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Another Live-ish, this time from the Constellation


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5 hours ago, abbydancer2003 said:

If you have any questions that I can answer on the ship, I'll make a point of trying to get answers tomorrow.

 

Hi! I am curious to know what the plans are for the Spring dry-dock. Thanks for anything you might be able to find out. I go on Constellation in June through Italy. Thank you!

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I am vicariously enjoying what should have been our cruise.

 

We cancelled because my husband came down with a gram negative rod gastrointestinal infection on November 30 that was completely mismanaged by his primary care doctor's practice and resulted in two hospitalizations and a bowel resection surgery.  He is now in rehab until 1/31.

 

We saw the handwriting on the wall and cancelled on January 2 (no way were we going to bring a gastrointestinal bacteria on board ship).  

 

We have trip insurance so didn't lose any money.

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On 1/24/2024 at 5:53 AM, Homosassa said:

I am vicariously enjoying what should have been our cruise.

 

We cancelled because my husband came down with a gram negative rod gastrointestinal infection on November 30 that was completely mismanaged by his primary care doctor's practice and resulted in two hospitalizations and a bowel resection surgery.  He is now in rehab until 1/31.

 

We saw the handwriting on the wall and cancelled on January 2 (no way were we going to bring a gastrointestinal bacteria on board ship).  

 

We have trip insurance so didn't lose any money.

So sorry.  I hope he's improving (FYI, I have Khrons so two resections over the course of my life).

 

And I have not abandoned this.  We got home Wedensday night, and Thursday - Saturday I was in training for working the primary all day, and had no energy to do anything but have dinner and go to bed, as the training was not near my home.  I'll start posting again later today.

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Connie - Day 5 -Cartagena Day 1 - Tuesday 1 

 

We were up early for breakfast, as we were meeting our friends for a city tour of Cartagena.  Even though we just had one course, we barely made it al Baccio at the meeting time of 9:00.  

 

They got there just before us, and by the time everyone got what they needed we left at 9:10.  We have a private tour booked with Tours By Locals, with a meeting time of 9:30, outside the port.  We have no idea how long that will take, so we wanted to allow about 30 minutes.  There’s no big issue, because we’re overnighting here.

 

The first step was taking a shuttle bus across the container part of the port.  Next to the shuttle bus, was this small bus.

 

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Notice it’s a funeral van?  Our bus is smaller than the big buses for the cruise line excursions.

 

The bus ride is short and the cruise area is lush with aviary and animals.

 

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A flamingo enclosure is near the bus exit.

 

There are birds all over. 

 

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We wandered past the taxi stands, with drivers offering us tours (of course).  Eventually we made it to the port exit, and found Raphael with no issues, and he called his driver and away we went.

 

Our first stop was San Sebstian del Pastelillo Bastion.  That was the first  fortress (using the term loosely) built.  It has nice views of the new hotel zone in the city.

 

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And here’s the Bastion itself.

 

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Following that, we headed to the monastery on the largest hill in Cartagena.  We’d been outside there in our fist trip in 1998.  There are great views of the city there.

 

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When we were here in 1998, this was all a cardboard shantytown.  Also machine gunned police at every corner.  Very different now.

 

We went into the monastery starting at the courtyard.

 

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In the right foreground, you can see the cistern used for collecting rain water.

 

We saw a display with the history of who has visited.  It goes way back.

 

 

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Raphael showed us what he called Miracles.  It turns out it’s a couple of display boxes of charms in the chapel, each of which represents some sort of miracle that’s happened.

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And flowering trees as we head back down.

 

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Following that, we drove to the walled city.  Along the way, we saw the vaults, which apparent was the last structure built by the spaniards.  Now it’s a bunch of shops.  

 

From there, after passing the main fort (one end of the Spanish Main), we headed to the old walled city for a walking tour.  One of the first things we learned is that on the doors, the knocker (is that the word?) represents the occupation of the original owner.  The the size also represents their relative position.

 

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This lion represents a military owner.

 

 

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It looks like this is a more important military person.

 

 

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As we walked we saw an open door, so you can see that the homes here had interior courtyards.

 

 

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The lizard represents someone who worked for the King of Spain.

 

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An interesting lizard.

 

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Two lions mean it was a more important person.

 

 

In addition, a fish represents someone who works with the sea, probably a fisherman, and praying hands represent someone who works for the church.

 

We saw lots of church buildings.

