This is a day we needed to recover after two days of hiking. Very cool and windy today. Another storm on the horizon.
We spent most of the day relaxing and watching ridiculous politicians.
We had dinner with Ron and Karen in the Canaletto Restaurant on the ship. There is a small up-charge for this restaurant. We have had dinner with the pair a few other times and they suggested dinner at this restaurant. We both enjoyed the the menu and the conversation.
We were looking forward to entertainment on the main stage today. The Vallies. A tribute to the Four Seasons. Unfortunately, they just boarded the ship back in Auckland and weren’t used to the sea and we were experiencing a very rough day. Hamish announced that do to “unforeseen circumstances” they would be unable to perform. He later announced that, yes, they were all seasick.
Jonathon Johnston was able to make another appearance in place of the Vallies. We missed Jonathon when he first appeared and were happy for a second chance. Jonathon was from Belfast and played the flute. Wonderful tone, repertoire , and chops! I’ll have to check to see if he is free for the DCCB rehearsals!
Tomorrow we arrive in Wellington and have a tour scheduled.…
Another calm day. Clear skies and 70. We arrived in Tauranga at 9 am and were able to leave the ship about 9:30 am. Today we planned another hike. Mount Maunganui was within walking distance of the ship. We planned to hike in the morning, go back to the ship for lunch and then Uber out to the city center.
Mount Maunganui
The hike afforded beautiful views of the sea.
Start of the trail. Our ship over Terri’s shoulder. other hikers
A steep trail but we were surprised to see so many college aged people running up and down this trail. The trail is not wide and if you are bumped there is nothing keeping you from falling down the side. At some points, the fall would be very far.
At the top we could see over the other side.
our guide checks his map
We decided to come down a different route that led to the other side and out onto Maunganui Beach. The way down had lots of stairs and took a bit more time.
After our trip down we went for another hike that took us to leisure island. More great views.
As lunch time approached we went back to the ship. I had booked dinner in Tauranga earlier in the day. We had lunch and then took an Uber out to Tauranga. We walked around town and stopped into a cellphone repair shop to have a new battery put into Terri’s phone. We then stopped at a nice bar for a drink and then went for another walk over to the Harbourside Restaurant.
A nice change from the ship. Great location and great food.
Very calm waters as we cruise into port today. Back to civilization! Our port has a building next to it that houses areas for cruise lines to check in passengers. Entry and exit today is a few steps from our room.
There is a bit of confusion on what time we have to be back on board. I ran into Hamish, our cruise director, and asked about it. Originally we were told 6pm, the online navigator says 5:30, the printed program says 4:15. Hamish said there is a required emergency drill at 4:15 but the ship does not leave until 5:30. “If you miss the drill, you be sent a letter reminding you of requirements of being a passenger…..”. ( I know Sandi is immediately thinking of staff meetings and PD.) Hamish assured me that we could still get on the ship after 4:15 but before 5:30. We will miss the drill.
Plans today include hiking around Rangitoto Island and a visit to the sky tower. We left the ship after breakfast and walked over to the ferry. Almost right next to the ship! First ferry left at 9:15 so we had some time to kill. No food or water could be brought off the ship and Rangitoto has no food or water. Supermarket is our first stop.
The streets of Auckland are alive with folks going to work or visiting. New Zealand has the largest population of Polynesians in the world. That is evident but they are not at all like the Polynesians we saw on the many islands in the South Pacific that we visited. I expected short and wide. Not so!
The city reminded me of San Francisco. Port side city, young people everywhere, bustling economy, high end shops everywhere. A few homeless but not the many tent cities as San Francisco. The NW Metro supermarket was blocks away. We purchased what we needed and went back to the port. The city tempted us to hang around and visit but it could have been Chicago, New York or Seattle. We were here to see the unusual. Hiking up a volcano was the main event.
The ferry pulled out right on schedule. A private girls school was on board with us. They appeared to be middle school aged with all of the laughing and giggling. Still summer vacation here. We chatted it up with some women our age that were visiting from the states. West coast folks. They were very interested in the cruise we were on. HAL had no excursions to Rangitoto. This hike was beyond what most passengers on this cruise could handle.
our ferryAuckland out the ferry windowRangitoto Island
The entire trip may have been 45 minutes, including loading time, a quick stop to another port, and then across the bay. Felt a lot like Sheplers to Mackinac Island.
Rangitoto is a volcanic island with strict environmental protections. There is to be nothing left on the island. There are no trash containers and there is no food or water. There are many traps around the island to control rodents. We did see a few birds but no other creatures.
We got off the ferry and went right to the trail. Strictly business. Many photo ops along the way. We did take a diversion to the lava caves. Big disappointment. Not worthy of even a photo.
