June 2022

May 2022 - May 2024
Arctic Circle, Midnight Sun, & Fjords Read more
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  • Day 33

    Offline Travel Journal

    June 27, 2022, North Sea ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    Do you keep a physical journal when you travel? I do! It makes a nice keepsake, plus it helps me compost my experiences and keep research notes.

    Lately, I’m fond of these cheap 100-page, 9x6 inch spiral notebooks. On one side, I keep a daily scrapbook with a few brief notes.

    The ship issues a daily schedule, so I cut the date out of that and paste or tape it into the page. I jot a few brief notes with daily highlights and add anything pertinent, like small maps, receipts, and other ephemera. It’s a tidy little summation of our daily activities. (I also have a separate bag for naps I’ve collected along the way and may refer back to.)

    Pretty straight forward, right?

    Here’s my personal quirk, though. I also flip the notebook over and start writing in it from the other side, as well. This side is for random thoughts, research notes, possible blog post topics, observations, rants, to-do lists, doodles, daydreams, and so forth.

    It’s messy, but that’s fine. To me, this side is a compost pile for ideas.

    When the two halves of the notebook meet in the middle, I start a new notebook. Seems to take about a month.

    How about you? Do you keep any sort of physical journal or scapbook? What’s your technique?
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  • Day 22

    Pink Cameron Tam

    June 16, 2022, Norwegian Sea ⋅ ☀️ 50 °F

    I’m coming home with a very special souvenir this trip! Here’s how it came about:

    The more cruises you take with a specific line, the higher your status becomes. With each trip, you climb the ladder and earn different rewards. It’s a way to create brand loyalty, and every cruise line has their own spin on it.

    On the first leg of our cruise, we met a couple named Susan and Mike who have Elite status on Princess. This is the highest rank on the customer ladder and means they get all sorts of spiffy perks, such as free laundry service, a complimentary mini bar, and so on.

    One Sea Day afternoon, Susan and Mike invited us to their balcony suite for another Elite benefit, a complimentary High Tea. While chatting over tea and scones, we learned that Susan is of Scottish ancestry on her mother’s side. Not only that, but her family belonged to the same clan as my ancestors, the Camerons. Who knows? Maybe Susan and I are distant cousins!

    To top it off, literally and figuratively, Susan’s mom loved hats as much as I do. At her memorial, Susan displayed dozens of them in the church. After the service, she invited each attendee to choose a hat as a keepsake. Even though several years have passed, Susan still sees people wearing her mom’s hats around town.

    Isn’t that a great idea?

    Later in the cruise, Susan gave me one of her mom’s precious hats, a cute little pink tam upon which she added a Canadian flag pin. In addition to making a wonderful new friend, I feel honored to add her mother’s Cameron tam to my personal hat collection.

    p.s. I’ll add a pic of me wearing the tam later!
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  • Day 22

    Lupines in Olden

    June 16, 2022 in England ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

    Pics first, words later!
    This is in Olden, Norway. Not sure why FindPenguins can’t find that now…

  • Day 22

    Traveling Advent Calendar Style

    June 16, 2022 in Norway ⋅ 🌧 52 °F

    One of Larry’s many nicknames for me is “Planny Plannerton” because I usually do advance research about places we visit. To me, it’s a part of the trip, itself. I enjoy digging up offbeat and overlooked tidbits, whether that’s history or an actual place.

    I’m not rigid with my planning; I just like to get an overview of the place, its history and culture.

    This trip, however, is the traveler’s equivalent of an advent calendar. In the weeks before our trip, I was too busy prepping my latest manuscript for the publisher to research Larry’s planned itinerary. (Well, I did look into a few places along the way, but those stops were canceled, so there you go.)

    One thing about traveling during the pandemic is that plans change even more than usual. At this point, I’m pretty confused about where we are *actually* traveling this summer versus where I *thought* we were traveling this summer!

    For instance, I thought we’d be seeing Paris, Rome, Dublin, and St. Petersburg, but those places have dropped from the itinerary.

    Same goes for Spitsbergen. I was quite jazzed to be there on June 21 because they have quite the Summer Solstice shindig. (Looks like we will be at sea that day, instead.)

    I’m not complaining, mind you. It’s just hard on a Planny Plannerton to step into a new city or country without having places on my list to see, or knowing how to say please and thank you in the native tongue.

    Of course, I enjoy historic cemeteries everywhere we go, and this trip has delivered some beauties!