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The statue in front is kind of interesting.

 

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We did peek into one of the many cathedrals, but couldn’t go in since there was a service happening.

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And saw many squares where slave auctions had happened.

 

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And one with art representing people at play.

 

 

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After our city walk we made two stops.  First was at a store that Raphael likes for buying coffee.  We got a couple of whole bean bags.  This is our new thing - buy coffee when visiting coffee producing areas.  On the way back we stopped at a store for Arie to get some local chocolate.

 

Raphael dropped us at about 1:30, and we walked through the various aviaries to the shuttle to the ship.

 

After a brief stop at our room we met at the buffet.  It had pretty much the same unappetizing food as the day in Grand Cayman.

 

Following lunch I went back to the room and checked on my new class materials, which drop every Tuesday.  The concierges are very good about printing things for me, but there was a problem with this one, because it bounced, so I played around with getting it split up and eventually got it printed.  

 

Once I sent the email, we went to Michaels for a drink and it turned out that I’d only sent one of the two split emails.  I had Penelope hang onto the printout until I send the second.

 

At 5, we went to the Reflections (aka Sky on other ships) lounge to meet Arie and Cheryl for drinks.  We had a nice conversation, and then, when they went for the early seating dinner, we left.

 

We got dressed for dinner and then went to the show.  It was the second show for singer Mike Mentz.  It had some silly moments, including him showing a video of him singing along with himself while dancing with people on a beach.  You had to be there.

 

Following the show, we went to Rendezvous to meet Arie and Cheryl.  This was a tradition we started on the Summit last year.  We had a nice conversation, and then headed to dinner.

 

Tonight I started with the burrata with eggplant.  Very good, but a lot of it.

 

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For my main, I ordered the short ribs from main dining (Luminae’s are a little too spicy for me) and for dessert, I had to try the Cherries Jubilee from main.

 

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After dinner we headed up to the room and called it a night.

 

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Once again, I haven't abandoned this.  I'll do a post now, and then finish it tomorrow (the day before I leave for the next one).  

 

Here goes:

 

Connie - Day 6 - Cartagena Day 2 - Wednesday 2

 

Today we have another TBL tour, this time the secret food tour.  Brian, another cruise critic friend, is joining us for this one.  Since a little after 9 worked yesterday, we agreed to meet him at Al Baccio.  For breakfast, we decided to just go to Al Baccio early for coffee and pastries.  We had about 20 minutes, which I thought would be enough, but we barely finished.  We met Brian and as we were leaving the ship Dan, our guide, started texting.  We ended up leaving at 9:05.

 

On the way out, we saw a peacock strutting his stuff.

 

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Once again, our guide was easy to find.  I figured we’d get a cab, and then he’d put us in a cab back, but it turned out he had a driver who took us to the old city and dropped us off.  We were to have 5 stops for local food.

 

Our first stop was at an open stand for Apepa - a fried corn bread filled with beef and egg, similar to an empanada I think.  We are also going to get fried plantains there, but they weren’t ready yet.  However, Dan showed us one of the raw plantains.

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Since the plantains were not close to ready, we went to our next stop which was a cooking stand at the edge of a high rise, for seafood salads.  We had our choice of shrimp or the bomb (bomb had other seafood, including octopus).  Glen and Brian chose the bomb, but I went for shrimp, since that’s about the only thing from the sea I eat.  I think it was somewhere between a ceviche and a cocktail.  It was very good in any case. Apparently the stand has been there for many years.

 

Next we stopped for a fruit juice.  We all picked a local fruit.  The juice was just juice and it was good.

 

Then it was back to the first stop for what we were told were the best fried plantains in Cartagena.

 

Our final stop was a cafe for Columbian coffee.  Both Glen and Brian ordered a double espresso, but I opted for a latte.  Apparently they both needed do add some sugar.  I did not, and enjoyed my drink as ordered.  Dan also gave us passionfruit cheesecake to share.  It was all delicious.

 

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He then called his driver to meet us and take us back to the ship.  We’d got a text from Arie that they were about 15 minutes ahead of us.  Their ship tour didn’t take them back to the ship but to the entrance of the port area.  I guess the want you to shop.  He mentioned that the coffee they bought at the store yesterday was about twice the price at the port store.

 

We met them at the buffet, which was rather a zoo.  Fortunately, we weren’t particularly hungry so we had a drink with them.  

