dressed for dinner (at 8:00) and I am sitting on the balcony blogging and editing the too many pictures… I will try to post some of the pictures this evening.

The seas are calm, the weather a bit cooler. There are light clouds, the sun is setting… By my calculations we are now 20 miles off the coast, 50 miles south of Rio… Our speed is 18 knots, our heading south, south-east.

Now about 11:00, pm… we have dinned, we have seen the show… Tina is preparing for bed, I will take my chances with the satellite internet… with luck I will get this and some photos posted…

Fair winds and trailing seas...

So it begins South America, first posting

A Note… this trip started with 23 hours in transit from San Francis to Rio… then 8 hours on a guided tour… then we checked in aboard the ship, cleaned up, had dinner, walked about, took a shower… as I update this its 10:00 pm or so in Rio… I am sitting on our balcony… it’s hot… nearly 90 degrees… I can see “Christ the Redemer” floating above the city… It will be sometime tomorrow before I can find an internet connection and post this… There will be times along the way that it will be a couple of days between blog posts… in between I will keep writing…

That being said, it all started at the airport, SFO, Saturday, early morning… We should go back there…

Saturday, January 9, 2010

We are at the airport… We have left…

It’s a bit disorienting… up early, so far no coffee (Tina is off dealing with this) a large pile of “stuff” a backpack, a computer bag, at my feet… So the journey begins… small suitcase and a large purse… All the stuff too precious for the cargo hold… so now we schlep it through security, across the airport, and down the jet way.

It’s a bit exotic, when checking it, “where are you going” “Rio”… Casablanca would have been cooler but Rio is a good answer…

We are carrying too much stuff… but its 3 weeks, and we need our stuff…
So far it’s unreal…

International travel is exotic… it’s special, but before we travel internationally we have to get to Atlanta… and that is a typical domestic trip… We are flying on Delta rather than my beloved Virgin America… I can see a Virgin plane at its gate across the tarmac.

Most journeys begin this way… I think it’s the pull of home… you need to break away, away from the common… so it goes…

This trip is different… I am not “connected” … here at the airport the wireless it T-Mobil… I left my phone at home… Driving across New Mexico and Arkansas I had internet access… at SFO I don’t…

Now airborne… Delta is calling the cabin crew or at least the head stew “customer service coordinators” … What’s wrong with “Flight Attendant”? They now talk of AED’s… better known as “approved electronic devices.” Regular readers of the blog know that I can be critical of airlines… Delta did a pretty good job.

We had a very long layover in Atlanta… so we took the MARTA the local subway downtown. Atlanta was dead…. It’s Saturday, and the offices were closed as were most shops including the Starbucks… We walked around the Atlanta Underground, which was a bust… It was cold… 29 degrees with a strong wind… Leon, a homeless guy pointed us towards Centennial Park… We found the Ted Turner Building, complete with Ted’s restaurant, Bison, which curiously features bison on the menu… We had a nice lunch. Feeling much better about Atlanta we found the subway station and went back to the airport, cleared security, and rendezvoused with the rest of our group… Tina’s sisters, Tanya and Karin, and her brother Sig and his wife Toby…

A bit after 8:00 pm we started to board the plane… It was chaotic as any airline boarding experience seems to be these days, but pretty well handled… I am finding that Delta is doing a good job… blankets and pillows on each seat… sufficient room for carry-ons, a helpful crew… They serve dinner including wine or beer, plus breakfast some hours later… the crew is fluent in English and Portuguese.