    On this advent calendar itinerary, each day is a new surprise to be revealed. And while I don’t intend to completely ditch my Planny Plannerton ways, I must admit this style of travel is quite fun, too. It forces me to let go of my expectations and focus on discovery in the moment. It’s probably good for me. Maybe it will even build character, as they say.

    What type of traveler are you?
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  • Day 19

    Hardhat Diver’s Labor of Love

    June 13, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

    In the early 1900s, Winchester Cathedral was sinking. A man named William Walker singlehandedly save the building by donning his hardhat diving gear and spending hours underneath it in the mucky sludge to save it. This dangerous task was a labor of love.

    It took him five years, from 1906 to 1911, to complete this Herculean task. As you can see, there’s a bust in his honor as well as a pub named after him near Winchester Cathedral.
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  • Day 18

    Space Metaphors

    June 12, 2022, English Channel ⋅ 🌙 59 °F

    The ship has a bunch of movies you can watch on demand. Tonight we watched “Ad Astra” starring Brad Pitt.

    While watching, I realized it would make a good double-feature with the Sandra Bullock film, “Gravity.” On the surface, both movies are sci-fi, but metaphorically, they deal with emotionally disconnected people by using space as a metaphor for the distance between people.

    If you’ve you seen either film, can you see my point?
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  • Day 18

    Falmouth Victorian Cemetery

    June 12, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    At first glance, much of Falmouth’s Victorian Cemetery looks wild and unkempt. There is method to this madness.

    When it comes to their historic burial ground, Falmouth Town Council GETS IT. They understand that cemeteries are for the living. In fact, they even have a sign explaining the importance of this magnificent cemetery.

    It’s well worth reading, check it out:

    “The older parts of Falmouth cemetery is valued by the local community for many reasons. Consecrated in 1857 it still serves as a place of remembrance. Many visitors include it in their regular walks as a place to immerse themselves in Nature as they follow the seasonal changes. Others visit for its historic interest or to discover its wildlife.

    Since 2016 Falmouth Town Council has begun to develop a maintenance methods to address these varying needs. Other challenges faced in the management of the
    cemetery include climate change and invasive plant species. Over 50 species of solitary bees can be found in the cemetery together with 7 species of bumblebees.

    You can find one of Cornwall's rarest bees in the cemetery, the Long-horned Nomad Bee, (Nomada Mirtipes). These are Cuckoo bees and the females lay their eggs in the nests of the Big-headed mining bee, (Andrena bucephala), another species rarely found in Cornwall. Only the males have an oversized head.

    The best time to see both species is in late April and May. Like many solitary bee species once they emerge from the nest as adult bees even the lucky ones will only have a life expectancy of about eight weeks.

    Unlike honey bees who have a queen with thousands of workers, a female solitary mining bee is a single mum who both makes her nest by digging a tunnel and collects pollen and nectar for her young entirely on her own. Different species appear from Spring to Autumn, the last one to appear in the cemetery is the Ivy Bee which times its appearance to the flowering of Ivy in September.

    THE IMPORTANCE OF THE CEMETERY
    We live in one of the most nature depleted countries in the world, with only 53% of our biodiversity left. A study by the Natural History Museum in 2021 places us in the bottom 10% of all countries and last of all the G7 nations.

    A good example of this decline can be seen in the numbers of Small Tortoiseshell butterflies in the which have shrunk by 75% since the 1970's.

    Butterflies present a more difficult conservation challenge compared to bees, as not only do the adults rely on nectar and pollen from flowers but their caterpillars tend to be very particular as to what plants they eat.

    The caterpillars of the Small tortoiseshell feed on common nettle (Urticadioica) and small nettle (Urtica urens). With stinging nettles not being ranked very highly as a wildflower by many people this makes conservation of this butterfly a challenge.

    There are a few nettle patches in the cemetery and these together with places
    where the adults butterflies can hibernate means there is a resident population. By accepting a degree of wildness in the cemetery it provides a refuge for this beautiful butterfly and other wildlife.

    The maintenance work carried out in the cemetery places a high priority on its value as an important site to preserve local biodiversity. The timing of the grass
    cutting in the summer is usually carried out around the beginning of June.

    This coincides with the flowering of brambles that offer an alternative source of nectar and pollen. It also allows the flowering of late summer wildflowers in August and September. These together with Ivy flowers are an important food source for insects such as queen bumblebees to build their reserves before hibernation.”

    Isn’t that impressive? I think more historic burial grounds should take an approach like this, don’t you?
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