Fall Sunset from the Deck

Fall Sunset from the Deck
Fall Sunset from the Deck

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Sea days on the Pacific December 3

As I write, we are beginning our fifth day at sea on the Star Princess. A few years ago, my lifetime friend Maryruth thought about going on this very cruise to Hawaii. I said, "omigosh, Maryruth, you don't want to do that, there are too many sea days!". She decided instead to fly to Hawaii and cruise around the islands with Norwegian. This is the same friend who for years tried to convince me that cruises were great. I said with that same haughty superiority that I often hear from non cruisers, "I could never go on a cruise, it seems so boring. I would rather go camping, kayaking, hiking, etc.".

Here I sit on my fifth sea day, loving it. And those of you who know me or read this blog, know that Mo and I aren't sit around types. We still hike and bike and kayak AND love to cruise. Somehow the forced slowdown of days at sea are especially good for type A's who always have to be on the move. Although I do know that reading about sea days could be terminally boring. It all runs together, with a few memorable moments here and there and the delight of completely forgettable moments.

Always in the background is the sea, gliding by with the faint rumble of the ship engines and the rhythmic rush of waves against the hull. We are rocked to sleep each night and lulled by the sound of the sea all night long through our open door to the balcony. Mo has finished the two books she brought along, necessitating a trip to the ship library for something to read during these last two days at sea. I am two thirds through Barbara Kingsolver's new novel, "Flight Behavior", good enough that I remember why she is one of my favorite authors. What a luxury, reading for hours during the day instead of a few minutes before falling asleep at night and dropping the Kindle on my nose.

We have managed some sunny deck time, watched a great movie in the Princess Theatre, "People Like Us", enjoyed our workouts in the gym. I treated myself to a luscious manicure, and spent some time at the Crooner's Lounge knitting with a group of women who meet daily to knit and share conversation, projects, and patterns. We enjoyed a couple of lectures from the ship naturalist, one about oceanography, and one about sea turtles.

Most often we start our day with room service coffee, juice, and a pastry, but we did go up for breakfast one morning. We have made it to dinner in the dining room on most evenings except for our one special dinner in the Crown Grill. For a $25 service charge we had truly magnificent steaks seasoned only with pepper and served with three types of finishing salts. I still can't figure out how they could make a steak taste that good with just salt and pepper.

Our late seating has been ok, well worth the table for two that we couldn't get at first seating. We go to the early show, then down to dinner, and then of course we have to participate in the ritual of checking out the portraits or candid photos for the day. Every other day or so we head for the casino. So far I am still ahead with $20. still on my players bank.

We have had two formal nights during these sea days, but on the last one we skipped the lobster dinner and spent our dress up time having free cocktails at the Captain's farewell party in the piazza and checking out the last production show, "British Invasion". It was OK, and I love rock and roll from that era, but the best thing going for the show was the over the top production aspect. Neither of us were particularly excited about any of the star singers, and after watching "So You Think You Can Dance" for a few seasons we are pretty particular about what good dancing looks like. The Princess dancers were entertaining, and good enough for a cruise ship at least. I put a couple of the dress up clothes photos in here because you asked.

I even did the formal night portrait thing. We bought just one photo out of all the candid shots taken during the cruise, but we have learned to not shy away from those roaming photographers any more. Half the fun is finding the sometimes funny, sometimes awful, and once in awhile good photos of ourselves having fun. The next two photos we took ourselves on our own deck. The other photo is my formal portrait, which I actually really like. You are seeing the iPad copy. Even if you buy photos, it is an extra fifteen bucks for EACH digital copy of a single photo. I saw people there laying down a few hundred dollars for their entire stash of photos.

Yesterday afternoon I enjoyed a middle brow wine tasting with five nice wines, including Kendall-Jackson Chardonnay, a great Pinot noir, a decent Cabernet, and a dessert wine, complete with cute little Princess glass to take home. The $9. cost was acceptable. I sat next to a lady who had more than 1100 cruise days on Princess, and more on many other cruise lines. I have no clue how you do that. I think 15 days is enough unless maybe you are seeing the Mediterranean with a lot of interesting overnight ports.

Are you bored yet? We aren't. A couple of news channels on the stateroom tv are a bit of a connection to the mainland. My biggest peeve with it all are the exorbitant fees for wireless Internet access. I think they are into me for a couple hundred bucks so far, which is why this won't get posted until we are in San Francisco day after tomorrow.

There are lots of things going on every day that we don't bother doing, dance classes, line dancing, karaoke, late night parties, trivia contests, juggling lessons, bingo, art auctions. I have to admit that all those social things are a bit boring to me. I would rather watch the ocean and knit.

