Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Rabaul - more photos



The Wesleyan Choir


 The village we visited - I bought the light-coloured dress.


 Coconuts washed up on the beach

A mystery flower


 The view from the volcano station


 Walking on the 3-4 meters of lava, formerly the golf course



RABAUL




Rabaul, March 1st, 2016

Rabaul was the provincial capital of East New Britain, which is an island about 60 km east of the island of Papua, New Guinea.  In 1994 most of Rabaul was destroyed by a volcanic explosion.  Due to the weight of the ash 80% of all buildings collapsed.  The capital was subsequently moved to Kokomo, about 20 km away.

Rabaul was captured by the Japanese in 1942, and it became the main base of Japanese military and naval activity in the South Pacific.  Now is it popular because of the snorkelling sites, spectacular harbour and other scenery, World War II history, flora and fauna, and, of course, the fascinating and colourful cultural life of the Tolai people. 

Before the 1994 eruption, Rabaul was a popular commercial and recreational boating destination; fewer private small craft visit now, but 10-12 cruise ships visit Rabaul each year. Tourism is a major industry in Rabaul and East New Britain generally.






White and dark chocolate confection to celebrate going to Asia

 Sunset on the 29th of February



Sailing into Rabaul







The mini busses for the tours - now air-conditioned, which they were not in 2012.




 The sulphur lake









The Wesleyan Church


The red lips and teeth from chewing betel nuts



The stone is ground very fine and chewed with the betel nut

 Pandanus tree - on Rabaul, the leaves are used for roofing and flooring, especially in the villages


Volcano monitoring station





Janet, our wonderful guide






Sunset leaving Rabaul



Thursday, March 17, 2016

LIFE ON BOARD

Here are some photos to give you a idea of the luxury in which we live.


Harry, our Australian Post bear


The hallway at the aft end of the shiop



Ricky, our steward



The Library







My really “Happy Birthday” was celebrated on the 5th of March with two of the lovelies people I know:  Katariina (not a typo, the spelling is Finnish) and Alistair.  We had dinner in the Verandah, a semi-private restaurant aboard.  QM2 has or had a branch of Todd English and QV has a Verandah but the service here on the QE was the best ever experienced, by far.

After a disastrous dinner in 2014 at the QV Verandah, I had decided never to go back to any private restaurant but am extremely glad that I did.  

Normally I give up sweets for Lent with the exception of my birthday - my birthday is always during Lent - and the World Voyage Concierge, the same Katariina, had arranged for cupcakes with a candle instead of a cake.  It was fabulous and the perfect ending to a leisurely and delicious dinner.

THE WORLD VOYAGE

It is not “around the world” because we do not circumnavigate the Earth - our route started in Southampton, the out into the North Atlantic, down the coast of West Africa, around the Cape of Good Hope, across the India Ocean, along the southern coast of Australia, up the eastern coast following the coastline of the Great Barrier Reef, continuing north to Papua, New Guinea (one of my favourite ports), then on to the Philippines - Palawan which was a very welcome substitute for the original port of Cebu and then Manila, Hong Kong, Shanghai and now, yesterday and today (15 and 16 March) Korea - Busan and the island of Jeju-Do.

The number of World Voyagers differs from year to year but the number is dwindling, probably because of Carnival’s attempt to squeeze every penny possible from Cunard, to the point of ruining it.

In 2011, the World Voyage had 4 segments, each approximately 1 month long.  Now there are segments as short as 3 days, constant turmoil and a general lowering of the standard of guests:  men trying to go to the dining room without a jacket, wearing jeans in the public rooms on a formal evening, picking up food with their fingers and then licking their fingers and yesterday, their knives.  Mostly they are Australians who get really cheap tickets because Carnival (1) wants to fill the ship and (2) hopes they will book longer trips.  Generally, they don’t.

There are cruise lines where this might be acceptable, although I doubt if such table manners would ever be acceptable.  But, Cunard was known for elegance, at least until Carnival took it over.  Sadly, there is no viable alternative so I intend to enjoy what I can for as long as it lasts and then  rely on the memories.

THE CONCIERGE
Each WV has a Concierge, a person hired to work only for the WV guests.    I have experienced 4 and Katariina is (along with Saengeeta) the best.  She is extremely competent, unfailingly cheerful and just plain fun.  The woman who had the job on QV in 2014 had no interest in her job other than the title and supposed status which (she felt) was involved.  At the end of the voyage most of us gave her a negative rating but she has friends at Carnival so…………………

BLIND DATES
An invitation to dine with the Captain or any senior officer is exactly like a blind date.  You are thrown together with (usually) strangers without any idea as to why you are there.  The Captain’s table seats 10 so you are only able to speak with the people closest to you, one of whom is your husband, wife or partner.

