• Rock of Cashel

    5 maja 2015, Irlandia ⋅ 🌧 48 °F

    We went on the the Rock of Cashel, a castle begun in the fifth century by the O'Bryan clan chiefs in this part of Ireland. A huge chunk of the bishop's tower as large as a Volkswagen was sitting on the ground. It was blown out of the northeastern corner in a single storm one night in the eighteenth century. Some of the wind we felt on top of that hill convinced me that such a catastrophe was entirely possible. However, since the building was abandoned at about the same time when a new bishop wanted a new residence down in the town, there was no need to replace the fallen material. Both the palace and the chapel were beautiful, even in their ruined state. The choir room, on the other hand, has been restored. At a restaurant at the base of the hill we enjoyed a lunch of baked chicken in mustard sauce, carrots and parsnips, and potatoes. The dessert was apple pie. We also got a complimentary Guinness Stout with the meal. Just after we climbed the hill to the castle, Glenda began to feel ill. She returned to the bus and took it easy, while I went on with my photography. Our guide Annie gave a very knowledgeable running commentary on Irish history, language, politics and culture as we rode back to the ship. Returning to the Royal Princess, I got us some pizza and brought it back to our room, where Glenda is resting and trying to recover. As we shoved off from Cobh, the Cobh town band was at the dock to play for our ship. They began with "Georgia On My Mind," and "King of the Road." Just as the lines were slipped, they broke into "Anchors Aweigh." About a hundred people on the dock began swaying their arms to the music, and we waved back. One little girl amused those of us on the port side of the ship by cutting somersaults down the dockside. As we left I got some good shots of the town and the cathedral. I went to the other side of the ship to see the place where the Titanic was docked before her fateful departure. When I tried to come inside, the automatic door for the promenade deck would not open, so I had to enlist help from some other passengers and crew to get the door to open. Finally they pointed me to another door. Coming back to the stateroom, I was engaged in a short conversation with another passenger about the wonderful conditions for photos today. I summarized our adventures, and he mentioned to me that he toured Cobh in a taxi with a driver named Patty O'Roark. Among other places, Patty took him to the Lusitania graveyard, where his grandparents are buried. Glenda just roused and says she thinks she has a slight fever. The captain announced that the voyage tonight may get a bit bouncy. High winds and rough seas are in our path. Czytaj więcej

  • Lismore

    5 maja 2015, Irlandia ⋅ 🌬 48 °F

    We stopped in Lismore for about an hour. Glenda and I had scones in the local hotel, and I walked back down to Lismore Castle to get a photo. On the way to the Stone of Cashel we grabbed a few shots of the view from a place called the "V" through the bus window before exiting the bus for photos. From this place one can see five counties in Ireland; the scene is spectacular. Nevertheless, my photos from inside the bus may be better than those taken outside. Just as we emerged, a thick fog bank rolled in and it started to rain. Czytaj więcej

  • Medical Center

    4 maja 2015, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ ☀️ 52 °F

    I have a cold so I went to the medical center onboard to assure myself that this is not pneumonia. The doc gave me some antihistamines that contain prednisone, and I already am feeling better. The medical center was busy with four critically ill patients, one being evacuated by helicopter this evening. No one is allowed on any of the open decks and no flash photography is permitted during the operation. The helicopter cannot land on the deck; there is no helipad. So the crews will lift the patient in a basket up to the helicopter from the basketball court. We actually saw the helicopter arrive and leave on the bridge-cam. Glenda and I dined alone tonight but happened to sit next to a couple who works for Princess Cruises in Alaska during the summer months. It was interesting to share tips and tricks about traveling abroad. We're looking forward to touring Southern Ireland tomorrow. We will land at Cobh, then go inland. Czytaj więcej

  • Crab Shack

    3 maja 2015, North Atlantic Ocean ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    If I have one impression about the Royal Princess so far, it is that we have to wait in line for everything, from the elevators to the coffee bar. There is not a stairway amidships that allows us to get our stateroom on the eighth deck, so we either have to wait up to ten minutes for a very crowded elevator, or walk to the end of the ship for a stairway. I do appreciate the captain's emphasis on hand-washing, however. This afternoon at the International Cafe we met Vincent and Naomi, and discussed with them our photos of the ice caves in Iceland. A section of the Horizon Court was roped off as "The Crab Shack" for tonight's supper. The waitress brought us eight large Alaskan king crab legs, about eighty boiled shrimp (no exaggeration), and corn and potatoes. We had a feast. Afterwards they brought us the Princess mousse chocolate cake and sang "happy anniversary" to us. Although it's not our anniversary today, we chose to use this cruise as our celebratory event. To top things off, there was a beautiful sunset, which I was able to photograph. Czytaj więcej