This afternoon we will port at Ensenada, Mexico, for all of four hours, just long enough to stretch our legs and hear some mariachi music. We will be back on board in time for another dining room dinner if we don't succumb to some really good Mexican food at port. Our waitress, Elena from Romania, is an interesting person, very professional, but a bit strong willed. She works hard to get us to buy wine every night (which we don't) and to get Mo to eat dessert (which she doesn't).

The seas were a bit high when we first left Honolulu, but for the last couple of days we have felt very little movement. I put on another patch this morning, getting ready for our northern route along the coast from Ensenada to San Francisco. We have had mostly sunny skies while California has been inundated with storms. The Captain warned us that our last day at sea, tomorrow, could be rough, with rain and wind on the decks.

I took a moment this morning to check the home weather, trying to gauge what our drive home might entail. We hope to get off the ship in time to drive to Klamath Falls and arrive before 5:30 so I can pick up Jeremy from his two week adventure at the vet. With him being elderly, I felt better about the vet boarding than our usual Double C boarding place.

Yes, I can feel the type a thing returning. We have one day to get the MoHo down to Grants Pass, with emails from the contractor telling us that the RV shed is completed. We have rain predicted for Thursday with snow coming by the weekend. Often by this time of year, the MoHo would be snowed in at Rocky Point and we would have to chain up to get her over the mountain. Blind luck!

I am going through in my mind all the steps needed on Friday as I decorate my table for the annual Ladies Luncheon in Rocky Point on Saturday. The men cook and ladies volunteer to do a table for eight and there are usually close to a hundred women at the luncheon.

Then on Sunday I'll be off once again. Sigh. I would have preferred waiting until January, but friend Bel was in the hospital for six weeks and is now home alone. Time for my annual trip to Florida and I will be flying out from Sacramento airport on Monday morning for a week in Ocala. I must say that when all this is over I will be more than ready for a quiet Christmas at home and some home down time.

Although that down time has become a bit complicated with the request by NRCS that I add 500 hours to my work schedule for the rest of the fiscal year. I cut back to a week a month in October, but will be going back to half time and a bit more. Something to do with dollars allotted for contractors and a mix up. Mo and I agreed that I should probably step up to the plate one more time. The savings will be good for future travel plans even if the work time interferes a bit. I am hoping that the MiFi is fast enough at the Grants Pass cottage that I can spend some of the work time there at least. With funds and budgets always under the gun, who knows if there will be any left for next year. So work it is.

 

11 comments:

  1. OK, I'm still hung up on the fifteen bucks per photo. Gah!
    One of these days, maybe, we'll take a cruise. Reading about the positive experiences that everyone has certainly helps.

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  2. Wow, you are a gad-about!! lots of adventures! But you have lovely times and it is great reading.. You will certainly be ready for a quiet Christmas, travel safe!! Look forward to pictures of the Grants Pass cottage :)

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  3. The one cruise I took a couple of years ago was enough for me. :) Glad you enjoyed yourselves.

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  4. Never have been on a cruise, not sure we'll ever do one. But I've sure enjoyed sharing yours. Hope you get to slow down before too long.

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  5. Thanks for blogging about your cruise. We are doing that same cruise in October on the Grand. Looks like you had a good time. Anything you would/wouldn't do again?

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  6. Wow, with all you have going on, you certainly did need the slower pace of this cruise. Yes, its probably a good idea to take the work when you can get it, just in case it slows down or ends in the future.

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  7. Looks like a WONDERFUL time. I have never been on a cruise, and my husband has never been to Hawaii... so perhaps this would be a way for us to do the things we havent yet done!
    Where is your Grants Pass cottage? We own a home in Grants Pass. We rented it out when we took on the RV life. Perhaps we will meet up in Grants Pass someday when we are all there.

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  8. nice recap of your days at sea! looks and sounds very relaxing! and by the way, the two of you clean up well!!

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  9. I think cruising is wonderful! Of course, I think all travel is wonderful :)

    Taking on additional work when you're trying to wind down is a difficult decision but it sounds like you've come to good terms with it.

    Enjoy the rest of your time.

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  10. Still working up to a cruise, but I've certainly enjoyed yours! I do have to say though, I don't envy your schedule for it and what's to come! I can't even get in a mood to get out Christmas, let alone buy a gift...

    I hope you wore some sunscreen on that deck! If you get a "second" look at my timeline page and that will be explained. But I'm doing fine for now.

    And lastly, you girls clean up quite nicely! I'm very impressed, but not surprised!

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  11. Interesting how non-cruisers are always so negative about something they haven't tried. It's one thing for someone to try it and decide it's not for them; it's another thing when someone dismisses it out of hand.

    These two Type A personalities enjoy the enforced relaxation that comes with sea days ... the movement of the ship makes us feel like we're actually doing something more than just kicking back and reading the day away. With the days in port offering an opportunity to explore new places, cruising strikes a nice balance methinks.

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