 

The plan for the afternoon was that at around 4, they’d come to our room to watch the end of sailaway and drink our wine.  I’d asked our head butler for some snacks, in part to see if we could still get them even without a dedicated butler.

 

After the buffet we went back to the room.  I sent my printout the e concierges, and then called X to change rooms on a future cruise.  I did some work on this until Tony and our rooms service guy showed up with shrimp, fruit, a cheese plate and potato chips.  We also got a big ice bucket for the wine, which we will keep for water, since our refrigerator is actually a cooler that doesn’t work.

 

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Arie and Cheryl soon showed up and we enjoyed watching a sailaway from Cartagena.

 

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The mandatory fort at end of harbor picture.

 

 

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Looks like a resort at the edge of Columbia.

 

They left and then a little while later we went to the Reflections Lounge for the second returned Captain’s Club happy hour.  Food there still hasn’t returned.

 

When they left for dinner we got ready for dinner and headed to Michael’s Club for. A drink.  They are making me excellent sangrias every night.

 

We decided to go to the show, which tonight is a Neil Diamond tribute performer.  He was good, but did do a lot of self promotion. 

 

After, there was a 5.00 free slot play, so I went to that.  I ended up with 3.45.  I then played 10.00 and ended up with 3.55, so 7.00 on 10 spent.  I did better later.   Arie and Cheryl were there finishing off their roulette money so I watched them and Glen joined me.  Most interesting thing was when Arie dumped a chip in his drink.  They did not refund it.  Once they finished, we went to dinner.

 

I started with an asparagus starter, which was pretty good.  It’s new and one of the few changes I liked.  For my main, I had turkey from the main dining, and some day I’ll figure out how to get good pictures.

 

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Glen ordered the sirloin, and once again was not happy (it’s more like a roast and doesn’t work), so he met with the chef.  He also switched to a seafood pasta.

 

Dessert was the raspberry licorice cream.  It does come with chocolate ice cream, but I left that off.  This was a whole lot better than it looks.

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Glen had the Chocolate Caramel Custard.

 

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And a random picture of Glen with our fabulous server Nolan.

 

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Today was also our dating anniversary (27 I think) and they gave us a little chocolate cake.  

 

After dinner, we went back to the room and found this.

 

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And this.

 

 

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That was very sweet of our room team. There was another cake under the plate cover.  We’ll give the wine to Arie and Cheryl later.

 

It was a very nice day and we felt very well taken care of!

 

 

 

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7 hours ago, LaCal said:

What did you mean when he dropped a chip in his drink they didn’t refund him?? 

 

Drinks in the casino are free 🍹🍹🍹😜

They replaced the drink but claimed they couldn't find the $1 chip.

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Connie - Day 7 Colon Panama - Thursday 2

 

Our arrival to Colon Panama was scheduled for 9:00 am, and we’d decided to join Arie and Cheryl for a ship tour of the new Locks visitors center and a visit to the Unisco World Hertitage town of Portobelo.  The description said that it was an hour drive to Portobelo.  Because Arie’d read that Colon was not a safe city, it seemed like a good idea.

 

We decided to go to the Elite coffee breakfast, since that’s open later than the restaurant, and we didn’t need to be anywhere until after 10am.

 

We went, and while I asked for regular coffee, it was dark enough that I’m pretty sure it was an espresso roast.  (That’s been an ongoing thing - coffee in Luminae, for example, is only truly brewed at breakfast).  We shared a fruit plate and a pastry plate, and had some OJ.  

 

At about 9:55 we decided to go get our stuff for our ship tour today.  We met Arie and Cheryl outside the theater, and headed in to get our numbers for our tour.  We got them, sat for a few minutes, and then headed out to our bus.

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Decorations in the terminal

 

We found our bus and were the first on board, so we had the front row.  I did watch as the rest of the people boarded, and no-one seemed to need the front row so we stayed there.

 

Our first stop was at the Visitors Center for the new Locks.  These were authorized by Panama in a 2006 vote, and 10 years later, roughly, the new locks were ready for business.  The new locks are wider and deeper, so allow for bigger ships (I did read that some ships still can’t do a full transit because they won’t clear the bridge on the Pacific side).

 

On the way to the Visitors Center, we saw various military areas.

 

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 The visitors center gives you a full view of the first set of locks.  Once we arrived, we were told that we had 90 minutes, and could see a film about the locks.  First thing was posters listing  what the different sets of locks were.  We’re visiting the Auga Clara locks.