  • Ponta Delgada Cheese & Wine

    2 maja 2015, Portugalia ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    When we returned from the volcanic crater to Ponta Delgada, we went to a very nice hotel for a wine tasting. Glenda and I got off the bus at the fifteenth-century Spanish fort and walked in the oldest part of the city. We admired the beautiful architecture and took a few photos. By the time I returned to the ship I had a slight sore throat, but was not running a fever. I took a couple Tylenol capsules and went to sleep. Around 5:00 pm I woke and got dressed for dinner at the Crown Grill. I am really enjoying learning some of the finer points of using the Canon 60-D camera. Czytaj więcej

  • Azores: Blue and Green Lakes

    2 maja 2015, Portugalia ⋅ ⛅ 59 °F

    This morning I took my walk and went to breakfast before we had to report to the Princess Theater for our excursion into Ponta Delgada, Azores. Our guide Connie took us to the western part of the island where we saw the green and blue lakes. The scenery was magnificent, and the greenery was simply lush. Anything will grow here. It is noteworthy that there is only one policeman for the whole island. Crime is practically nonexistent. Czytaj więcej

  • First Formal Night

    1 maja 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    We saw Nole and Leila at breakfast. They did a great job, as did Gretel (strange name for a big guy). Rain today. I shortened my walk because my camera was getting wet. Slept in the afternoon.. Leila shared with us the fact that she comes from a town called Nish (Nis) in Serbia, the birthplace of the Roman Emperor Constantine. More photos of Keith and Nicole dancing. Czytaj więcej

  • Leisure on the Sea

    30 kwietnia 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    Another time change caused us to sleep late, so we missed our walk before breakfast. We saw Lee and Sandy at Horizon Court and confirmed supper plans. I spent the morning down at Club 6 reading about camera lenses. We met friends from Canada who are excellent dancers, Keith and Nicole from Toronto several days ago. Yesterday I took some shots of their dancing. I walked on the track this afternoon, then read more in the lens book. I walked on the track for an hour at mid-afternoon, and took a nap before dinner. We dined with Lee and Sandy, had a long conversation afterwards, then watched a little girl dancing alone at the Piazza. Czytaj więcej

  • Photography Class

    29 kwietnia 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    Walked for an hour on the track before breakfast. Shot photos on deck. Lee and Sandy Patkus will make dinner reservations for tomorrow night with us. Will attend lecture on John Paul Jones and go to a photography seminar. Cookies in the afternoon preceded more reading about the camera. We had dinner last night with a couple from Ohio. Leila Dinic, with whom I had discussed photography in Horizon Court was our junior waiter, working with Nole Nelo from the Philippines. Czytaj więcej

  • Wine Tasting

    28 kwietnia 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    In Horizon Court Had breakfast with Lee and Sandy from northern Virginia, recently moved to Florida. Lee is a big guy I noticed on the track yesterday. Got the email address for Leila, a junior waiter, to whom I will send a photo I took of her yesterday. Attended lecture on northwest passage and John Rae (1813-1893). Frozen in Time by Beattie and Geiger. Fatal Passage by Ken McGoogan. I attended a wine tasting, then I finished reading the field manual for the Canon 60D. Afterwards I took a nap on deck.. Later tonight we will go back to the Wheelhouse Bar to hear classical selection by the string quartet Capriccio. Czytaj więcej

  • Seaboard Lectures and Leisure

    27 kwietnia 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    I rose at 5:30 am and went out to take photos. We had breakfast in Horizon Court. Before attending a lecture on Sir Thomas Cochrane, we passed the time with one Herb from Philadelphia in the piazza, who prided himself on being a liberal. Took photos of Capriccio String Quartet and champagne waterfall in the Piazza. A photo of the elevator shows some of the problems on a ship that holds 6700 passengers. Overcrowding on the elevators was common, and we had to wait in line for most events. Czytaj więcej

  • Getting to Know the Royal Princess

    26 kwietnia 2015, North Atlantic Ocean

    Sunday morning I awoke at 5:30 am and went around the ship to take photos. I had a small bowl of muesli at the Horizon Court, and checked back to see whether Glenda was awake every hour on the hour. She was up by 8:00 and I went with her to breakfast. We perched at the back of the ship on the Horizon Terrace, enjoying the company of After supper we went to the Wheelhouse Bar to hear a string quartet. Czytaj więcej

