We went up to breakfast, lingered
a bit in the room, and then got off the ship, our “in transit” papers in hand,
along with our passports and immigration and emigration paperwork. We’ve heard there are 47 passengers “in
transit” continuing on to Los Angeles.
The best here is that we’ll be seeing our California friends, Mike and
Vangie, as they’ll be boarding in Sydney.
Cingular Quay was getting busy,
suits going to work, young girls in dresses and nice outfits. It seems to be a young town. We didn’t care. We knew of a coffee shop in the mall that
does good coffee. They knew of it, too,
as it was quite crowded. But we weren’t
in a rush to get anywhere.
Then we wandered back through the
Royal Botanic Garden. We found statues
that we’d not seen when we’d gone through it a few weeks ago. It’s a beautiful place and worth all the time
we’ve spent here.
Known as a slit-drum, this one is made of Pacific teak. These were traditionally used for beating dance rhythms, transmitting messages or summoning villagers to meetings. |
There were some ponds here and there, and one with pretty daisy-like flowers that we'd not discovered when here before. |
This was quite unique. It appeared that when the tree died, they had someone do a carving on the trunk. |
Would they really send this for an iced tea spoon? |
When we got back on board we
discovered the differences besides just having a smaller cabin, less shelves
and closet space, a smaller deck and only one television set. The towels are not as thick, there are
smaller bars of soap, different beds and pillows. AND there’s no emergency pull cord in the
shower. There is none at all in this
cabin. But we still get ice, our room
steward has us well in hand and he seems quite nice. Plus he brought us robes that we asked for
like we had in the mini-suite. We’d
gotten quite used to having them and now expect them.
We met up with our Californians,
Mike and Vangie, for dinner. There was
2-1/2 hours of giggling, talking, laughing out loud, and we told them of the
special appetizers and the fabulous view from up in the fancy Skywalkers Lounge
on the 18th deck, for Platinum and Elite passengers. All-in-all, it was a great day, and we’re
underway again, crossing the Tasman Sea yet again as well.
The next few days were at-sea
days, and we headed back across the Tasman (April 13/14/15). Of course, there was bad weather expected
again, but somehow we avoided it mostly.
Yay.
I’ve been totally busy. There are lectures about upcoming ports, the
gym (Come Back New Princess says), there’s card playing … through which I
discovered a whole new layer of activities with something called Cruise
Critic. Internet basically sucks so I’ve
not been on it much, but when you know you are going on a cruise you can go to
this site and find your ship and the date you’re sailing, and find people that
are going. Some of them like to arrange
tours, card playing, and so on. They did
a cabin crawl where you visited a variety of cabins, so you could see what they
were like … and what you were missing.
I’ll have to get on it for the next one.
We went with Vangie and Mike to a
new ship restaurant we hadn’t tried before, Share. Six courses, we were way too full, but it was
wonderful, and we plan to go again. This
ship does great food. I should come back
new with an additional 20 pounds. NOT!!!
So, the second day at sea I
thought one of the lights in the bathroom was burned out. Funny, how you can’t see something well, so
you make up what you think it is. Turns
out it’s a vent. Whoops.
We had told Mike and Vangie about
the Skywalkers Lounge appetizers. We met
up there, but nothing was happening. We
figured it was because the captain was having a big soiree with a champagne
waterfall in the piazza. We went up
again the next night. Still nothing, and
we weren’t the only ones looking for it.
We thought we should look at the invitation. Wrong venue.
It turns out that there are a larger number of repeat customers, about a
thousand, and so it was being held in a different place. But we were on it now.
No comments:
Post a Comment