Now, Sunday, January 10, 2010, late…

We landed a bit after 9:00 local time… we waited in longish lines for immigration… (Rio has a reputation for very long lines… these weren’t… ) We grabbed our checked luggage… we had too much, three bags, the sisters had more, Sig and Toby less… schlepped everything though customs with a wave through… then out where we met our guide Neyla… Tina had researched local guides though Cruise Critics… she came highly recommended, by several people including one we had cruised with before, and trusted… She was a good choice… we gathered the bags, got out to the curb where she had a mini bus… The checked bags took one row of seats… Pulling out of the airport we headed downtown to the cruise dock where we dropped the checked bags, then continued on our tour…

At first Rio seemed a difficult, run down and chaotic… It soon proved otherwise… We started by visiting the Carnival competition facility… Carnival, the Brazilian Lenten festival has outgrown street parades… (they still have street parades too) so the Samba competition has its own facility, a 5 or 6 block long street like facility with grandstands and skyboxes… they had repainted the street white in preparation for this year’s celebration… there were several floats present for practice… we visited one of the “Schools” where Tina and I tried on costumes and had our photos taken…

From there we headed to the ‘Christ the Redeemer” a 90’ tall statue of Christ, arms out, so forming a cross on the top of a local hill, overlooking the city… to get to the top you either take a train… an electrified rack railroad, or drive up in a minivan… we took the train… As a certified guide Neyla could get tickets without standing in line… so the wait wasn’t bad… the train runs through the jungle on its climb to the top… Most of the other guests were locals… always a good sign… At the top you can either climb stairs or take an elevator the last 100 feet or so… we got to the top, where the statue loomed over everything… the view was incredible… It was a good choice… We took the train back down… we talked to locals… most learn English in school, but are afraid to use it at first. We stopped in the pharmacy across the plaza for water bottles, a coke for Tanya and ice creams all around… The site had parking police, municipal police, and tourist police… there was a disagreement about the charge for parking… the Tourist Police, a federal police force, handled it… of course they had machine guns…

At night they light the statue only… right now (11:00 pm or so) it is floating in the blackness above the city…

From Christ the Redeemer we drive over to the “Hippie Market” a 1960’s craft market… nothing catches our fancy, but we take pictures of the Santa in a bathing suit statue, and I try some local food, a bean paste shell filled with corn mush deep fried with a sauce with tiny shrimp (complete with shells and in some cases heads) It was good… only Tina tried a bite…

From there we drove along Ipanema and Coco Cabana Beaches… then to the tram station for Sugar Loaf… Sugar Loaf is a rock at the entrance to the harbor… to get there to take a pair of aerial tramways… again, the view was spectacular, the ride fun, and we saw an monkey at the top…

Back down, back through town… this time in the area behind the downtown… I wanted to see the 1870’s aqueduct… It now is a bridge for a tram line… Nearby Nelya took us to a local artist’s project, “The Selaron Stairway” a stairway completely covered in tile and mosaic. Selaron, the artist was present, selling drawings, paintings and tiles… He is known for his drawings of pregnant black women… We purchased a tile from him, and took photos… The stairs have been well covered in the media… They were featured on an episode of CSI Miami… He has a web site at www.escadariaselaron.com.br

On the street at the bottom of the stairs a neighborhood Samba band was practicing… both for Carnival and for the party that evening…

We toured for a bit longer, then a bit after 7:00 Nelya dropped us at the pier to check in… there were no lines… we were on the ship quickly… our luggage was already in our room… We washed up, changed, went to dinner… Having eaten, we explored, unpacked and showered…

Now Midnight… Still on the balcony… Still sweltering… Christ the Redeemer is still hovering over the city… I have a single malt on the table, I have Stan Getz/Joao Gilberto’s “Girl from Ipanema” playing on my computer. There was a fireworks show over the city a few minutes ago. This is fast becoming a special trip.

Now Monday, January 11, 2010

I was up early… for coffee on deck… the ship is asleep, as most people are on vacation and taking it easy… just across the docks Rio is awake, bustling and noisy… it’s a stark contrast.

I tried to find a stray internet signal, and failed, so now I will go down stairs to the internet cafĂ© aboard and post this…

Friday, January 8, 2010

He was THE KING, Happy Birthday Elvis


Today is Elvis’ 75 birthday.

Steph and I visited Graceland last Sunday… I expected it to be tacky…

I was wrong… It was strangely human… The house is smaller than expected… and Elvis is there, throughout the building…

I visit a lot of house museums... I run a house museum... Graceland was something special. It's 1970's in a way that seems right... Its a home first, a temple of worship second... The feeling follows throughout... The Colonel's office, the trophy room, the graveside... All unexpectedly moving...