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The new locks on the Pacific are the Cocoli Locks.  Too far away for today.

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The visitors center has a gift shop, a theater and viewing platforms fo the locks.  I headed to the viewing platform and discovered a container ship was in the first lock.  We watched the water drain out to lower the ship.

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Eventually, we watched it sail out of the first lock, into the second.

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We could see what appears to be the control tower for the locks.

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There was also a good view of the bridge that crosses the Atlantic set of locks.

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Once that was done, I went to the gift shop and bought a magnet to commemorate my visit.  I also shared some of the plantain chips that Arie had purchased.

 

After that it was time to watch the movie about the building of the canal (both times).  It only ran about 9 minutes, so not very detailed.  David McCullough’s book is in my future.  (The Path between the Seas, I think).

 

After the movie we waited for our bus.  Our group loaded quickly, so we had time to drive across the bridge to see the old locks, too.

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Once back across the bridge, it was time to head to the UNESCO site of the pirate town of Portobelo.

 

Our tour description said it was an hour drive.  That was problem one - it was a little over 90 minutes of driving.  The part along the coast was nice, but we drove through towns with mountains of trash by the side of the road.  I’m not sure why.   

 

We eventually arrived in Portobelo, It turns out it’s a small town with a 3 forts in ruins, a couple of old churches (the current one from the 17th century is apparently a shrine to the “black Jesus”. Wikipedia says that the statue in the church is venerated in Panama, and people make pilgrimages to it, walking from all over Panama to it.  

 

We aslo went to a small slave museum in the old custom house.  Small but nicely done.

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Custom house as seen from the ruined fort next door.  

 

We had about 40 minutes there so we wandered around.  The town square is nice.

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We saw nothing about the promised “pirate village”. 

 

We stopped in a minimart, but didn’t see anything interesting, so we got back on the bus.  It was slightly shorter back, but still close to an hour and half.  Once back at the port, we were dropped closer to the entrance, and a bit further walk back to the ship.

 

On the whole the excursion was a mix.  The Locks were good, but the trip to Portobelo was too long and the village seemed like a small impoverished town with a couple of interesting things to see.  Not worth it.

 

By this tie, it was close to 5 , and all we’d had to eat was the fruit and pastry at 9:30.  Arie and Cheryl decided to go get ready for dinner, as their dinner was at 6.  We headed to the buffet and grabbed so pizza.  I took me a little while to find some water, as they’re still serving everything.  I’m generally OK with served food, but drinks should be self service.

 

We went to Michaels for a bit afterward, and then back to the room until dinner.  For dinner, I had the Roasted Carrot Salad, and grilled chicken breast.  The chicken was good , but the black garlic emulsion on the veggies was only OK.  For dessert, main had Cherries Jubilee, and I love those so I finished with that.

 

After dinner back to the room for a while and a reasonably early night since we have an early start tomorrow.  Fortunately, the clocks go back an hour.

 

 

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1 hour ago, abbydancer2003 said:

David McCullough’s book is in my future.  (The Path between the Seas, I think).

 

 This is an excellent and very detailed book on the canal. 

 

 Question - was there anything worth getting off the ship at the terminal in Colon?  We did not get off the last time we were there because we also heard it was not safe and we had toured the locks and Panama City the last time we were there. 

 

 

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7 hours ago, DaKahuna said:

 

 This is an excellent and very detailed book on the canal. 

 

 Question - was there anything worth getting off the ship at the terminal in Colon?  We did not get off the last time we were there because we also heard it was not safe and we had toured the locks and Panama City the last time we were there. 

 

 

As I recall not much near the pier.  There is a large duty free shopping area, but you have to take a cab or something there.  There's not much in the pier area, maybe a couple of shops.

 

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Connie - Porto Limon - Friday 2 

 

Today is our 4th port day in a row, and we’re in Costa Rica.  We were on the Pacific side on our very first cruise and now it’s the Atlantic side.  Arie had booked us with a guide he knows, who was gracious enough to give us a price break when we couldn’t drum up more people.  We did get a 5th person last week. 

 

We got up early and thought we’d have time for Al Baccio,   However by the time we got there it was almost time to leave, so I got a latte and drank it on the way to the gangway.  We also met Vicky, who was the person joining us.