As in real life, occasionally a blind date works out well, as our German- language table (of 8) did.  We spent over 3 hours with intelligent, stimulating conversation, lots of laughter and regret that one couple was leaving in Hong Kong.
On the other hand, we had dinner with some of the strangest people aboard.  One couple showed up drunk and proceeded to drink more.  Normally alcohol and soft drinks are not included in the food and drinks provided and apparently alcohol is rather expensive.  However, at a hosted table, the drinks are free.  Both red and white wine are served as well as anything else which can be obtained from the bar.   The couple had large glasses both both and then something (port?) after dinner.  The husband was an authority on most things when they arrived but as the dinner progressed his fund of knowledge seemed to expand, and loudly.
The two next to them were sufficiently intimidated as to do nothing other than nod agreement with the pontifications of the drunk.
The third couple’s reputation proceeded them.  Elaine, one of the Carrots (more about that below), had warned me about them but I was seated next to them.  
The man had the conversational skills of an anteater while his wife gurgled and belched throughout the meal.  As opposed to the German- language dinner which was delightful and ended too quickly, this dinner dragged on and on.   One is not supposed to leave before the host signals the end but this officer is an engineer and he and Per had a wonderful evening discussing automatic control (of nuclear power plants, for example) while the rest of us had a choice between strangling sounds or Australian-accented monologues.  Of course the belcher ordered lots of food and as we know, it takes extra time to eat, gurgle and belch!

BUGS BUNNY AND THE CARROTS
About 4 years ago, I meet Glen and Elaine aboard QUEEN MARY 2, and through circumstances long forgotten, we began to do the brainteaser quizzes together.  And we won, often.  Most people form teams of 6 to better their chances of winning but we three were happy together and usually found the input of others distracting.  
For a win (the highest correct number out of 20 questions) each member of the team gets a stamp, redeemable for rather tacky (sometimes desirable) Cunard promotional items, starting with a pencil stamped with the name of the ship.
They left in Australia and I stopped for a while but have begun again.  Now, I do the quizzes alone and sometimes win, all due to my misspent youth reading the World Book Encyclopaedia.
Other activities which interest me:  Chairobics, more strenuous than it sounds; Line Dancing which should be fun but is too full of country music and leaders with Scottish accents exhorting us to twirl our las-oops - as they pronounce it; and other dance classes.
There are also lectures by well-known writers, scientists and politicians, films - ‘SPECTRE’ was shown last week: bridge lessons and duplicate tournaments: napkin folding lessons (really); computer and smart phone classes; classes and lectures offered by the Spa, some with a fee: fencing lessons, croquet, paddle ball, bingo - all sporting activities and lessons are free unless from the Spa; the Casino, machines all the time and tables in the evening; ballroom dance classes; a sports’ club with weights and machines and in each stairwell, 10 decks of stars to climb. 



Friday, March 11, 2016

Across The Indian Ocean

February 5th - 12th, 2016


Across the Indian Ocean

There are several overland excursions available through the ship’s tour office:  from Cape Town there were safaris into the African bush, some very luxurious while others were more primitive.  Those on tour left at Cape Town and rejoined the ship at Port Elizabeth, several days later.  Unfortunately some returned bringing bacteria, both pulmonary and gastro-intestinal.

I had already picked up a cold which was just about gone when it came back thanks to some of those bacteria.  Because I really do not like going to the doctor or the side effects of the antibiotics which would normally be prescribed, I put off going to the doctor for much too long.  

The worst aspect of my stubbiness is that I missed most of Australia and especially the Melbourne Triplets - three wonderful women and dynamite dancers I met on QUEEN MARY 2 several years ago.  

The first Australian stop was Fremantle, on the Indian Ocean.  I got off the ship, found a pharmacy and a post office, wandered around for about an hour and went home.  Per spent the day trying to get my computer repaired, to no avail.  




The rainbow seemed to come closer to the ship.












About 10 minutes from downtown
Free
Would have loved this

The source of my beaded handbags.















The rest of Australia:  Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney were a blur.  Finally, when we got to Brisbane I was able to really enjoy the stop.  By Cairns I was almost fully recovered. 


We walked around Cairns, in 100 degree F sunny weather, looking for an apple store which is closed on weekends and it was Saturday.  So, we walked some more and dragged ourselves back to the ship.