The Rain in Spain – Our Day in Malaga

cruise ship docked in port

Carnival Breeze docked in Malaga, Spain

Malaga, Spain

Carnival Breeze slowly slipped through watery darkness approaching Malaga.  Every now and then a sudden flash lit up the pre-dawn sky.  As the sun rose through the clouds the flashes of lightning continued while rain poured from the ever-lightening sky.

I couldn’t help but think of an old movie called My Fair Lady.  According to a song in that movie, the rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain.  Not being familiar with the geography of Spain, I have no idea if Malaga lies within a plain, but it certainly did rain.

We had no set plans so we stayed on the ship and watched the weather for a bit.  When the rain slowed down some we set out, chiding ourselves for having forgotten to pack our rain gear.  Carnival crew members near the exit had a table of rain ponchos for sale for $3, so I bought one on the way out.  Of course wearing it meant becoming a walking billboard for Carnival, but it kept me nicely dry and fit easily over my backpack.

city bus in Spain

mirrors on Spanish buses resemble horns on a charging bull

 We stopped to pick up our shuttle tickets on the way through the port building.  A steady stream of passengers boarded the waiting buses.  Spanish buses remind me of bulls the way their mirrors curl down a foot or two ahead of the front window like the horns of a bull with his head down ready to charge.

lighthouse, Malaga Spain

Lighthouse near the cruise ship dock in Malaga

The bus filled quickly and headed off toward town.  It drove out of the port, down the road a ways, and then looped back.  It stopped to let us off at the entrance to the port area after having driven a comparatively long way to go next to nowhere.  If you visit Malaga, unless walking is a problem for you, save your money and don’t bother riding the shuttle.  In the time it takes driving around, or maybe even less, most people could easily walk the short distance to the place where the shuttle finally lets you off.  Walking also offers a close-up view of a lighthouse along the way.

amusing traffic light

the little guy on the stoplight runs when the time gets short

We’re easily amused and got a kick out of the traffic lights.  Instead of just saying walk and don’t walk in a nearly square box or just showing a hand or a person walking, the pedestrian lights more resembled old style traffic lights painted bright yellow.  One light area displayed a number and one below it a little guy.  On red, the number counted down the seconds until green while the little guy stood still.  On green the number counted down the seconds until red.  The little guy started out walking.  As the remaining seconds to cross safely got lower, the little guy went faster and faster until he started running near the end.

amusing crosswalk sign

Spanish crosswalk signs look like a person running across a piano keyboard

Crosswalks without lights had signs nearly as entertaining.  Whenever I saw one of these signs I wanted to run across a giant piano keyboard, but all that was ever there was just an ordinary crosswalk.

Not particularly wanting to wander about in the rain, we decided to take the Hop On – Hop Off double decker bus tour.  Their tours are usually pretty good.  We’ve ridden them in other places and seen quite a few sights that way.  People normally prefer sitting on the top deck, but in the rain the bottom filled quickly while the top remained mostly empty.

hop on hop off bus tours

Hop On – Hop Off  Double Decker Bus

A couple stops down the way, the bus sat for a very long period of time while the driver told people standing outside it was already full and nobody wanted off.  He let a bunch on anyway who said they would go upstairs.  When the bus finally moved they came down and stood in the aisles dripping on everyone.  The windows steamed up so we didn’t see much.  Then the driver sailed on by the stop where we wanted to get off without ever stopping.  Based on this, I can’t really recommend the Hop On – Hop Off bus tour in this city, though we could have just gotten a bad driver or one who didn’t deal well with rain.  I do think most of the main things people would want to see on this tour were actually within walking distance from the ship anyway.  At least on a day with better weather for walking about town.

Someone had told us the Birthplace of Picasso museum had free wi-fi, but that was the stop we missed.  Another bus passenger gave us a great tip though.  They said all McDonald’s and Burger Kings in Europe have free wi-fi so we ended up spending a couple hours at a McDonald’s near the dock.  It started out without many people and pretty good internet, but as the restaurant filled up the internet slowed down to the point where it couldn’t even load a picture.  That turned out to be a good tip though, even in Miami when the internet went down in our hotel we could walk to a nearby McDonald’s or Burger King, both of which had free wi-fi.