 

Walking off the pier we were serenaded by a reggae band singing a “Welcome to Costa Rica” song.  It was rather catchy, actually.  Between the pier and the street was a craft market.

 

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A nice sign

 

We met Charlie, our guide, just outside the port.  Our plan was to go to the Sloth Sanctuary and then a national park, but Charlie suggested we visit some hanging bridges.  Along the way, we encountered a lot of traffic due to road work.  We left the main road and head up a hill to a jungle area with a restaurant.  

 

Once we got up there one of the guys, Kennedy became our guide up to the bridges,.  We walked uphill for a while, He pointed out varies plants and a few creatures.  Our favorite was the tiny poisonous frog.  

 

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A bit elusive, but here’s a orange/reddish one.

 

After about 20-30 minutes, Cheryl and I gave up, since it didn’t look like we were going anywhere except up, so Cheryl and I bailed, and walked back to the restaurant.  We had a nice time talking to Charlie, watching monkeys, and enjoying some fruit.

 

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This is a monkey (hanging from the tree), but they are hard to see.

 

It took them about an hour to return.  We saw them crossing a bridge to get to the restaurant, but then they veered off.  We later learned that Glen and Arie were ready to head back, but the other lady wanted to see everything.  In retrospect, maybe we should have left her there and she could spend the day as she wanted.

 

By the time they were done, it was too late to do the planned stops, and by this time none of us wanted to spend a lot of time in his van.  So he suggested that instead, we go to a nearby canal for a boat tour.  We’ll likely see wildlife.  That sounded good.

 

We headed to the cancel and had a private boat with both a driver and a spotter.  We saw lots of birds.

 

 

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We also saw a crocodile under some plants.  Look closely.

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We did see a few sloth and monkeys, so it was a good ride.

 

Next up we went to visit a beach.  No swimming for us, as the weather wasn’t that great, but it was nice.  We walked through a restaurant to get there.  Gotta love the iguanas at the restaurant.

 

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We then drove up a hill to get a good overview of Purto Limon.  I think you can see the ship on the left side of the picture.

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Following that, we went to a grocery store, so that Arie could get some coffee.  We thought we would too, but when we got there, we noticed at all the coffee that Charlie recommended as good was only sold as ground coffee.  I’ve noticed that in the grocery stores in the Caribbean, coffee is only sold as ground.  We decided to pass.

 

That turned out to be our last stop.  We’d deviated greatly from the planned itinerary, but since Charlie was well short of the number of people he needed, we were OK with that.  

 

We decided to stop in the craft market.  Arie and Cheryl wanted shirts, and I wanted to take a look.  I did find a refrigerator magnet (with sloths) and and a small bag of whole bean coffee from the brand that Charlie liked.  I also got another local coffee.  For some reason the guy kept telling me they ship to Massachusetts.  Maybe I’m supposed to infer that hey can ship anywhere in the US?

 

We headed to lunch at the buffet since we were back in time for it.  It wasn’t crowded and the were carving top round, so I had some of that.

 

After lunch we went back to the room until 5pm, when we met Arie and Cheryl at the Reflections lounge for our nightly drink.  

 

After hanging out in Michaels for a while we went to Soundtrack, the first production show.  It was OK. 

 

Following the show, we met Arie and Cheryl for our later drink, but this time at the OceanView Cafe bar, since the loud band was in Rendezvous.  The bar was busy, but not as loud as Rondezvous.

 

At about 8:30, we headed to dinner.

 

Tonight I had a mushroom vol au vent and the chateaubriand from main.

 

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The vol au vent was made right and tasted good.

 

 

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I think this is pineapple upside down cake.

 

That was a then a wrap for us.  Tomorrow is a sea day, so no plans.

 

 

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11 hours ago, abbydancer2003 said:

As I recall not much near the pier.  There is a large duty free shopping area, but you have to take a cab or something there.  There's not much in the pier area, maybe a couple of shops.

 

 

 Thank you.  i think we'll be staying aboard as usual. 

 

 Costa Rican coffee is our favorite.  We also only buy whole beans.  

 

 

Edited by DaKahuna
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Connie day 9 - Sea Day 3 - Saturday 2

 

We did manage to be up in time for breakfast, so we went, since we didn’t at all during the run of  port days.  As I was finishing, I got a text from Arie that they were on the pool deck waiting for officer vs guest “speed baggo”.  It appeared tow however did the beanbag toss better, but we couldn’t really see it.  We did figure out when to meet for Catan later.