..same selfy expression…different background…
The view from the top was magnificent. One could see the many volcanic islands and the magnificent city of Auckland. We took many photos and decided to head down a different way. Our goal was the 2:30 ferry. Miss it and there was one at 3:30. Miss that and we are on the island all night.
The path down turned into a road used by a tractor pulled trolley. The entire path was crushed volcanic rock. It was quite steep. Terri took a tumble and scraped up her hands a bit. We took it slow and came to the bottom of this road and were back on a trail. The ferry was about 3.5 miles from here. Nice views of the water and very interesting hike.
We stopped for lunch on a bench and relaxed before heading over to the ferry.
Our next stop was the sky tower in the center of Auckland. We felt quite invigorated after the 8 mile hike but not enough to bungee jump off of this tower.
The view from floor 60 allowed views of the entire city. Afterwards we stopped for a drink near the ship and heard the alarm for the mandatory drill at 4:15. Darn.
Back on the ship for the Auckland send off party.
Big day and we packed it in early. Another big day tomorrow.…
Today our trivia team partners played their last game with us. Tomorrow they get off the ship when arrive in Auckland.
To my left, Skip, Gail, Joan, Jerry, and Terri. We are going to miss them and we wish them the best of luck.
Log of the Voyage
It was cool and windy this morning. We did sit out on the deck but hat long pants and sweatshirts on. We watched as the ship headed toward an obvious storm. When it reached us we experienced the roughest seas we have experienced so far. The Captain said winds were up to 70 mph and swells up to 14 ft.
We had dinner in the main dining room and saw some dishes fall from tables as the ship roll and pitched. It is rougher back in the dining room then anywhere else. The seas were full of white caps and were slamming into the ship. The Captain said that by 1 am we would be in a more sheltered area near New Zealand and the pitch and roll would subside. After being at sea for over a month it really doesn’t bother many folks.
After dinner we played a few games of backgammon and called it a night.
Tomorrow we have a hike planned on Rangitoto Island in Auckland, New Zealand. …
We have reached the end of the world! We are heading to New Zealand on the other side of the map.
We decided to go to the Main Stage and listen to Ian talk about Australia and Singapore. Sometimes you pick up interesting facts and sometimes you want a life refund coupon. This time it was the latter.
Maybe a record day on team trivia. We scored a 12 out of 15. We were all quite proud and vowed to make our final game tomorrow, with team Michiganders, our best.
Absolutely beautiful day. The entire roof was open on the Lido deck and we had lunch there. 80s and low humidity. We spent the afternoon on the deck and enjoyed reading and the weather.
We had dinner with two other couples. Another black tie gala night. This time for the Oscars.
The entertainment was an encore of the Motown Act. Bill had dinner with the girls yesterday and confirmed what I could hear in their music. They have never been to Motown nor have they heard a live Motown performance by any of the original Motown acts. You-tube can only provide so much. We decided against seeing the encore act and played a few games of backgammon.…
We decided that today we would do exercising before breakfast. I hit the treadmill just before 6 am and Terri did power walking on the lower promenade. Breakfast followed and we packed for out trip out. Terri packed some water and I took cash and credit card.
We watched from our room as the HAL staff prepared the port area. We were still awaiting customs clearance. I could see on the pier that a band was preparing to perform. This was a Police Community Brass Band.
brass band under black awning
What a great way to welcome tourists to the island. This is the Kingdom of Tonga!
Clearance was granted. We checked out the band. Very good! This band gets around. Their book is about 2 inches thick!
We then walked by the many tables of wares set up along the pier. Ian said there would be bicycle rentals on the pier. We saw none and decided to walk to the market. Interesting place full of all kinds of fruit and vegetables and lots of wood carvings, jewelry and other products. Terri managed a picture of the “production line” at the market.
It doesn’t appear so in the pictures but the people of Tonga are very happy and very friendly. We ran into Bill at the market. He invited us to join him and 4 others on a tour of the island by private car. We knew that was not much to see but we decided we would join him. We met back at the pier and loaded up in a mini van. Tight for 6 people and driver. We had a map and decided to hit every highlight that we could before getting back to the pier before 4:30. Some roads were paved and very smooth. Others were only one lane with tall grass on both sides. The three headed coconut tree was the first stop.
Underwhelmed we went to the next stop. Our driver wasn’t much for narration. Bill peppered him with questions constantly to get information from him. We learned he grew up in Tonga, has 10 children and 3 homes on the island. He does woodcarvings and exports them to Hawaii and other places. We looked at some of his work on the pier. It is outstanding.
Next stop was a beach. Great photo op.
Tsunami Rock. Storm moved this rock inland about 2000 years ago.