Back at the port we saw all sorts of people on their laptops in the area near the duty-free shops.  They had internet there available for a fee.

McDonalds in Europe offer free wi-fi

view through the arches out the window of McDonald’s

Due to the weather we spent most of our day in Malaga making use of the free wi-fi at McDonald’s rather than visiting any of the things tourists like to see.  The most entertaining things we saw there were the crosswalk lights and signs.  Which is not to say there isn’t anything there to see, we just didn’t see it.  We did learn some valuable information though because it’s always good to know where to find free wi-fi on vacation.

Malaga has a very rich history.  The Phoenicians founded this southernmost large European city about 770 BC.  It lies in the Andalusian region of Spain and enjoys a generally warm and mild climate with November as the rainiest month.  Malaga later fell under the rule of the Roman Empire.  After the fall of the Roman Empire much of Spain including Malaga was ruled by Islamic Arabs.  In 1486 the Spaniards conquered the area and Malaga fell under Spanish rule.

intricately carved building in Malaga, Spain

Top of a building we walked past near the port

Tourist attractions in Malaga include architecture from its various past eras.  It has the Alcazaba (a sort of fort), a castle, and cathedrals, as well as museums and a bullfighting ring.  Cruise ship shore excursions offered bus tours to historic attractions or nearby cities, tours of nearby historical sites, a visit to a cave, or tours featuring food or wine.

Posted in Breeze, Carnival, Europe, Port Cities, Ports of Call | Tagged , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Chocoholic Buffet on the Norwegian Pearl

chocolatebuffet on Norwegian Pearl

Welcome to the Chocoholic Buffet

Chocolate Buffet on the Norwegian Pearl

On the second to the last night of our Caribbean cruise on the Norwegian Pearl, the Garden Café transformed into the Chocoholic Buffet.  Decorated with ice sculptures and a candlelit feel in the lighting, the stations normally serving meals held all manner of sweet, mostly chocolate things.

cruise ship dessert buffet

mmmm, which one do I want?

Fancily decorated apples and puddings sat along the edges in front of the cakes, cookies, and other chocolaty goodies.  One whole station held tasty-looking sugar free treats.  Nearby stood a selection of gluten free sweets.  Diet-restricted chocoholics have a chance of finding something tasty to devour at this delicious dessert buffet.

sugar free goodies at Norwegian Pearl chocoholic buffet

sugar free treats

cruise ship chocolate buffet chocolate fountain

chocolate fountain

Even non-chocolate dessert lovers would find something to eat.  Here and there between the various chocolate cakes, brownies, and other scrumptious treats sometimes things like pistachio blondies or strawberry cakes appeared.  The ice cream counter offered a number of flavors, chocolate or not.  The ice cream station also had a working chocolate fountain,  used to dip kabobs of marshmallows or fruit per passenger’s request.

Norwegian Pearl chocolate buffet

fruit kabobs for the chocolate fountain

Walking around the buffet area, taking samples of this or that, a person’s plate fills very quickly.  Long before making the complete rounds to see what all this scrumptious buffet has to offer, full plates mean time to sit down and munch your way to chocolate bliss.

cruise ship dessert buffet offers more than sweets

spirits at Norwegian Pearl Chocoholic Buffet

This chocolate buffet included a selection of spirits….and some spirited people!

cruise ship passengers have fun

passengers dancing joyfully at the chocoholic buffet

We always look forward to the chocolate or dessert buffet each cruise.  Ships make such delectable desserts and this buffet offers the chance to try many all at one time.  A trip to the gym or walking track may be necessary the next day to work off the extra poundage, but it’s worth it and nice to know the ships do provide facilities for working off all the wonderful food they serve.  We also tend to get lots of exercise by taking stairs everywhere and shunning the elevators even when coming into a lower floor from a tender and having to walk 10 flights or more up.  It might take several times up and down the entire staircase to work off a dessert buffet, but the fantastic treats they serve are worth it!

chocoholic buffet cake

fancy cake at the chocoholic buffet

so many good things at chocolate buffet

too much good stuff

ice sculpture

ice horse

Posted in Cruise Food, Norwegian, Pearl, Shipboard Life | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Carnival Breeze Bridge Tour and Interview with the Captain

cruise ship bridge

Bridge on Carnival Breeze

Where inside a cruise ship has a view forward, backward out both sides, and down below?  Most passengers never get to see this area of the ship, and if they do may be so interested in everything else they don’t notice, but the best views on board from anywhere inside the ship are found on the bridge!