  • Boarding the Ship

    25 kwietnia 2015, Stany Zjednoczone ⋅ ⛅ 86 °F

    When we arrived at the Fort Lauderdale airport, a shuttle bus took us the short distance to the ship. A twenty-minute bus ride brought us to the cruise ship terminal. Luggage was delayed until after supper, but then we secured all our baggage and got the room squared away.Standing for just a moment in the hot sun before we took the elevator up to check into the ship was merciless. I had brought my hat and a sport coat, and in the sun, the heat was nearly unbearable. However, the discomfort did not last long. Princess showed its usual efficiency in getting us checked in. Once on the ship, they treated us like royalty. When we boarded, our room was not yet ready, so we had to wait in the atrium. There were several couples dancing to recorded music. We did not realize that certain ships are known for certain types of activities. The Royal Princess is known as a ship that welcomes people who enjoy dancing. I had prime rib for supper and Glenda had Mexican. Czytaj więcej

  • At Home Again

    18 lutego 2015, Stany Zjednoczone ⋅ 🌧 36 °F

    Although the flight was postponed repeatedly, we made it home to Raleigh-Durham Airport, where the Southerns picked us up. Because it was still snowing, we didn't delay but came straight home. I found Cedar Creek Drive to be glassy with ice so I turned off Lexington Road and gunned the motor. The car was not steerable, but the inertia brought us far enough so that I was able to get the car into the driveway Czytaj więcej

  • Leaving in a Blizzard

    16 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ 🌬 27 °F

    This morning in Reykjavik Glenda got a text message saying that her rain pants had been turned into the lost and found at the Blue Lagoon. Although a snowstorm made travel difficult, we left Reykjavik early and planned a detour to the Blue Lagoon on the way to the Keflavik Airport to reclaim Glenda’s waterproof pants. Snow started and stopped all day today, but when our airplane boarded at 4:30 pm the snow and wind struck with intense ferocity. We waited in the plane about one hour while the wind buffeted us on the tarmac. Then we waited another hour at the end of the runway until the pilot felt a brief, very slight, respite in the wind. She shoved the throttle forward and we were airborne. We are still trying to check on the internet to see if the Raleigh Airport is open. It may be that the winter storm in North Carolina has caused flight cancellations even if the airport is open. We will just have to take one thing at a time. Glenda and I were separated on the flight by one Sue Ellen from Ohio, an interesting travel companion—very intelligent teacher at a private school. Landing in Toronto we rushed to get our luggage transferred so that it would not get lost as it did on the trip to Iceland. We were shuttled back and forth from Terminal 3 to Terminal 1; then from aisle 3 to aisle 7 then back. I called Gray Southern to tell him that we would not make our connecting flight. He said that he had seen on the web that our flight had been cancelled. The reason no agents were at aisle 7 was that our flight to Raleigh-Durham has been cancelled. We went back to aisle 3 at the Lester B. Pearson Airport in Toronto. Glenda arranged for a hotel voucher, while I went to aisle 15 to rebook a flight out. A limousine took us to the Hilton Garden Inn. We are going to bed. We’ll wake up tomorrow and take another bite out of the apple. Czytaj więcej

  • Swimming in a Snowstorm-Blue Lagoon

    15 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 34 °F

    We shared a pizza for lunch at the N1 station in Borgarnes and started back south as an intense, but short, snowstorm hit. We went back through the six-kilometer tunnel, southward this time, on our way past Reykjavik to the Blue Lagoon. Both Glenda and I had some initial glitches with the computerized bracelets. Apparently, the attendant failed to register ours properly. Soon we got them working and entered the pool. While we were swimming in its pool, a snowstorm started. Swimming in hot water in the middle of a snowstorm outside is among the strangest things I have ever done. Completely comfortable in the water, my ears and face were still uncomfortably cold. We returned to the Hotel Center Plaza around 5:30 pm. Check-in and parking were much easier this time, since we had done it all before a week ago. For supper Glenda had a traditional pylsa hot dog from the little hot dog stand in the plaza. I was still not hungry after the big pizza I had in Borgarnes for lunch. We were assigned a room that was larger than the one we had occupied a week before. We prepared our luggage for the trip home tomorrow. I will be reluctant to hand in the keys of the Toyota RAV 4. She has been a great little horse. We just got the ironic news that Asheboro is expecting a winter storm tomorrow. We might be delayed in arriving at home. Yet, we are not worried. One thing we have learned in Iceland is that everything is dependent on the weather, and we can adjust. Czytaj więcej