Next stop was a photo op at the blowholes.
the Trillium
We finished at about 3 pm and Caleb, our driver, dropped us off back at the pier. We sat on the lower promenade as the ship pulled out and a group of women danced to Polynesian music and waved goodbye.…
We are 18 hrs ahead of Detroit and we will gradually cross 18 more time zones before we get back home.
information booklet received every evening
After our morning routine we went to the Main Stage to watch Ian give a presentation on Tonga. We still don’t have anything planned and my research suggests that there isn’t that much of interest to see. There is another market we plan to check out and we may rent bicycles to tour the island. This is not a tender port and that makes life a lot easier.
We did group trivia and are sad to learn that the rest of team gets off the ship in Auckland. They are seasoned travelers and are doing only a portion of the cruise. Skip and Gail and Jerry and Joanne will be leaving Tuesday. That leaves some spots we will be interviewing for.
One of our cabin stewards, Yan, is also leaving. I believe he works 9 months a year on the ship. The old days of leaving a tip for these employees has been replaced. HAL now adds a gratuity onto your bill. How handy! We have learned that people from some parts of the world refuse to pay this and to compensate for this, HAL now charges them more up front. HAL does not put a price online for its cruises. You must give them your information first and they will email you a quote.
We had dinner with Jean and Jim again in the main dining room. They have lots of great stories. I think they are the only farmers I have ever met and had a conversation with. I didn’t get that chance growing up in Detroit when the population was 2 million. Not many farmers crossed my path.
The show “Atlantic Crossing” was the evening entertainment. This featured the Amsterdam’s singers and dancers and they did a show featuring pop history from the UK. Beatles to Cold Play. They presented a very polished production once again. There are 10 in the group. 2 male and 2 female lead singers. 3 female and 3 male backup singers. They all dance well and the production appears flawless.…
We lost a day crossing the international dateline and turn the clock back another hour tonight.
Another nice warm day cruising on the Pacific. Breakfast, gym, trivia, lunch put us back in our lounge chairs for the afternoon.
Tonight we had dinner in the Pinnacle Grill and were guests of Captain Mercer. We didn’t do anything heroic like point out an iceberg. Everyone on the ship eventually gets this invitation. The Pinnacle Grill serves better food and has a nicer atmosphere. There is an upcharge for having dinner here at any other time.
Each table was hosted by a crew member. Ed was at our table. Ed is the Environmental Compliance Officer. He is in charge of all what is discharged into the ocean and into the air from the ship. Different areas of the world have different laws and he needs to communicate that to the engine room and the Captain. I know that at sea we burn diesel fuel with at least a 30 percent sulfur content. This is taken care of with scrubbers. 10 percent is is burned closer to shore in most countries. New Zealand doesn’t allow any sulfur and a different fuel is carried on board.
Three other guest joined us at out table. Ava, Mary Lee and Beth. Ava was a college professor. She was pretty soft spoken and it was very difficult for me to hear her. I do know that she is from Colorado and her son wanted to be a band director but now teaches 4th grade. Mary Lee did teach at one time but is currently working with her son who owns a towing company. She is from Seattle. Her sister, Beth, is also from Seattle and did spend 30 some years living in Alaska. She started teaching and then worked with autistic children. Her career was all in some form of education.
Ed is from England has been working on ships since he was a teen.
We talked about the Brexit quite a bit. It was nice learning about this from someone who is actually experiencing it. He did talk about the immigrants coming to England for a handout. They then send it home and put the other hand out.
He kept climbing up the ladder until his present position. He had some great stories to tell about some of the people he has met.
Tomorrow we are in Tonga. This country sees the sun rise before anyone else in the world.
Tomorrow we cross the international dateline. We will go to bed tonight and wake up Thursday morning. February 20 does not exist on this cruise. I will be following what the ship does so the dates may seem odd but the number of the day will continue.
Bora Bora was a blast and our timing was for the day worked perfectly. The sun is very intense here and we both show signs of it the day after.
When we showed up for group trivia we found another couple in our seats. Two things we learned on this cruise. Game seating and bus seating are sacred. Once you sit in a seat it is your for the tour or the cruise in this case. Obviously this group was new. Nasty looks didn’t seem to work. We did find a stray table and Terri and Becky sat while Skip, Jerry and I stood. A good effort on our part. The only other element to be liquid at room temperature besides mercury? If you said bromine you were correct. We were not.
The evening entertainment was a trio called the Soul Sisters of Motown. Before I do my usual critique, there was a woman in front of us that spoiled the event a bit for us and did cause some friends of ours to leave. She was alone, sat right in front of me, and was quite obnoxious. She tried to imitate everything the women on stage were doing. If she could only keep a beat it wouldn’t have been as bad. Obviously her meds were back in her room.