cruise ship bridge crew

bridge crew at work

I’d imagine that is a good thing.  The captain, officer of the watch, or whoever else may drive the ship needs to see everything around them far more than the passengers do.  Of course the ship has all sorts of electronic gadgets to assist the bridge crew in their navigation.

cruise ship steering wheel

big ship, tiny steering wheel

Every cruise ship bridge we’ve seen had a very tiny steering wheel, almost lost among all the other navigation equipment on the bridge.  Unlike the ships of yesteryear steered with their large wheels, modern ships hardly use them.  Manual control is usually done with more of a joystick instead.

cruise ship bridge

docking station on Carnival Breeze

The front window extends the width of the ship and beyond.  The beyond part is what offers the views to the sides, back, and below.  Yes, there is a window in the floor.   The extensions on either side of the bridge allow the captain to dock on either side of the ship with a good clear view.   Both sides have identical navigation stations.

window in the floor of the bridge on Carnival Breeze

window in bridge floor

This window aids the captain in docking the ship.  With a cruise ship, the captain has a very lot of ship to dock.   It’s a good thing ships that large can move sideways (by use of thrusters) as well as forward and backward.

cruise ship captain

Captain Stefano Battinelli of Carnival Breeze

Captain Stefano Battinelli had the honor of taking Carnival Breeze across the ocean on its very first transatlantic cruise.  He took the time out of his busy day to show us around the bridge and we even had a cup of tea with him.  Cruise ship captains are real people, although they do have far more responsibility than the average person.


Interview with Captain Stefano Battinelli

We did this interview somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean on our transatlantic cruise.  While looking out the front window we noticed a hitchhiker on the bow.

bird resting on a cruise ship in the middle of the ocean

hitchhiker on Carnival Breeze

cruise ship bridge

Look up – more control panels above on Carnival Breeze Bridge

bridge on Carnival Breeze

A cruise ship bridge covers a vast area

cruise ship diagrams

diagrams of the ship hang on Breeze bridge wall

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Easter Egg Candy Cookies

recipe for no bake chocolate candy cookies

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter!  These simple to make cookies provide a tasty edible nest for small Easter egg candies.

NO BAKE EASTER EGG NEST COOKIES

Ingredients

3 cups oatmeal

sweet sticky goodness

ingredients for Candy Easter Egg Cookies

1 cup coconut

1/2 cup slivered almonds

2 cups sugar

5 tablespoons dark chocolate cocoa

1/4 cup almond butter

1/4 cup butter

1/2 cup milk

1 teaspoon vanilla

small Easter Egg candies

Directions

no-bake cookie with almonds and almond butter

with peanut m&m’s

Mix oatmeal, coconut, and almond pieces in a large bowl.

Place sugar, cocoa, butter, almond butter, and milk in a large saucepan.

Cook, stirring frequently, until chocolate mixture comes to a full roiling boil.

Boil for 1-2 minutes.

Remove pan from heat and add vanilla.  Stir in oatmeal mixture.

Scoop cookies out by spoonfuls onto wax paper.  For regular non-holiday candy cookies they are finished at this point.

easy no bake cookies

with mini robin eggs

Use a small spoon to make a depression in the center of each cookie and press in several small Easter Egg candies.  Press the eggs into the cookie a bit so they will stick when it hardens.  I used mini robin eggs and peanut m&m’s in Easter colors, but any small Easter Egg candy would work.  Allow the cookies some time to harden before eating if you want them to stay together and not be sticky.  Resistance is often futile though and some cookies usually get eaten right away.

cookies all decked out with candy eggs

Easter Egg Nest Candy Cookies

Substitutions

Different options for these cookies include using regular cocoa instead of dark, or half regular and half dark.  Peanut butter and peanuts can be exchanged for the almond butter and almonds, or for a nut-free choice use 1 cup of butter and no nut butters or nuts at all.  Coconut may also be omitted.

Game Day Treats

game day snacks

Decked out in team colors for the big game.

For a game day treat option, omit the vanilla and stir in 3 Tablespoons amaretto after removing chocolate from heat and before adding oatmeal and coconut.  Decorate in team colors.  Almond m&m’s are the closest to football shaped.