  • Searching for Skallgrimur

    15 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 36 °F

    Last night the sound of the rock music was the least of our concerns. We heard none of it because of the roaring of the wind that lasted until about 4:30 am. Finally the storm settled down. I went back to sleep until 7:30 am when we went down to breakfast and were greeted by the Filipino woman who works as the cook. Thorstin was still sleeping because the law school dinner-dance lasted until around 5:00 am. Even so, when we were into our breakfast Thorstin appeared, a bit bleary-eyed, but full of good information. The son of the hotel owner had not yet recovered from the party. Still thoroughly intoxicated, he insisted on coming to our table and singing every song he knows in English. Finally Thorstin reigned him in. In response to our questions he gave us some good suggestions as we left Borgarnes. He also gave us a bag of bread and said that it was common for passing motorists to stop and feed the Icelandic horses. The horses recognize the sound of the rustling of the plastic bag. On our way out of town we stopped to photograph a reconstruction of a Viking sod house. Next we photographed the Borg Farm just north of town which gave Borgarnes its name. The history of this farm goes all the way back to Scallagrim and the Egil Saga. I had hoped to photograph the interior of the church once I read the historical marker out front. Although the church building dates back to the 1880’s, the altarpiece was carved in the year 1002 AD. When we came upon a herd of Icelandic horses Glenda was in heaven. We stopped twice to feed the little Icelandic horses and to take photographs. As far as the weather was concerned this day has been much more pleasant that its predecessors. The temperature stayed around 3 degrees C today, with clouds and occasional light rain and snow. Winds remained under 10 mph. We were pleased with the weather because each provider of a forecast was offering contradictory information. The government forecast was still calling for high winds, and the other forecasts ranged from heavy snowfall in morning to nothing but partly cloudy skies all day. We saw the Eldberg Crater in the distance and turned onto a road to approach it. We had hoped to find some sort of visitors’ center. We found instead a building marked “Reception Area.” Glenda entered. A little boy in his pajamas saw Glenda, shouted “Mama!” then put on his little boots, walked out onto the porch, and pointed to the barn. There his mother was cleaning out the milking area. Meanwhile, I was setting up my tripod to photograph the Eldborg Crater, but was distracted by an ebulliently friendly black and white dog, barely older than a puppy about to grow into adulthood. The dog was everywhere—under the tripod, back up on the porch—as friendly and cheerful as a dog can be. May she live a charmed life there here people love her, and there are no leash laws or traffic. Next I wanted to stop at Gerduberg to see the basalt wall with its vertical columns. I had seen photos of it and took a few myself. I wish I could have gotten closer. Maybe hikers can approach closer to see the vertical sections more clearly. I also found a considerable portion of the surface obscured by snow. These cliffs might offer a better photo opportunity in warm weather. We had no other specific objective on the Snaefellnes peninsula, so we reversed course back to Borgarnes. Czytaj więcej

  • Hurricane in Iceland

    14 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 39 °F

    As we headed back to Borgarnes, sustained winds increased to around 40 mph with gusts that threatened to flip the car. At Barnafoss I had almost been blown down by the wind when I went to use the restroom. I had to lean against the wind as hard as I could to walk, and cover my face with my hat to keep the sleet from pelting my eyes. On the way back, twice the wind blew so hard that I had to steer to keep the car on the road. We drove to the restaurant at the Settlement Museum in Borgarnes and enjoyed their vegetarian buffet followed by traditional Icelandic rice pudding and hot coffee. When we returned to the Hotel Borgarnes, Thorstin informed us that a local law school was to have a Valentine’s dance that night in the hotel ballroom. He suggested that we allow him to relocate us to the top floor. We agreed and he moved us to room 431 up one floor and on the opposite side of the hotel from the ballroom. We enjoyed a casual afternoon in our room watching the storm blow. I suspect that we’re having sustained winds of over 60 mph, with frequent gusts of over 75 mph. No one can walk outside. We were told that highway 1 down to Reykjavik is closed. Czytaj więcej

  • Hraunfoss and Barnafoss

    14 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 37 °F

    A quick photo stop in Reykholt led us to Hraunfossar (Lava Falls), where the water magically pours from the side of a cliff along a front about 1/8 of a mile wide. It is remarkable in that the water seems to come from nowhere. There is not a river or stream that feeds it. The falls simply comes from groundwater trickling through volcanic basalt. Walking upstream a few hundred meters led us to Barnafoss (Children’s Falls). This torrent pours into a basin about the size of a city block, and is the most turbulent pool I have ever seen. According to tradition, two children tried to cross the river and were drowned. Their mother put a magic spell on the pool so that no one else would ever try to cross the river there again. We saw a German tourist who had climbed over the barriers and walked out on the rocks right over the dangerous falls to take photos. We were astounded at his disregard for his own safety. Had he fallen into the frigid waters, there would have been no way to save him. Czytaj więcej