The sisters looked the part and did some great choreography. Some of the harmonies and even lead parts were off for just a bit. It was very obvious that a lot of time was spent on costuming, and choreography. Motown musicians were great musicians. Great vocalists and instrumentalists. Here is where the show lacked. I would have preferred a canned recording of a real Motown backup band. There is nothing like the sound of a bari sax or trumpet. The synthesizer that the stage band used just didn’t do it. They also played very carefully. This is how musicians play when they have little rehearsal time. The Motown sound was not there. If they did that, their sound would have improved tremendously, even with the occasional vocal flaws. They probably would have sang with more energy with a better band sound.
Tomorrow we are at the Captains dinner in the Pinnacle Grill.…
One of the tours HAL offered on Tahiti was an over night stay at the Hilton on Moorea. Passengers who opted for this excursion would tour Tahiti and then taken to Moorea on a small craft to spend the night in the Garden Bungalow. The cost was outrageous but we did talk about doing it on our own. If we had done this, we would have had to Fly to Bora Bora on our own. The ship did not stop on Moorea because of weather. HAL did fly passengers who booked the tour through them to Bora Bora and a tender was send out to get them. This is the kind of chance you take when doing things on your own. We were lucky we had nothing booked.
Many of the islands in French Polynesia have a reef around it. There is a place in the reef where ships can get through. A pilot came aboard in Tahiti to navigate through this reef. The Captain had to retract the stabilizers to get through the reef because it was narrow. He warned us of the ship rolling but we did not notice any difference. Inside the reef the water was relatively shallow, very clear, and very calm. Today we planned to pick up our rental car, do some snorkeling, see the sites and do some hiking.
Tenders started operating at 6am and it was open tendering until 7:30am. This meant we did not have to stand in line and pick up a tender ticket. We had breakfast, grabbed our gear and headed down to deck A. Loading was fast and efficient and we were off. Avis opened at 8am and we would be early but didn’t mind. It was already very hot and humid when we pulled up to the port. Avis was very close to the port as expected.
I began planning these excursions in June of 2018 and I often forget details. We rented a Renault Twizzy. A tiny electric car. It held two. The passenger sat behind the driver. Since I did the booking, I was the driver. There was not a lot of room in the rear seat but Terri took it in stride. The detail I forgot? No trunk, no roof rack, no place to store things. I would been happy with a milk crate bolted to the back. Luckily, Terri was able to put some of our gear between her legs and the remainder was piled to my left and right. No AC but there were no windows on the sides so there was plenty of airflow. After figuring out how everything worked we were off.
Our first stop was Matira Beach. Almost a mile in length of white sand. The water was 86 F. Getting in was effortless. The reef was at least a mile or more out. We knew that the best viewing was there and the water was only waist deep all of the way out. After 30 minutes of snorkeling about 1000 yds from shore, we decided not to go to the reef. Lots of jet skis, and tour craft out; and it would be difficult to see us with our heads in the water. There was some coral near us which brought in plenty of fish to view and this was not our only snorkeling stop on the World Voyage.
We spent a few hours in the water, packed up and headed out to see more of the island. We had a local map but the instructions were written with locals in mind. “Make a left at the farm and take the asphalt road up”. I don’t remember how many times we went back and forth to find something. A hiking trail is what we wanted. After at least an hour we managed to located it. Closed, said the sign. Getting around the fence would be difficult so we moved on.
We saw the famous “Bloody Mary’s” restaurant and decided a Bloody Mary is what we needed. We shared a burger some fries and each enjoyed one of the famous Bloody Mary’s. Very unique flavor. Just enough kick! I will be searching for this recipe.
Back in the Twizzy we were off to another hike. More back and forth but managed to find it. No signs to guide us. Just a gut instinct and my map app to guide us. The road kept going up and up. About three quarters of the way up the Twizzy said “no more” and would not move an inch further up. Not enough torque in this little thing. We parked and got out to begin the hike. We saw a sign that said “private”. That sign usually means we are close to a trail. We did meet up with another hiker who said he was lost. Not lost in the sense of not being able to get back to town. It’s up or down, one road around the island. He said he had lost the trail. He was looking at his phone and I pulled out mine. He had the official French map of the island. I pulled out maps.me and was able to see the trail with an icon that used GPS. The trail was heavily overgrown. We got him to the trail, took a few photos and went back to the car. I didn’t have my Popeil Pocket Machete with me and we decided to turn back.
trail?View back from the hike. Twizzy in foreground
We were able to drive around the entire island. Much smaller than I imagined. Maybe 25 mins around. The Twizzy would not go past 47kph.