Copyright My Cruise Stories 2013
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Great Stirrup Cay, Norwegian’s Private Island

tender at Great Stirrup Cay

tender loading passengers from the Pearl

Our Caribbean cruise on the Norwegian Pearl made its first port stop at Norwegian’s private island, Great Stirrup Cay.  Shortly after breakfast, we caught a tender from the Pearl to the island.  Both from the tender on the channel in, and walking about the area we noticed that the island had a look about it of a place in transition.  Plants all appeared dead or new, and areas without them often had a newly worked on look about them.

straw market at Great Stirrup Cay

straw market at Great Stirrup Cay where locals sell their wares

As we disembarked the tender, we headed toward the Straw Market, an area where locals from nearby islands sell their brightly colored crafts.  All the bright colors contrasted with the small pastel buildings and lack of color in the surrounding area.

Norwegian's private beach

beach at Great Stirrup Cay

beach at Great Stirrup Cay

snorkelers must wear vests sign

Not finding anything we wanted to buy, we moved on to the beach where rows of blue beach chairs sat in the sand amidst signs proclaiming all snorkelers must wear safety vests (which, of course, they have for rent.)   We have our own snorkel gear, but vests are not among it so we had to rent them at the snorkel gear rental shack.

Warm salt water provides quite a bit of buoyancy.  I’ve always found  it harder to dive under than to stay on top even without a life vest and much prefer vest-free snorkeling even when in deep water.  At least we were not required to put air in them.

beach waiter on Great Stirrup Cay

You don’t have to leave the water to order from this waiter.

Near the shore, people swam about and small children splashed and played.  Some people floated around on inflatable rafts.  We even saw a water waiter bringing drinks to people in the sea.  One group of people attempted to make a massive sand castle, but it collapsed before they finished.  Perhaps they could use some pointers from the people we saw in Barcelona.

fish seen snorkeling

fish in a rowboat

The area near the beach had quite a few rocky spots, but clear passage over sand to deeper water ran through the rocks in a few places.  We swam out a ways to snorkel, and as usual  John turned back long before I had any intention of it.  He always prefers taking photos of other people snorkeling to doing so himself.  I bring the underwater camera and take photos while snorkeling.

Flight of the Fancy

on the snorkel trail

The snorkel gear rental shack had maps of a trail of sunken objects to follow.  Not everything on the map was there though.  We stopped at that island shortly after hurricane Sandy, which had taken all the sand from the beach along with things like the stingray pen and the hippo slide.  Buoys throughout the lagoon marked the trail of things to see, quite a few of which still remained.

escapee from the stingray pen

stingray at Great Stirrup Cay

Whether, rocks shipwrecks, or intentionally sunken artifacts like these, any sort of structure underwater attracts fish.  This area had some pretty good sized ones, and I even saw a one of the stingrays that lived in the stingray pen before Hurricane Sandy destroyed it.

even on their islands the cruise ships have bars

bar on Great Stirrup Cay

Hurricane Sandy definitely left her mark on the island.  Trees of that region can survive storms, and though at first glance they all look dead, a closer look shows new green foliage starting to emerge.  The rest of the island needed a bit more help to recover from the hurricane.  We saw all sorts of excavating equipment and one of the life guards told us that on boat-free days the island’s employees worked on restoring the island to its former glory.  They had replaced the sand on the beach when we visited, but had not yet had time to get all the boulders out of the lagoon, fix the stingray pen, or get a new slide.

barbeque lunch at Great Stirrup Cay

BBQ lunch mmmm

The buildings on the island survived the storm better than the beach did.  The barbeque shed was quite intact and serving up all sorts of good things for lunch.  We found too many tasty-looking items to try them all.  The other buildings seemed fine too.  The restrooms were clean and the bars open for business.

parasailing at Great Stirrup Cay

parasailing at Great Stirrup Cay

If the parasail boats had gone close enough to the ship for photos we probably would have gone parasailing as they were up and running, but since they stayed in a different area we didn’t.

Things to do on Great Stirrup Cay include a wave runner tour, a kayak tour, cabana rentals, the hippo slide, and stand-up paddle boards.  People with enough ambition can hike to a lighthouse built in 1863.  In the past people manned the lighthouse, but it is automatic now.