Enjoy the photos….

If you missed the Graceland Slide show it can be found at http://picasaweb.google.com/RandyHees/Graceland#

Randy

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Packing…

We leave for South America in about 36 hours… It’s time to pack… We have lists… we have the stuff… we are tearing our hair out… figuratively…


We will be gone for 22 days… You cannot carry enough clothing for 22 days... we will have to do laundry along the way… but we (or she) are trying to carry enough not to…


We start with a flight to Rio via AtlantaAtlanta will be cold, we have a long layover so we are likely to go downtown to explore. Rio will be hot… We have a day of touring in Rio before boarding the ship…


Once aboard we sail south… to Buenos Ares… to Montevideo, to Puerto Madryd Argentina… along the way we will be in cities, aboard the ship, and hiking in a National Park… From there it will get colder… The Falklands… then down to Antarctica… back to Ushuaia Argentina (aka Terra del Fuego) and Punta Arenas Chile… We end at Valparaiso Chile… then van via the wine country to Santiago for our flight home…


We need cold weather gear… sweaters, jackets rain gear… we need hiking gear… we need casual urban clothing… we need formal wear… (I own a tux… I am taking two shirts… there is a joke there… ) I am taking at least 4 pairs of shoes… I have never carried 4 pairs of shoes on a trip before…


We are talking three checked bags… two suitcases and a garment bag… we are each carrying to carry-ons… Me a back pack and a computer bag… Tina a really big purse and a bag…


We have our technology, a computer, two cameras, a GPS, binoculars… We have maps, a compass…


The suitcases are eventually finite space… Airlines have rules about weight… We will need to lug the carry-ons about Atlanta


It’s all about enough stuff vs. mobility… At least once we get on the ship we don’t have to haul stuff for 20 days… ships are good that way.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Closure, Home… for a couple of days…

It was a great trip… long drive and all…

I landed at SFO last night at about 11:30, 25 minutes ahead of schedule… I love Virgin America… Their staff is nice… the passengers are nice… its worth more to fly Virgin…

Thoughts…

On the journey... There is a lot to see if you are willing to pause and get off the Interstate… we got off at most towns with a “Historic Route 66” marker… There is a world parallel, within a mile of the Interstate, a really fun, interesting world.

The cities of “middle America” are great with lots to offer… we particularly liked Oklahoma City (Bricktown), Ft Smith and Little Rock… Memphis has lots to offer… but Beale Street is a bit Spring Break… A place to party, but we had fun, and Graceland is real... a not to be missed attraction.

Road side attractions should not be avoided… the Cadillac Ranch (itself a parody of road side attractions) particularly. The steak at the Big Texan is not the best in the world (its good) but you should not avoid it, instead embrace it.

McDonald’s and other chains are not a good option… in 6 days we visited Starbucks three times… We never went to McDonald’s…

If you get a chance, visit Graceland.

The postcard is not dead as an art form… I don’t mean the color photograph of a canyon or significant building reproduced in color. I mean the post card with big letters saying “Welcome to …”, the Photo of Elves’ Cat, the photo of Bill Clinton’s Cat… The post card is under siege from the email… long live the post card… We found that the post card selection at the Big Texan, The Clinton Library and Graceland were particularly good.

We had more connectivity on this trip than expected… Steph and I both had web cell phones… we were never more than 10 minutes away from e-mail and the web… We had live GPS… I had Wi-Fi at Dulles, and on the plane flying home.

Travel is no longer equal to isolation.

You need to visit Graceland… really

Washington DC is worth the trip… it’s a spectacular city, the home to a great government… its obvious… If you haven’t been here you need to visit to understand. I recommend crab cakes… or crab cake sandwiches… I like the Eastern Market or the Capital City Brewery… but I am not an expert, only a visitor…

Embrace the city where ever you are…

Remember to visit Graceland….

