Showing posts with label Cruise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cruise. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Debarcation In Barcelona

Our last night on the Epic was a flurry of food, packing, gaming, and howling at the moon. After breakfast the next morning, we debarked and headed on by shuttle from the port to La Rambla and our hostel there, the BeniDorm.
Norm and Marie; after a day with us in Barcelona, they headed
off on another cruise, all around Italy; they'll rejoin us in Paris
in a week

















On terra firma again; two big Celebrity ships were already in
the Port of Barcelona...10,000 tourists hitting Barcelona from
this quay alone (there were other lesser cruise ships around
the harbor); Barcelona is to the Mediterranean what Miami
is to the Caribbean...



















Bye, Epic; no longer first-time cruisers, we might well see
you again...
















Chris Colon welcomes us to Barcelona...
reminding me of the old bumper sticker
that said "Welcome to Texas! Now go home!"





















A last look at the Norwegian Epic, over the roof tops, from
La Pedrera



















Not pictured department: the restaurants, and particularly the Garden Cafe buffet, where, alas, we spent most of our waking time. We enjoyed the cruise greatly, Vicki even more than me, and are sure to do it again, but the food thing en cruise can be a bit disturbing. I had lost 15 pounds while in New Zealand, then gained much of it back while at Fiji and with Rebecca and then at Carole's. Then comes the cruise and Norwegian's free-style gluttony approach...really good food, incredible variety, available at all hours and in whatever quantities...e.g., 2,400 lbs. of lobster tail served at the Garden just on seafood night. Even at the sit-down-and-be-served restaurants, the food, though not to rave about, was quite good, with the exception of a few Thai dishes, and the variety was fairly stunning. At one of the nutrition seminars we attended (!), it was observed that the average cruiser will gain 7-14 pounds on a week-long cruise. Looking around at the largely American, and therefore largely obese passengers, it appeared that many had already enjoyed quite a few cruises. A whole new meaning for heavy cruiser. So despite trying to eat sensibly and walking 10-15,000 steps a day and doing the stairs often, I am afraid I did not succeed in keeping a few more pounds off. I have to credit Marie and Norm for cruising as much as they do and still keeping very fit.

Also not pictured department: other passengers. Initially I felt like observing--you hear this often at assisted-living facilities--that we were among the younger (and therefore more attractive, well, photogenic) people on board. ("Everyone else is so old"). Imagine my shock at learning that I was eight (8) years older than the average passenger on board. So I spent more than a little of the cruise in reflection and self-examination (looking in the mirror: "do I look that old?"). But not very much. There was always another meal to go to. Pass the coconut flan, whippersnapper!

Pillars Of Hercules

We passed through the Pillars of Hercules about 11:45 PM Tuesday night. Lots of people were up on the 15th floor looking for the famed Straits of Gibraltar, including me, but it was pretty dark out there. I alternated between port and starboard and got at least a few decent night shots.
Ships passing in the night















A town on the Spanish side















A big town on the Moorish side















Next day, in the sea lanes 















Close by the coast of Spain, a white city in the haze...

Funchal, Madeira Islands

Our one port of call was Funchal, capital of the Madeira Islands. The Madeira Islands were the first of the "discoveries" of the Age of Discovery, in the earlier 1400s, by a team in the employ of the Portuguese prince, Henry the Navigator. (We visited the site of Henry's School of Navigation, near Sagres, in 2010). Among the Madeiras' other many claims to fame are 1) they make Madeira wine, 2) Funchal is the annual site of the world's largest fireworks display (according to Guinness), 3) the place is really scenic and beautiful and semi-tropical and historic, 4) Funchal is the #1 Portuguese port of call for cruise ships (sadly for Belem and Lisbon; and for the cruisers who miss them), and 5) the port McDonald's has free and unlimited wifi. Having been starved for nine days by slow ship-board wifi and high ship-board prices (75 cents per minute plus a $3.95 "set-up" fee), we concentrated on 5). Oh yes, the Madeira Islands are way off the northwest coast of Africa, about 500 miles west of Casablanca.
Debarking/embarking, more chances to be impressed by
the Epic...
















Funchal Cathedral, 1506




















Spring well underway in Funchal; more likely, it's never
anything but spring or summer in this place
















Street scene




















Nice Portuguese tile















In the fish market















Hasn't changed much over the centuries















Really ugly fish















We tried some Madeira (fortified) wine and
decided to wait until we get to Spain or France
to buy wine; I did sneak a small bottle of Ginja
back aboard...the wonderful cherry liqueur we
were enchanted by in Obidos in 2009























The flower market was pretty neat















Returning to the harbor, another view of the Epic, across
the marina
















From the ship: Funchal is not a small place; said to be
110,000, but it seemed larger than that to me
















Panoramic view from the 15th floor...wait!...what's that coming
up on the left, I mean, port?!