Other remnants of Great Stirrup Cay’s past people might come across hiking around the island include concrete blocks from the island’s time as a military outpost, or old buildings from a plantation once there.  Pirates used the island for a hideout during the Caribbean’s pirate era.  Norwegian acquired the North end of the island in 1977 from the Belcher Oil Company.  It became the very first private island for cruise ship stops.

 

Posted in Caribbean, Norwegian, Pearl, Ports of Call | Tagged , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Devastation and Recovery – Hurricane Sandy at Great Stirrup Cay

brown palms after a hurricane

Great Stirrup Cay shortly after Hurricane Sandy

Many cruise ship lines have private islands around the Caribbean where their own ships stop.  These islands have ways for cruise ship passengers to spend a pleasant day on shore.  Norwegian cruise line’s Great Stirrup Cay in the Berry Islands of the Bahamas is no exception.  With a beautiful blue lagoon and white sand beaches passengers bask in the sun or sit in the shade of palm trees.  They could swim with stingrays or slide down a hippo slide – the world’s largest inflatable slide.

hurricane damaged palm tree

dead looking tree

Then hurricane Sandy came along, leaving devastation in her wake.  Brown, dead-looking trees and bushes stood sadly over a choked lagoon.   The shredded slide would never hear the laughter of happy children again.  Where a gentle sandy slope once led to a sandy shore, a four foot sandless drop overlooked boulder-filled waters.  One pole remained where the stingray pen once stood.

beach restored after hurricane Sandy

sand restored to the beach

Working hard to make the island a nice place to visit again, island employees dredged the lagoon, replaced the sand on the beach, and on ship free days, work on removing the boulders.  A new slide will replace the ruined one.  The stingrays stayed in the area, sometimes seen by passengers snorkeling around in the lagoon.

hurricane damaged trees

trees at Great Stirrup Cay just after Hurricane Sandy

At first glance, all the island’s vegetation looked brown and dead.  Upon closer examination, we saw nature at work.  Bits of green started appearing amidst the brown.  A leaf here, a stem there.  Soon the trees and shrubs – mainly palm trees and sea grapes – will have more green than brown.  When enough time passes they will once again stand in a green finery of leaves.

hurricane Sandy left the water murky at Great Stirrup Cay

fish at Great Stirrup Cay

The water in the lagoon, described as crystal clear on Norwegian’s website, was cloudy and murky during our visit, probably due to the damage sustained there during the hurricane.  That too should settle down over time.

Overall, the island got off fairly easy in the hurricane.  Buildings on Great Stirrup Cay remained intact.   Other areas were not so lucky.  Hurricane Sandy killed people in some parts of the Caribbean, hit Cuba at its peak causing some death and much destruction, and devastated the north Atlantic coast of the USA.  It destroyed many of the popular seaside tourist attractions in Atlantic City, New Jersey along with many homes and businesses.  It left parts of New York without power for days.

We were there in November 2012, shortly after the hurricane while the damage was still new.  Likely by now much on Great Stirrup Cay has returned to normal.

Posted in Caribbean, Norwegian, Pearl, Ports of Call | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Beggars of Spain

sand aculpture

Simpsons Sand Castle in Barcelona

Our transatlantic cruise on the Carnival Breeze began in Barcelona, and made several stops in other Spanish ports before beginning the trek across the ocean.  Unemployment is quite high in Spain right now, so in some areas we saw quite a number of beggars.  They need to make a living somehow, and look to tourists as a means of acquiring money.

BEGGARS OF SPAIN

I’ve got to give the beggars of Spain credit for their creativity.  In the US we often see people standing by the roadside with cardboard signs proclaiming things like “Need Help,” “Will Work For Food,”  “Homeless and Hungry,” or “Down on My Luck.”