  • Reykholt--Center of Saga Research

    14 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 39 °F

    We awoke at 6:45 am and immediately went to breakfast with a bus load of Japanese tourists. Thorstin took a liking to us and shared some fresh salmon he caught and smoked in his other job. He owns his boat and is a commercial fisherman on the north side of the Snaefellnes peninsula. The guide for the Japanese tourists came to our table. He said he grew up in the east of Iceland. Even though we did not get his name, we had a wonderful conversation about the Icelandic language. As Glenda an I headed out for Reykholt, we me sustained winds of 30 mph and varying degrees of rain. The day before we had discussed going to Reykholt to see these falls. It’s a good thing we delayed, because Thorstin informed us that there is more than one town by that name. The Reykholt we want is not the one near Gullfoss, but rather is a smaller town of the same name only 30 minutes from Borgarnes. The roads were fairly clear with only occasional patches of ice and temperatures about 5-8 degrees C. The preeminent scholar on all of the Norse sagas lives and writes from his home in Reykholt, an ancient Icelandic town. Czytaj więcej

  • Borgarnes--Home of Icelandic Sagas

    13 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °F

    Wanting to make sure we had enough Diesel fuel and time, we didn’t stop for lunch until we arrived in Borgarnes around 3:00 pm. As we were eating at the N1, a helicopter landed in the parking lot next door. We learned later that someone had fallen and was seriously injured. The paramedics flew the patient to Reykjavik for treatment. When we checked into the Hotel Borgarnes we were greeted by the owner, who asked us to wait a few minutes for the desk clerk. In just a few minutes he arrived. He introduced himself as Thorstin, and was one of the most congenial Icelanders we met. After originally assigning us to a room, he cheerfully moved us to room 318 where we would have better internet reception. Before supper we walked around the shoreline and learned that Borgarnes is a significant place in the Icelandic sagas, especially the Saga of Egil (pronounced Ayl). We took photographs of this lovely place and then visited the Settlement Museum, where we learned more about the Egil Saga and the history of Borgarnes. Eating a dinner of apples, pears and peanuts we had brought with us preceded our doing our laundry for the first time since arriving in Iceland, and then bedding down for the night. Czytaj więcej

  • Thingvellur, Where Europe Meets America

    13 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 30 °F

    Icy roads slowed our progress to Thingvellir National Park, but we didn’t mind. The terrain was surreal, like a white moonscape. I found Thingvillir absorbingly interesting. North America and Eurasia are only twenty feet apart where the tectonic plates emerge from the Earth’s crust. At a photo stop on a broad, white, snow-covered plateau, we chatted with three young Italian tourists. The one from Bologna was overjoyed to know that we had been to visit his home town. Thingvellur is also the place where the first parliament in the world met. Laws were very few, and were recited at each gathering by the Speaker of the Thing, as their legislature was called. Even now in the churchyard of a shrine in Iceland's version of Arlington National Cemetery. The honored dead from Iceland's military service are buried here. Czytaj więcej

  • Hot Water from the Earth--Geysir

    12 lutego 2015, Islandia ⋅ ⛅ 18 °F

    We drove west to Geysir without incident and checked into the hotel. After putting our luggage in our bungalow, we walked up to the Stroker geyser and took photos. Then we had dinner at the restaurant. There were only one or two other people dining there. Glenda had a steak sandwich and I had fried cod with Icelandic lobster with a white wine from Chile. We returned to the bungalow for an early bedtime after a wonderful, yet challenging day. This place gave its name to all of the geothermal fountains in the world "geysers." However, Icelanders give the first syllable a long "a" sound, not the long "i" sound it has attained in America. This morning we awoke in Geyser at 8:00 am after twelve hours of sleep to a mystically beautiful sunrise that I photographed. Our room had been a bit cool overnight, and Glenda discovered that we had slept through a -10 degree C night with a window partially opened! After breakfast she checked out while I got one more video of the Strokker geyser without a bunch of giggling Japanese teen agers in the shot. In Iceland many homes and building are heated geothermally. I was quite surprised that the interiors of all of the buildings are heated to the mid-70's F. Their rooms are warmer than those in the United States. Another factor to consider is that native Icelanders rarely go outside their homes in the winter unless it is an absolute necessity. Czytaj więcej

Odbierz swój własny profil podróży

Bezpłatne

QR code

FindPenguins dla iOSFindPenguins dla systemu Android