We finished the afternoon shopping for pearls. Jewelry store first. Terri found a bracelet she liked but it really didn’t do much for her when she put it on. There was a necklace that she liked. $747.00 was a bit more than she wanted to spend. I didn’t like it so my wallet never opened. We browsed for a bit then left. Fine jewelry store to homemade table on the street side selling pearls. The pearls looked identical. The price $10; but did not include a “Letter of Authenticity”. We hit the jackpot …
a plugin issue prevented Tahiti images from loading on day 26. Issue resolved
We arrived left Tahiti about an hour late because of weather and arrived at Moorea and found the same. Captain says 50 mph wind gusts and rain. They cancelled tendering on shore and we were unable to make a stop here. We learned this after spending 90 minutes in line for a tender ticket on the Lido deck.
The ship left Moorea for Bora Bora at 9 am in the roughest waters yet on the trip. We hit the gym after the announcement was made and I had the most exciting time on the treadmill yet. Nearly fell off a few times as the ship was navigating through huge swells.
All excursions booked through HAL were promptly refunded. Anyone booking third party tours lost out. We had nothing booked and planned to wing it once we arrived.
The ship staff quickly re-planned the entire schedule on the ship. Port days have few activities and sea days have many. We sat outside and watched the huge swells and whitecaps. This is what I imagined the Pacific would be like when we left a nearly a month ago.
Dinner was a tropical paradise theme.
The evening entertainment was Kieran Powell. Puppeteer and ventriloquist. Absolutely hysterical show.
He pulled a male “volunteer” out of the audience and had him stand there as he held a microphone and a big pair of lips that he could control in front of his face. He then “spoke” to the audience for the volunteer.
He did his own version of the “Dating Game” with one of his “male” puppets and three woman he pulled from the audience. One was the former personal assistant to the former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau (Justin’s Father). It was hilarious as the puppet asked the women questions.
I would guess because of his age that he has youtube video clips. Great show. It be worth it to look.
February 16, 2019 – Papeete, Tahiti. French Polynesia
We arrived at the dock about 8:30. No tendering today and we got the all clear from the Captain at 9:30. This morning we planned to do a 10 stop walking tour of Papeete, come back to the ship for lunch and then take a guided tour of the island of Tahiti.
The highlight of the morning tour was the municipal market in the center of town. Here one could purchase fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, and all kinds of other goods in “flea market” fashion. We did stop at a fine arts store where we again found something we couldn’t do without.
We finished our tour and went back to the ship for lunch at 11:30. At 1 pm we were back for our afternoon tour. Tahiti is two islands that are connected. Each of the islands has a paved road that circles it. We were to do the eastern island. This is a tour that we booked online using Viator. It costs almost half of what HAL offers for the same tour. The down side of a third party tour is the lack of a guarantee that the ship will not leave if the tour runs late and there is no cancellation if the Captain cancels the stop because of rough weather. This island has a port for us to dock so there is no tendering issue. We do not have to be back on the ship until 4 am. The risk is low.
We did 5 stops on the tour. This one had a perfect place for a selfy.
One of the stops was a garden that had many trails. It was a 25 min stop so we chose the trail that went up. After 15 mins of switchbacks we grabbed a photo and started back down.
Next stop at a waterfall.
Lots of great scenery throughout the tour. We were really were fortunate that the rain held off until the afternoon.
Unfortunately there is not enough satellite bandwidth to upload video.…
We are close to French Polynesia and still are up in the air about what to do on Moorea on Sunday. Saturday we are in Papeete and have a tour planned. The tour is at 1:30 pm. We plan on checking out the city early, coming back to the ship for lunch and returning for the tour. Sunday was to be a day of hiking but the forecast is for thunderstorms and we may reconsider. We rented a car in Bora Bora and plan to tour on our own and stop to snorkel.
The Pacific Ocean seems to be a bit bigger than Lake Erie. We are excited for the next few days exploring Tahiti, Moorea and Bora Bora.
Decent job on group trivia. We did miss the national animal of Cuba. Castro wasn’t the answer. The group next to us scored a 3. We finished with a 10.
We spent the afternoon on the Lido near the pool. Rain spoiled our outdoor reading spot. It was a nice change. The water in the pool moves with the ship. Constant waves crashing into the sides.
We had dinner in the main dining room. Made it to the 2nd floor with those that have permanent seating. Nice change here also.
The Main Stage entertainment was BBC World II. Outstanding filming with live music. Very well done and very entertaining.
Next few days will be busy. Time zone is now 5 hours earlier than Detroit. …
After 24 days at sea we have developed a whole new lifestyle. All of our bills are paid automatically, no need to open mail or email. All meals are prepared by a great chef. Laundry is done on a daily basis and delivered folded or on hangars as you request. Our focus on sea days is going to the gym, reading on the deck, group trivia, lunch, reading on the deck, dinner, entertainment then bed. Going to take some time to re-adjust after the 114 days is up.