 

I had some things that needed to be done for the class I’m taking, so I went back to the room and worked out that until lunch.

 

Lunch was at Luminae for the first time in several days.  I had fried mushrooms from main, and then the Luminae Cobb salad without onions or eggs.  For dessert, I had a scoop of mango sorbet. 

 

After lunch we met at Ocean View to play Catan.  Today we were playing with a single 12 sided die (flashback to my very limited D&D days).  That did change the game, because the odds of a particular roll became completely even).  It was fun and Glen won today.

 

I spent the rest of the afternoon continuing my class, and the we did our normal Reflections, Michaels, show.

 

Tonights show was a broadway performer, apparently he’d been in Grease on both broadway and a touring show.  The show could have been good, but was actually kind of boring since mostly he did old standards and not broadway.

 

Once that was done, we met Arie & Cheryl at Cellar Masters for awhile, and then went to dinner.

 

I started with corn soup, without the stuff they put in it. Still good.

 

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Both of us had the pork tenderloin, with mustard sauce.  Sadly, it was pretty dry and the sauce didn’t cover that.

 

For dessert, I had the brioche custard.  It was rather deconstructioned, but pretty good.

 

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After dinner, back to the room for the night.

 

*

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Connie Day 10 Sea day 4 - Sunday 2

 

Today is the second of two sea days before we get to Cozumel.  For something new to do, we decided to go the continental breakfast at Michael’s Club.  Once I got there, I realized that the only coffee they had was from the machine, meaning it was espresso roast, which I only like in lattes.  I mentioned to Michelle, the server, that maybe if I went to Luminae, they’d give me a cup of brewed coffee to go. She said she’d call them.  Soon a pot of brewed coffee appeared, and I got my good coffee!

 

In the middle of this, we got a text from Arie about playing Splendor and Fluxx after the captains  event in the theater at 11.  We don’t eat lunch until after 1, so that should be fine.  (Splendor plays faster than Catan)  

 

Soon after that there was an announcement from the cruise director about an “Over 18 only” show at 10:45.   He announced that if you wanted to go, you have to have a “open mind”, at which point everyone in the Club cracked up.

 

We met Arie & Cheryl around noon, and played.  Arie won both games, and Splendor was close.  We kind of let him win Fluxx because lunch was getting pretty close to ending.

 

I started with the burrata salad, and had the main dining fried chicken for my main.  It was 2 boneless pieces with Jonny Cakes (a little thicker than we make at home), fries, and a coleslaw that had too much onion for me.  For dessert I had one of my favorites, key lime pie.

 

After lunch I went back to the room to work on my class.    Since tonight was our second formal night, we dressed before our Reflections lounge meet up.  Tonight was Music and Mixology, an event we’ve been to once before.  We enjoyed it, and started other people dancing after we did it.

 

Following that there was a second Officers thing in Michael’s Club.  Tonight we did meet the Captain, and we talked about his upcoming vacation home to Venice.

 

Tonight’s show was The Chernov Brothers.  They did their very own two person variety show.  They are acrobats, clowns, swords etc.  They were terrific and I’m not sure what they’re doing on a cruise ship, not touring the country.  Since they are Ukrainian, they ran a film tribute to Stand with Ukraine.  It was (and hopefully still is) gorgeous.

 

 

We headed back to the room for a little while, and then went dinner.  I had the “crunchy” asparagus, and then the rack of lamb.  It was excellent as always.    For dessert, we shared a coconut tapioca.  I had most of it, and gave Glen the orange chocolate tulle, which is gone from the picture.  The passionfruit sorbet was good, tapioca - OK>

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After dinner we went to the adult show.  It was a little burlesque, and the costumes were a little risqué, but the story was pretty tame (evil witch enslaves sailors on her island, love triumphs.  I'd have given it an R rating, Glen PG 13.  It was about the same level of "adult" as the Rocky Horror Picture Show.  In other words, not really, and you didn't need a terribly open mind for it.

 

So that ended our nice sea day.  Cozumel and one more sea day left.

 

 

 

 

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I'm going to wrap this with some quick notes and pictures from our last 2 days of cruise, and trip home.

 

After our two delightful sea days, we went to Cozumel.  Our original plan was to go to a resort that Arie recommended, but there are serval ships here, and we figured it would be crowded, so we decided to just take a walk.