Now to pack for the next adventure…

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Day 7, Washington DC and home


Thursday, January 5, 2010

Washington DC area…

I awoke early to see the girls (my grand nieces, Maddy and Kate,) off to school. Then sat around talking with Jen, my niece, and the daughter… Finally taking it easy… I had to pack, sorting the mess in the car, the kind of mess that only a long car journey can generate… for the flight home.

Bags packed Steph and I drove up to the metro station and took a train into D.C. We got off at the Union Station station, and had lunch at the Capital City Brewery… having fortified ourselves for the cold we set off to walk from Union Station across the National Mall to the Hirshhorn Gallery store… I had seen a book on duct tape projects there a month ago, but they had sold out… today I got it… we then walked to the metro for a trip back to our car… It was bitterly cold out… the Capital reflecting pool was mostly frozen… there was ice on the walk ways… It will be nice to return home where it is up to 50 degrees warmer.

Steph then drove to Dulles Airport, to the Smithsonian Air and Space museum there… like all Smithsonian museums it is free, but they charge $15.00 for parking… but we discovered they stop charging for parking at 4:00 (this may be a winter thing) and seeing as we arrived at 3:59, we didn’t have to pay for parking…

We started in the observation tower, watching the planes land… then into the museum itself… It is overwhelming, a huge space stuffed with aircraft… a Boeing 707, a Concord, a SR-71, the Enola Gay… planes parked on the floor, planes hanging from the ceiling, 3 high, planes upside down, planes nose up… and a separate wing for the space artifacts, including the Shuttle Enterprise… I find the museum impressive, but not a great museum... they throw the artifacts at you... they overwhelm you with stuff, but they fail to tie the goodies together. They fail to tell a story. The planes are wonderful... The space exciting... but the museum doesn't come up to the standards of the other Smithsonians...

They announced they were closing a bit after 5:00… we made for the gift shop and exit…

Steph drove around the airport to the departure area… We said our good byes and I walked in… I found the Virgin America counter (they are the best damn Airline flying today!!!) checked one bag and walked to security… where I found… NO line… no one in line ahead of me… I cleared security in a couple of minutes, found my way to the gate and here I sit blogging… About 8 hours from now I will be home… It will be midnight… I will be tired, but I will be home…

Then I can start to plan for Saturday’s morning departure for South America… I understand its in the 90’s in Rio… from a high of 20 yesterday, to 90 Saturday… a 70 degree swing in 5 days… It works for me.

Bye for now, Randy

Monday, January 4, 2010

Cross country, 6th day... Virginia at last...


Monday January 4, 2010

We got up early only to find it still dark, had breakfast, packed up then went to the car just before 8:00… it was snowing… just light flurries, but it was snow… It was cold… 18 degrees…

The snow was a concern, but the road was dry, and traffic was moving fast… as went north the flurries got heavier… snow started to accumulate along the shoulder. Wisps of snow blew across the road… but the road remained dry. The temperature varied from 17 to 22 degrees…

We crossed the border into Virginia about 9:20…

9:30 found us in Bristol Virginia, in need of gas… and they have a Starbucks… the roads away from the interstate were snow covered, icy and difficult… having found gas and boutique coffees we got back on the road pointed northeast.

A few miles beyond we left Interstate 40 for Interstate 81, and continued up the Blue Ridge.

We reached Roanoke Virginia at 11:40… They have a transportation museum… Roanoke is a railroad town so trains dominated the museum. I liked the museum… but we were walking around in snow freezing our b%#$s off… There is a second museum in town dedicated to the photography of O Wilson Link… I walked the 4 blocks to the Link museum while Steph drove… they have a dedicated trail… well done… The photography was great… the museum well organized… we could have spent much more time, but the road called…