In Canada I once saw a beggar with two separate coin collecting boxes sitting in front of him and a sign that said “Who’s More Generous?”  One box had a label saying men and the other women (the women box had more money in it.)  At the time I thought he was pretty creative compared to the rest, but that was long before I ever went to Spain.

making a sandcastle

sculpting a sandcastle

Walking along the beachside boardwalk in the Barceloneta area of Barcelona, we saw many intricate sand castles.  Soon we noticed a collecting box with a few coins in it on the edge of the boardwalk by each castle.

street art Palma de Mallorca

art for sale

In Palma de Mallorca we did not go to any beaches, but the beggars in the old part of town all had their own style.  Some sold art or trinkets, but that’s nothing new.  Others though, they dressed up in costumes that got weirder and weirder as we worked our way through town.

are there Aztecs in Spain?

costumed beggar in Palma de Mallorca

Initially we saw people near the La Seu cathedral dressed in some sort of costumes that looked like they belonged more in the Aztec area of Mexico.  John took some pictures of the first one we saw.  Most of the beggars we came across stayed fairly quiet, but that particular one quite aggressively panned for customers, and after John put a donation in his collecting tin for the photos the man loudly complained that it was not enough, keeping it up until he guilted John into giving him a bit more.

beggar in Palma de Mallorxa

costumed beggar near La Seu cathedral

Then we saw a lady in a fancy old-fashioned dress.  Walking through the touristy area of the old part of town we saw several “headless” people, one of which had a head for his collecting tin.

creative beggars

Is he begging for money to buy a new head?

headless beggar

creative collecting tin

Above all other costumes, one very unique one stood out.  A girl dressed all in gold sat in mid-air, her hand on a pole which provided her only contact with the ground.  While she appeared to sit in mid-air, she had a long sleeve covering the arm of the hand holding the pole.  She had a square of carpet under her, covering a support base to hold her pole.

creative begging

sitting on air…or is she

On a closer look, it appeared that something went through her sleeve, an ingenious framework holding a seat which her clothes covered.

street musicians in Spain

street musicians in Palma de Mallorca

Other beggars perform as street musicians in hopes people toss coins their way in appreciation of the entertainment.

music in Palma de Mallorca

street musician

Pickpockets of Spain

Spain is notorious for having pickpockets.  We did not lose anything there, but also did not wander the streets after dark, use public transportation, or go to the tourist areas they are most known for frequenting.

One scam that the pickpockets use is to hand unsuspecting tourists a sprig of rosemary and then either demand payment for it, or while they are in contact with you as you take it they pick your pocket.

We visited Malaga on a rainy day and did not see the beggars in their elaborate costumes there as we had in other places.  That’s not to say Malaga does not have any, more likely begging in pouring rain is probably very miserable and not too profitable.  We also did not go to any of the major tourist attractions where they would likely hang out in Malaga either.

Walking down the sidewalk in a rare non-raining moment on our day in Malaga, we did meet up with a couple women who tried to get us to take a sprig of rosemary.  Having heard of this scam before we went there, we refused the rosemary and did not allow them to get close enough to touch us.  They did follow us for a bit and try to insist we take it, but keeping a tight grip on our belongings and our distance from them we just as insistently said no until they finally left us to look for easier prey.

Posted in Breeze, Carnival, Europe, Port Cities, Ports of Call | Tagged , , , , , , | 10 Comments

How To Fold a Towel Penguin

penguin made by Norwegian Pearl stateroom steward

Towel Penguin from Norwegian Pearl

Easy Towel Animals

How to Make a Towel Penguin

On a recent cruise on the Norwegian Pearl, our cabin steward Rosario made the towel penguin pictured above for us one day.  I had not seen a towel penguin before, but thought that with the right colors and a few embellishments it could really come to life.  This is a very easy animal to make and one of the cutest so it’s a good starter animal for inexperienced towel animal folders.

Supplies Needed to Fold a Towel Penguin

1. Black bath towel

2. Black washcloth

3. White washcloth

4. Decorations desired – I used google eyes and pipe cleaner feet

Towel Penguin folding Video

 

If you’re a Lilla Rose fan, watch for the Princess Tiara Dangle flexi clip in the video

How To Fold a Towel Penguin Head

how to make a washcloth animal head

lay the black washcloth out flat

making a washcloth penguin head

fold washcloth in half diagonally

now it resembles a paper hat

fold over the long edge of the washcloth

soon it will look like a penguin

keep folding the long side over itself until the pointy end is the length you want the penguin’s beak

almost there

fold washcloth in half with the long folds on the outside

now there's a head, we need a body to go with it

fold long ends all the way together and set head aside

How To Fold an Easy Towel Penguin Body

making a towel penguin body

Lay the bath towel out flat

how to fold a towel penguin

fold towel in half crosswise

towel art

fold towel in half crosswise again

instructions for folding a towel penguin

fold corner down from not quite the center so that the fold comes near the edge, but not all the way to it

towel animal folding instructions

fold over the other corner

How To Assemble the Towel Penguin

Can you see the penguin in these towels now?