 

We met around 10 am, after breakfast, and headed out. Once on shore, we found this in a courtyard.

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I love this sort of sign.

 

Wandering through the area we found a small pyramid replica, with a small museum inside.

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And at the edge, the required sign.

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Following that, we found a store that sold coffee and chocolate.  So we bought some whole bean coffee, vanilla for my sister, and a white chocolate bar.  The store staff was very helpful with letting us taste the clocolate, and smell the coffee.  It was good experience.

 

On the way out of the area, we noticed a guy painting murals on the buildings.

 

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After that, we stopped at stall so Arie and Cheryl could buy some hats.  

 

We headed back to the ship, We agreed to meet Arie and Cheryl for lunch, where they had a Mexican buffet.  Pretty good, but when I ask for Fajitas, they ended up pressing it into the tortilla, making it a fajita burrito.  

 

After that, we played Catan.  The rest of the day was pretty much the same as others, we hung in our room, went to the Reflection Lounge, and hung out with them after their dinner.  

 

Dinner tonight was good, and Glen  had the special creme brulee for dessert.

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I had a crepes suzette.  Pretty good.

 

 

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After dinner, we went back to the room and watched a show on our Roku, which we connected.

 

The next day was our last day.  We didn't do much, except play Catan for the last time, go to the Reflection Lounge for last time, etc.  

 

After the reflection lounge, we packed until it was time to go to the show, which was Rock City.  I've seen it a few times, but I still like it.  After that, our last drink with Arie and Cheryl and then final dinner.

 

The amuse bouce was a blue cheese macaroon, which may have been the best part of the dinner.

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For appitzers, we chose a cheese, which is a raw milk cheese, that was pretty yucky.  We couldn't eat much.

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My main was an oxtail entree but with filet, I didn't like it and Glen didn't like his much either.  We agreed that it was the worst meal we've ever had, and considering the grand total, they're not doing too badly.  

 

We went back put our bags out just a little after 10 and went to bed early as we're up early tomorrow.

 

Some closing thoughts, last day, and a couple of answers late.

 

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I just finished a midterm that was hanging over my head, so here's my wrap up. 

 

The first leg of our trip home left Tampa at 12:30, so we had lots of time.  We had a last breakfast in Luminae (something we always do) and headed to the lounge.  Jioro was out with a bad back, so I missed having him kick me off a ship for the 4th time.  Instead, around 9:10 Penelope told us we had to leave.  

 

I'd texted Arie to ask if there was facial recognition and he said yes, but it was at the customs stand so we did have to show our passports.  No matter, it only took about 10 minutes all told.  

 

We grabbed our bags, and headed out.  We decided tto try for a Lyft ride, and it was only about 10 minutes before our driver came.  She was friendly and we talked about how she got free casino cruises.  

 

Tampla airport was also easy, and we were soon waiting at our gate.  We flew to Chicago, and then to San Francisco.  The only interesting thing was that our plane to SF went back to the gate, as the captain said that we were over our fuel weight, and they had to remove one passenger.  I've never heard of that, and I do wonder how they chose the passenger to remove.  Odd.

 

Some notes.


First, what I learned about the upcoming dry. dock.  Things will be refreshed, carpets, paint etc.  Also they are converting some of the back rooms (family verandas maybe?) to sky suites, so they are extending Luminae a bit.  I believe they'll take out the back wall, and move it further into the dining room.  They did that to the Infinity and there are pictures around.  They're also changing Michael's Club a bit.  I'm not sure if they're adding the food area.

 

We did have a very nice time on the cruise, and the staff was amazing as always.  If they bring back the longer cruises on her, I wouldn't hesitate to book again.  

 

Thanks to all who followed.  I have some notes from my current cruise on the Beyond, which I will be updating tonight, and then I'll do a live on the Solstice in March.

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Thanks! we leave on the 9th for this cruise. So you only had 2 forml nights after ll, not 3? Did you have a Full Moon (white nights) party? It's never been on the full moon, but they had those on our last 3 Celeb cruises...

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22 minutes ago, sofietucker said:

Thanks! we leave on the 9th for this cruise. So you only had 2 forml nights after ll, not 3? Did you have a Full Moon (white nights) party? It's never been on the full moon, but they had those on our last 3 Celeb cruises...

Two formal nights.  I think there was a Full Moon, but I didn't go, so I could be wrong.  

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