We have met quite a few folks that we enjoy talking to. Believe it or not we met a couple originally from Dearborn when we were in one of the museums in Lima. He went to the old Dearborn High and she graduated from the first Edsel Ford High School class.
For our own entertainment and a way to remember folks that we talk to each other about, we have assigned names to them. Jimmy Cash looks like he could have been Johnny’s brother. Slicked back white hair, jeans and large buckle on his belt. Loves to dance but moves pretty slow. Jack Lalane is in the gym as much as we are. Always instructing the women on how to correctly do an exercise. Terri loves that. There is a woman who has a hair style reminiscent of Lindsay’s late dog Clement. You guessed it. There is a Bernie Sanders look alike also. He is constantly looking for other peoples money. We had dinner with a Jim and Jean last night and we learned that they do the same thing. Jim asked me if I knew “2 step”. I laughed and said “Who is that?”. I learned that 2 step is always 2 steps behind his wife. Every once in a while she will look back to make sure he is there. We also learned about “Joe”. The real Joe is someone who went on this cruise some years after seeing an ad. He signed up and didn’t notify his family. They had no idea he took a cruise. His memory was a little faulty and he got lost on every excursion. The crew was constantly looking for “Joe”. Joe is now used for anyone with a failing memory. There are many “Joes” aboard.
4 hour time difference is making communication a bit more difficult.
We have been setting the clocks back one hour every night since leaving Easter Island. I’m getting used to 25 hour days. We are on Pacific Time today.
Breakfast and then the gym as usual. Land was sighted about 9:30 am. Ian gave his presentation over the loudspeakers. Pitcairn is an interesting island and I can understand why Fletcher Christian chose this island to hide. Even if they were somehow discovered, the cliffs and ocean swells afforded lots of protection.
many are direct descendent of the mutineers
The longboat contains all of the residents from the island. They came aboard and assembled on the Lido deck to sell us things and did a presentation on the Main Stage.
We quickly worked our way through the crowds gathered on the Lido. Some interesting crafts for sale but nothing we chose to purchase. Long lines at the passport stamping station and at the postcard station. Not sure what the thrill here is.
We went to the Main Stage presentation. Simon is an island resident originally from Yorkshire, England. I was a bit disappointed that he wasn’t one of the residents that grew up on the island. He gave a slide presentation and then did a Q&A session. They have a generator on the island for electricity. It runs during the day only. Old fashioned outhouses. I’m not sure why he chose this lifestyle. His wife is from California. They will never leave. They get supplies every 3 months from a New Zealand ship. There are 9 families on the island. An elementary school has 3 children in it. A few of the folks are hired to come in. The school teacher and police officer are two. Those who want to continue their education beyond elementary school are sent to a boarding school in New Zealand. This is the last of the British Overseas Territories. Many of the residents have part time government jobs on the island.
It was a fascinating presentation. The longboat left at 1 pm. We all waved and decided it was a good excuse for a party.
The serving staff wore festive uniforms to create an 18th century feel. This happened right in from of our door on the lower promenade and it was fun. Someone decided that playing music from some musical production would add some spirit to the festivities. Didn’t happen. In many musical productions, actual good music is an after thought. I would rather have heard “Tiny Bubbles” by Don Ho.
I decided to have a gourmet burger at the Lido for dinner.
bun, burger, huge deep fried onion ring, lettuce, tomato, fried egg over easy, mustard, ketchup – entire dinner!
The evening entertainment was the return of pianist Tim Abel. Very talented. He did the Liberace version of the 12th street rag at the Liberace tempo. Wow! He is by far the best instrumentalist we have seen on the ship.…
Another great day to enjoy the weather and sea. Nothing but water everywhere. Haven’t seen so much as a ship in since we left Easter Island. I can’t help but imagine Captain Bligh in his little boat traveling in this huge body of water.
We watched several storms move around the ship today. It looked fascinating. We managed to avoid any rain but the ship rolled a bit more than the past few days.
Bill stopped by our chairs on the Lower Promenade deck and asked if we would like to join him and his fellow traveler on the Komodo Island excursion he booked. This is one of the few places I had nothing planned. Komodo Island is a National Park and guests cannot leave the ship without being part of a tour. The HAL tour descriptions sounded less than exciting. Bill found a 3rd party that would take us on a hunt for the Komodo Dragon (this is the thing to do on this island) and then a stop to Pink Beach to do some snorkeling. We brought our gear with us and decided we would join him. Our stop on Komodo is March 17. I sent a note to the tour company and have received confirmation. We are still up in the air for a tour on Tonga. That stop is next week.
Tomorrow is Pitcairn Island. Ian will be giving a play by play from the Crow’s Nest. We will be able to hear it from our chairs on the lower promenade. He really does a nice job. Only 50 people live on the island and they are all coming aboard. Passengers will be able to get passports stamped for $10. Passing on that. I could send out a postcard from Pitcairn. Mail will be picked up in March. Should arrive sometime in June. Passing. I don’t want to have to look for a life refund coupon.
We did our usual routine today. I’ve been hitting the treadmill and/or elliptical trainer for about an hour each day. Treadmill level 15 and elliptical level 12. Terri has been mixing it up with weights, treadmill, and laps around the lower promenade.
Bet you didn’t know how many albums have to be sold to receive “Gold” status. Neither did we at group trivia.
We passed on a repeat of the “Knights” on the Main Stage. Instead we did a cut throat match of scrabble. Terri was the winner by at least 100 points.
Thankfully we have a few days at sea to recover from Easter Island. We moved to Central Standard Time Last Night and will move to Mountain Time tonight.
We learned that out of 24 planned tenders, only 15 made it to Easter Island before the Captain ended the operation. How lucky we were! The Captain gave everyone a free glass of champagne because of the cancelled tendering. I don’t think that will help the complaining.
Our next island is Pitcairn. We are midway through watching Mutiny on the Bounty with Clark Gable and Charles Laughton to prepare for this island. There is no place to tender ships on the island. Cliffs around the island prevent that. Island residents will lower long boats to come up and greet us. They will board the ship and set up shop to sell us stuff.
Temperature has been about 80 degrees each day and partly cloudy. Breakfast first. Then workout. We sit on the deck after and then again after lunch. We tried the main dining room for lunch. Much quieter and a nicer menu. Everyone in the Lido wants to eat at noon and it gets crowded.
The ship is rolling more today than yesterday. The ship feels very alive when the diesel engines are running and the ship is moving.
The evening entertainment was the return of magician Stephen Williams and pianist Liam Cooper. The magician did a short act and it was well done. Liam wasn’t as good as his first show. He came out playing a piano he wore around his neck a la Johnny Winter. Jump was one of the few Van Halen tunes I didn’t care for. He also did some Queen. I don’t know what people hear in the Bohemian Rhapsody that delights them. I didn’t like it when it came out in the 70s and still don’t care for it today. Never a fan of Queen. There was a recording playing while he and the band played that supplied all of the harmonies. Reminded me of karaoke night at the Railroad Inn in Mt. Clemens.
We finished the night at the Crow’s Nest. The Station Band had a night of disco. Well done. …
A bucket list day, we have been waiting to get here all week. Our goal is to see Rano Raraku, Ahu Tonariki, Anakena Beach and Tahai.
sunrise at Easter Island
The ship pulled in about 7am and we were already in line for tender tickets at 6:30 am. We were given tickets for tender 12. That means there would be 11 tenders that would leave before us. During the wait we could do whatever we wished on ship. We would be called over the loudspeakers when our tender was ready.
The tender ships are stored above our deck so we could watch them being lowered and prepared. Customs officials gave Captain Mercer clearance to begin operation at 8:30. A few tenders were out at sea and they were testing conditions. The seas looked calm but there were rolling swells that were hard to notice until the tender was next to the ship. Once next to the loading platform, the tender would rise and fall with the swells. It was going to be a challenge. I estimated the swells at 10 ft by the amount the tender moved against our ship. The folks that booked the early HAL trip at $299.00 per person were first and they began boarding. The tender holds 150 and it was taking a minimum of 15 seconds a person. Sometimes it took 90 seconds as the crew allowed the swells to subside. I knew we were in trouble. Would they even get to tender 12 at this rate? We went to lunch as they called tenders 7, 8, and 9. Calling 3 at a time told me that people were beginning to drop out of the tendering process because time was growing short. Good news for us. Of course the call for tenders 10, 11, and 12 came in the middle of lunch. We quickly went back to our room, grabbed our gear and headed for Deck A.
We waited in line as people were getting off of the tender where we were to board. They already had their experience on the island and were in no hurry to move aside. It took 30 minutes to load our tender. A process that takes about 10 minutes in calm water. We had no problem with safety but many of the folks should have passed on this. They weren’t physically able to do it without lots of help.
Finally loaded and we were off. We learned later that the Captain cancelled tendering after we left. We made it on the last tender!
The trip out to the island was smooth. About 15 minutes passed and we were there.