Place the head between the folds on the body so that the long parts are within the body and only the round head bit sticks above it. You can stand the penguin up at this point and decorate it if you want a one-color penguin.

making towel animals better

For optional white belly, lay the white washcloth out flat

a few more folds and it will look like a penguin

fold down a couple inches or so of one edge of the white washcloth

almost there

fold the corners of both sides over on the folded end of the washcloth enough to make it fit on the black body without white hanging over

making a  towel penguin

Lay the white washcloth onto the black penguin body with the folded edge at the top. Adjust the folds so it sits from the bottom edge of the corner folds of the black towels to an inch or so under the rounded part and beak.

almost a towel penguin

tuck under the sides of the white washcloth so the angles more or less match the side angles of the black towel

the art of towel animal folding

fold both sides of the black towel to the center, making sure it is tight just below the head and stand the penguin up

a towel penguin emerges

After standing the penguin up, adjust the head, wings and belly as desired until it looks like a penguin

Decorating the Towel Penguin

pipe cleaners may also be called chenille

penguin feet made by folding a pipe cleaner into three sections

Happy Feet here I come!

Place the feet under the penguin and add eyes and the towel penguin almost comes to life

For instructions on how to fold a whole bunch of other towel animals click here or here or visit the towel animal page.

Coming up next in towel animal folding:  Towel Pigeon

pigeon towel animal

towel pigeon

Copyright My Cruise Stories 2013
Posted in Pearl, Towel Animals | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Carnival Breeze Galley Tour

veggie arrangement on Carnival Breeze

vegetable & fruit bouquet

Several tons of food passes through a cruise ship galley every day.  The bigger the ship the more hungry passengers the crew has to feed.  The galley on the Carnival Breeze serves both main dining rooms as well as having a small section just for making food for the taste bar.

Carnival Breeze Galley

produce piled high

The ship had a comedy brunch in progress as we toured through the kitchen.  First we passed by the taste bar galley where they had a head start preparing things to get ready for the night’s tasting.  Different nights at the taste bar feature different eateries around the ship.

galley workers on Carnival Breeze

Carnival Breeze galley

Carnival Breeze Head Chef

head chef Joaquim

Head chef Joaquim from India led us on through the galley explaining that the large area where they put the meals together had one end for each dining room so they could send things out in both directions since the two main dining rooms are at opposite ends of the galley and not that close to each other in the passenger area of the ship.  The galley also makes some of the food for some of the other dining venues aboard the ship.

soup vats

giant soup vats

Many sections branched off the main aisleway through the galley.  One held many ovens, another giant vats used for soup kettles.  By the pastry area a member of the galley crew mixed up batter in a mixer larger than he was.

working in a cruise ship galley

garnishing the cheesecakes

Rows and rows of little cheesecakes sat in dishes all along one station while a guy with a bowl of berries worked his way down the line garnishing each one in turn.  A different area had all sorts of people cooking up things like Eggs Benedict and curly fries for the ongoing brunch.

cruise ship food storage

meat defrosting locker

Chef Joaquim said that all the meat came aboard before the ship left Barcelona, ordered in advance from Miami.  They take on food at just 3 ports on this cruise.  In Las Palmas, Grand Canary Island they loaded tomatoes, oranges, and potatoes.  On our island tour of Grand Canary, we saw many enormous greenhouses, which the guide said all grew tomatoes.

cruise ship galley crew

galley crew making curly fries

Food definitely is one of the many things most passengers look forward to on each cruise.  It takes a lot of work from a lot of people to feed the several thousand plus passengers aboard the Breeze.  Then there’s the crew to feed as well.  They need to eat too.  No wonder the ship dedicates so much space to food preparation.

cruise ship galley ovens

Ovens in the galley on Carnival Breeze

Carnival Breeze galley tour

carved watermelon

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Teppanyaki Restaurant on Norwegian Pearl