It's Funchal's Exact Replica of the Santa Maria, taking a load
of Epic cruisers on another cruise
















Sailing away...more islands in the Madeira archipelago; nice
respite

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Aboard The Epic

The Epic had more venues, restaurants, stores, theaters, facilities, etc., than I got to and certainly more than you want to see pictured here. Nevertheless, here are a few...
Any number of demonstrations, here, French cooking, most
a soft ad for the ship's many services, etc.

















Or merely entertaining; all kinds of movies were shown...















Part of our stateroom/cabin/whatever




















Ditto




















Ditto again















Staff were helpful, cheerful, attentive















15th floor festivities...music, dancing, waterslides, pools,
hot-tubs, climbing wall, basketball/volleyball courts, etc.
















One of the larger casinos afloat; Vicki says we lost either
$6 or $23, depending on accounting methods...
















We took in most of all the entertainment















Thus




















But the best-on-boat, by far, was this rock n' roll dueling
pianos thing, all requests, incredible voice/keyboard talent,
who could do anything from Bertold Brecht/Kurt Weill to
Billy Joel and Elton John, and more recently too (so I was
told); they did a very credible rendition of my request for
Blues Image's "Ride, Captain, Ride, Up On Your Mystery
Ship" which no one else in the audience really seemed to
appreciate...


















And most especially this Michigan lady, Rhonda Hughes, I
think; her rendition of  "What a Wonderful World," part Louis
Armstrong, part Bert Lahr (Cowardly Lion) was a KO

















At Sea

So every day I checked with the bridge to make sure everything
was OK; steady as you go, etc.
















And to learn many, many interesting facts about the Epic;
personally I think the beer bottle statistic is misleading since
most of the beer I saw consumed was Foster's, which comes
in cans and is the choice of cruisers everywhere (bigger cans)


















Bow hot-tub apparently reserved for Leonardo di Crapio and
Kate Winslet
















Most of the 9 or 10 days crossing looked like this















But some days it looked like this















I spent not nearly enough time here, the 7th floor jogging
track on the starboard side
















The port side was reserved for shuffle-board; but no one
plays shuffle-board anymore, so I made it my own personal
walking/jogging strip

















Salt spray on one of the 7th floor life-boats; the weather was
marvelous for the whole crossing, but for one front we passed
through in a day; the Epic rolls a bit in even the calmest seas,
however; 14 of its 18 decks are above water line, and the higher
you are the more you feel the roll

Embarcation In Miami

So Carole and Jim drove us from Coral Springs to the Port of Miami, and with little ado, we boarded the Norwegian Epic and checked in...then had lunch, moved into our cabin on the 10th floor, explored a bit of the ship, found our travel companions and guides, Norm and Marie (Vicki's sister and her husband...on their 8th cruise in the past year), watched the ship's departure, and settled into our 11-day routine at sea. All excitement, since this is our first cruise of any significance, and despite being somewhat atypical--a re-positioning cruise, getting the boat back to its summer waters, the Mediterranean, with only one port of call--we are regarding it as a foray into yet another style of travel. The cruise is a little atypical too in that the Norwegian Line's "freestyle cruising" is a departure from customary notions of cruising (formality, propriety, dinner-seatings, dress code, etc.) The Norwegian Epic is the third largest cruise ship in the world, nearly 1100 feet long, displacing 155,000 tons, with the usual amenities, and all that added to the excitement.
View from the jet-way (boat-way?); perhaps all cruise ships
are on the colossal side, but parked along Miami's nearly mile-
long quay, with two Carnivals and a Disney for comparison,
the Epic seemed quite as immense as the billing suggested


















Us, boarding


















The Epic is apparently 4th for take-off; the two Carnivals
are off...
















Followed by the Disney Wonder...
















Panoramic view of downtown Miami, from the port; Vicki
and I both were born in Miami, and I was raised there; she
returned to South Florida for high school; and me









And a bit of south Miami Beach, and some of the 1920s
islands dredged up from Biscayne Bay










The Julia Tuttle Causeway, connecting Brickell Avenue and
environs with Key Biscayne (think: Richard M. Nixon, Bebe
Rebozo, et al. (if you're old enough); well, maybe best not to
think of any of this, regardless of age)


















We have embarked and are heading for Government Cut...
more of south Miami Beach and the islands
















A bit of South Beach...some serious Art Deco in there















South Beach itself..."well I been thinkin' 'bout/ all the places
we surfed and danced and/ all the faces we miss so let's get/
back together and do it again"...well, actually I didn't surf
all that much (like, none) nor dance...but it's nice to regard a
place like South Beach somewhere in one's life portfolio



















Our jet-ski escort has departed, we are past the jetties and
out into the Atlantic
















As we turn northwards, views of North Miami Beach,
Aventura (right, Carole?), and
















Sunset over south Florida