Back on I-81, we continued north another 60 miles or so before leaving I-80 and heading west towards Charlottesville Virginia. We climbed again before dropping down, out of the Blue Ridge proper, in to the rolling hills of the coast… Charlottesville was home to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello… we visited on a cold afternoon… It is a special place, he a special man… even with the underlying issues of declaring “all men created equal” yet owning slaves, and possibly bearing children with one of them. We spent more time than expected… we met a brick layer restoring a chimney and talked for some time… then down the hill to the parking lot on the last shuttle and heading north the last 75 miles or so to Lorton Virginia, and my nieces’ home to end the road trip…

A few miles from our destination the temperature finally reached 32 degrees, the first time it had been above freezing in the last 48 hours. It’s still way too cold…

We arrived at 7:08, greeted by grand nieces, had dinner and talked with family. Tomorrow I will pack, we will do something in nearby Washington DC before Stephanie drops me at the airport for a evening flight… I should be home before midnight… Virgin says I get free wi-fi on the plane, so the nest post is likely to be from something like 35,000 feet.

Totals for today, 473.8 miles in 11 hours and 39 minutes of driving

3048.8 miles for the trip

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Cross country, Fifth day Graceland and the Ryman

Sunday January 3 2010

We got up late… alarm at 8:00. Showered, packed and checked out a little before 9:00… First we went down town in search of Sun Records… having found the birth place of Rock and Roll we moved on towards Graceland… and breakfast… be believed that with all the motels near Graceland a Denny’s would be found nearby… there was none, but there was a Crispy Cream and the hot light was on… coffee and donuts, how good does it get… the Crispy Cream offered free donuts to Elves impersonators and to anyone with a Graceland receipt on the King’s birthday (this Friday, January 9th )

Having eaten we went to Graceland… bought our tickets… got on the shuttle and off to the Mansion… It was great… It is surprisingly middle class… and over the top… all at the same time. We liked it… having toured, we visited the gift shop… Then back on the road… to Nashville…

Along the way we got off to see the Casey Jones Museum which had signs along the highway… I was perplexed… We were in Tennessee, the famous accident happened in Vaughn Mississippi… why a museum here? It turned out he lived here, and they have preserved his house and surrounded it with a tourist mall… beyond the house it was a gift shop in search of a museum, with bus parking.

We reached Nashville about 2:30… Went to the Ryman… took the tour… smelled the “Hillbilly Dust” had our picture taken on stage with guitars…

We tried walking about “The District” n afterward, but it was 18 degrees with a wind… and it was just too cold, so we got back in the car and headed east towards Knoxville… All along the road we saw frozen springs, dipping down hillsides forming large ice falls… really spectacular if it wasn’t so cold. We have had snow or ice along the way since before Williams Arizona, over 2,000 miles so far…

We arrived in Knoxville at 7:25 pm (we had lost another hour when we crossed into the Eastern Time Zone) just after dark, found a motel, (Best Western) found dinner… It was 18 degrees and dropping after dinner… with the wind chill it felt like 13 degrees… we took a swim after dinner.

Tomorrow we may make it to D.C…. If we don’t it won’t be an issue… I don’t have to be there until Tuesday night…

Totals for today, 426.9 miles in 7 hours and 15 minutes of driving
2,575 miles for the trip (so far)

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Fourth Day, OKC to Memphis

Saturday January 2, 2010

Up at 7:00, I showered first, then checked email while Steph showered and packed… We have the weather channel on… its 18 degrees outside with snow flurries expected tonight… its cold across the Midwest, bitterly cold… We can handle the cold, but are worried about snow… it makes for slow travel…

We went to Starbucks… a Mocha and a Latte… then back to the Oklahoma bombing memorial… this time in daylight… Still moving… still cold… I think the cold added to the experience…

Back to the Highway… Eastbound again… The countryside changes from plains to forest as we move east… Oklahoma likes to announce construction work… as many as 14 signs as you approach… a single sign as you leave the “zone”…

We stop for gas once in Vivian OK before reaching the border with Arkansas…
Arkansas border: 11:03 am, 1,831 miles…

We stopped at the Arkansas “Welcome” station just over the border… A really nice visitor center… great restrooms… great information… nice people… a great welcome.like it.

Back to I-40… at Little Rock we leave the interstate to visit the Clinton Library… We have lunch in a Mexican CafĂ©… We like Little Rock…

We find we really like the state of Arkansas… We didn’t expect to… but we do… on lots of levels.

Back to I 40, Gas at Parkin AK, back on the Hwy…

We cross the Mississippi River into Tennessee (Memphis) at 4:50, 2,142 miles since San Mateo. We have crossed the 2/3 way mark. Its sunset.

We check in to our motel… we go out to explore… There is a bowl game in town… The Liberty Bowl, Arkansas and East Carolina… They are prepping for crowds and possible trouble along Beale street… we go early… we walk the street… a band is playing Gram Parsons in the “Rum Buggy CafĂ©” We go in… we enjoy the music of Pam and Terry… we drink (I more than Steph, she is the driver) we buy the CD… We leave when they stop and the crowds from the bowl game start to show… Live music on Beale Street… its is what it is all about.

Back to the Motel… Blogging… thinking of sleep… we will visit Graceland tomarrow… they open at 10:00… getting up early is not needed…

Friday, January 1, 2010

Third Day... Albuquerque to OKC


Friday, January 1, 2010










We started out in Albuquerque… The alarm went off at 7:00, in the car by 7:58. It was 22 degrees… There was a Starbucks less than a block away… I sat in the car with the engine on… Steph went in… We did a quick drive around old town… I took photos of the church, and two Civil War cannons, abandoned by confederate forces during their most westward advance. It was a really pretty clear day. There was a balloon on the horizon… we left town at 7:58.

Steph noted that we receive the last of the Starbucks Christmas cups… they timed it right… the Christmas stuff ran out on New Years day…

We reached Santa Rosa at 9:54, got off the freeway and followed old route 66, both in search of the old road, but also in search of gas… Santa Rosa still had the old Rt 66 feel, particularly a really nice restored Conoco station… Many businesses were closed, likely for the winter, but felt like the mother road. It was a stark contrast to Tucumcari, the nest detour of the interstate in search of the Mother Road… Tucumcari was sad, mostly failed business…

Beyond Tucumcari we crossed into Texas at 11:20 mountain time, and lost another hour as we passed into the central time zone… we are now 1,304 miles from San Mateo.

In Adrian Texas we followed the mother road off the Interstate and found a surprise… the midway marker for the original Rt 66… The town still remembered its heritage… the next town, Vega Texas did not, but not in a bad way… it seemed to have outgrown the old road… All along the way to Amarillo the old road closely followed the modern highway…

Just outside Amarillo we visited what may be the highlight of the trip… the Cadillac Ranch a 1970’s art project which buried 10 vintage Cadillacs nose down, fins up in a wheat field… Visitors are encouraged to spray paint or otherwise decorate the cars and add to the site… We spray painted with found paint, then I created the installation in miniature with discarded spray paint cans in place of the cars. Steph was not impressed, but it made me happy.

Just beyond in Amarillo we visited another classic Texas roadside attraction, The Big Texan, a famous steak house which offers a free meal if you can consume 4 ½ lbs of beef plus side dishes… we settled for 12 oz Rib eyes… I had a beer (Texas size) so Steph took over driving for the next leg…

We reached the Oklahoma State line at 4:29, 1,485 miles from home. At least this time we didn’t lose any time…

We followed the mother road off again in Grick for more gas… We lost the sun soon after… We arrived in OKC at 6:29 and found our hotel… theny went exploring… the first stop was the Oklahoma City Bombing memorial… I am not sure what to say about it... it is moving, more so as we saw it at night, each of the chairs representing one lost was lit from within... the large entry's were spectacular, if stark... you greve for the lost, but its not clear whether I should be angry or sad... and if angry who at...

We followed by driving around, finding the Brick Town neighborhood… we walked about, had dinner at the local brew pub, and were back in the room before 8:00… Brick Town was everything the old Pueblo in Albuquerque was not... a lively neighborhood... We were impressed.

Totals for today, 560 miles in 7 hours and 28 minutes
1,646 miles for the trip (so far)