Once on shore we headed out to the place where we had a rental car waiting. The port we came into was about a mile further from the one that is used most of the time. It had better conditions for us today. It just meant that we had a 1.5 mile walk instead of .5 mile. We happily walked along side the road, commenting now and then about how much this island reminded us of Hawaii. Hot, humid, palm trees, and cacti. We did pass a few horses and passed many roaming dogs.
The rental place was in the town of Hanga Roa. We quickly signed our rental agreement, looked over the car, pointed out the few scratches and dents and then headed out for the quarry where the Moai came from. I didn’t get the sense that the woman would hassle me when I returned the car. Insular was the name of the company. It was highly recommended by other travelers.
a photo taken from the passenger seat
I used an app called maps.me. This allowed a user to download the maps ahead of time and use them with GPS. No cell service or wifi was necessary once the maps were downloaded. They operated just like apple or google maps. Directions were clearly given.
Time was our enemy. Last tender back was 6:30 pm. Miss it and they do not wait. I already checked out flights from Easter Island to Tahiti. Not cheap.
The next 40 mins of consisted of driving, looking for Moai, and waiting for cows and horses to clear out of the road. Beautiful views of the volcano, and ocean.
We arrived at Ranu Raraku and grabbed our cameras. We stopped at the entrance to pay our $80 per person fee. They wouldn’t take our money. We had to purchase a ticket back in the city! I tried everything. Sob story, bribing the attendant, complete ignorance. Nothing. We were turned away. We did try to go around the stone wall and walk pass the entrance but were caught by the observant Chilean attendant. We took as many pictures as we could. There wasn’t enough time to drive back to town, get a ticket, and drive back.
Rano Raraku
This is the quarry where the Moai were sculpted. The Moai here are in different stages of completion. We got back in the car to see if there was another place we could hop over the stone and barbed wire fence. We did find a place.
Here I am on the other side of the fence navigating through road apples. We determined with the time left, it wasn’t possible to climb up, view, and get back to the car and then back to the tender in time.
It was time to get back in the car and drive to Ahu Tonariki. This is a restored, 656 ft Platform of Tongariki. 15 re-erected statues. We certainly didn’t make the mistake of going to the check in area this time to show tickets we didn’t have.
As you can see we were able to get in and take numerous photos.
We spent at most 20 minutes at this site. Time to move on! Our next stop was Anakena Beach. My navigator kept me appraised of the time to destination. We couldn’t mess around here. It seemed as if all 6000 residents we out on the road or at one of the many beaches. I couldn’t help having flashbacks to “Deliverance” as we navigated past pickup trucks full of island residents. When we finally arrived, …
Another nice sunny day on the South Pacific Ocean.
Our room faces north as we travel west so the sun is always behind us. Today there was some work being done on the railing near our room so we sat on deck in the rear of the ship after breakfast. The sun was spectacular shining on the Pacific!
At team trivia we were still missing Jerry and Joanne. Joanne was quarantined in her room because of a fever. Hope she gets better soon.
A presentation was given by Ian on the Main Stage about our next stop, Easter Island. Ian is the shore excursion expert on the cruise. He explained the tendering process and again reinforced the safety issue in this port. Captain Mercer later said that we will not know if it will be safe enough for the tendering process until his crew sends out a tender and checks conditions after we anchor. The port is very vulnerable to the large swells of the Pacific. There are 2 ports we can use and hopefully one will be safe enough.
Lunch on the Lido seems to be getting very crowded. Hard to get a table. We may try the main dining room. A bit longer for service but we are in no hurry.
Terri looks better in every photo!
The entertainment on the Main Stage was a trio of male vocalists from England. They call themselves the Knights and they perform music of Sir Elton John, Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Tom Jones and also some Dames such as Julie Andrews.
They did several medley’s from these great artists. My only complaint was they did very few complete numbers. My Favorite Things was the longest number and was the only tune to feature any of the instrumentalists in the band. They all have roots in musical theater and did a tune or two from Les Miserables. Those numbers didn’t fit in with the show at all and they could have been cut. I would have loved more Tom Jones and less Rolling Stones. The show was well rehearsed and they worked well with the house band.…
We followed our usual daily routine. Breakfast, gym, email, group trivia then lunch. I fielded a few science questions and got them right. My strong point. Terri was right on with some medical questions. You are correct if you assumed we lost.
Tonight was a gala night. One of many. Not sure what my grandfather is doing in this picture with Terri.
Bob and Brenda shared our table once again.
Dinner then off to entertainment.
Tonight was a production by the Amsterdam Singers and Dancers. 14 twenty somethings did a Latin Salsa show. A very polished production. Lots of energy and great balance and blend of voices. Dancing and costumes added flair. Bravo!
Internet has been very poor this week. It has been very challenging trying to do this. Hopefully that will improve. Haven’t seen land, a ship, or dolphins all week. …