Norwegian Pearl cruise ship

Norwegian Pearl in Cozumel

One major thing Cruise Ship passengers can always look forward to on any cruise ship is the food.  Norwegian Pearl has a variety of food options including the main dining rooms and buffet available at no extra cost, so those who prefer not to spend any extra on food during their cruise can eat well.  They also offer plenty of specialty restaurants that do charge extra as another dining option.  We mainly stick to the free eateries, and had many tasty meals there on the Pearl.

soup course at Teppanyaki

miso soup

One night though we tried something different and had dinner at one of the pay-extra eateries, Teppanyaki, a Japanese style grill.  At the appointed time of our reservation, a representative from the restaurant came out to the waiting area to lead us and the others dining at our table inside.  There we all sat at one of four tables, each surrounding three sides of a very large hibachi grill.

salad course at Teppanyaki

seaweed salad

Everyone’s heard the phrase dinner and a show.  When eating at Teppanyaki dinner is the show.  Each table has its own chef, and reservation times for the start of a meal for that particular table.  After our group got seated around the table and menus passed to each of us, our table’s chef came out to start the show.  Once people finished using the paper menu to order from, they had the option of folding it following the origami instructions on the other side.

at Teppanyaki dinner is the show

egg creature on the grill

First he did tricks with eggs and a very large knife.  Eventually the eggs ended up on the grill, where they got joined by a large pile of rice.  Once cooked he blended the eggs into the rice, but not until after he had shaped them into something resembling some sort of animal and chopped them into bits.

Teppanyaki on Norwegian Pearl

veggies on the grill

The chef added vegetables onto the grill.  A stack of onion slices became a volcano before a flash of steel from the chef’s knife divided it into separate piles to add to the other vegetables and serve to the guests.

appetizers served at Teppanyaki

rice and veggies

While we watched him cook the rice and vegetables, a waitress served the miso soup and seaweed salad courses.

Teppanyaki chef

Chef at work with the meats

Next the chef served the rice and vegetables to all the waiting guests while he set about cooking whatever main courses people had chosen from the menu.  I had the chicken yakiudon and apparently enjoyed it too much to bother to stop eating and take a picture since I don’t seem to have one.

Throughout the whole process he impressed everyone with his knife skills.  Teppanyaki would be worth the extra charge just for the show alone, so it was rather a bonus that we liked the food as well.

dessert at Norwegian's Teppanyaki

Green Tea Cake

Following dinner we had a choice of fruit sashimi or green tea cake for dessert.  In spite of the very green color, the green tea cake and ice cream tasted quite good.

Teppanyaki is one of the more popular pay extra eateries on the Norwegian Pearl, and after having eaten there I can certainly see why, and would recommend this experience to other folks who plan to book a cruise on the Pearl or any other Norwegian ship that has the Teppanyaki restaurant.

Teppanyaki Menu

You are about to experience the Japanese style of cooking called “Teppanyaki”. Our chefs will show off their amazing skills by slicing, dicing and juggling while preparing delicious meat, poultry, fish and vegetables on an iron “Teppan” griddle.

FIRST COURSE

Miso Soup and Seaweed Salad with Ginger Dressing

MAIN COURSE

Select your choice of one of our Teppanyaki Classics or Combination Main Courses. All choices are served with Garlic Fried Rice
and Japanese Teppanyaki Vegetables with our Onion or Creamy Mustard Dipping Sauces

TEPPANYAKI CLASSICS

Chicken Yakiudon – Hibachi Chicken, Udon Noodles
Vegetable Yakiudon – Seasonal Vegetables, Udon Noodles
*Seafood – Lobster, Sea Scallops, Calamari
*Filet Mignon – Beef Tenderloin
Vegetable – Teriyaki Tofu, Seasonal Vegetables*

TEPPANYAKI COMBINATIONS

Samurai – Chicken and Jumbo Shrimp
Land and Sea – Filet Mignon and Jumbo Shrimp
Shogun – Steak and Chicken Breast
Shinto – Sea Scallops and Jumbo Shrimp

DESSERT

Choose one of the following:

Green Tea Cake – Cashew Nut Brittle
Fresh Fruit Sashimi – Selection of Delicately Sliced Exotic Fruits

Posted in Cruise Food, Norwegian, Pearl | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments