Juneau River Rafting Shore Excursion

Norwegian Sun Cruise Ship

Norwegian Sun in Juneau

Juneau offered more shore excursions that we wanted to do than any other port, and our ship spent the least time there.  We wanted to see a glacier up close.  Our first choice would have been dogsledding, but to do any real dogsledding out on the ice and snow of a glacier involved taking a flight that for the three of us would have cost more than our entire cruise.  The less expensive dogsledding tours weren’t real dogsledding at all, but wheeled sleds on dirt trails, on the dog’s summer exercise and training type sleds.  We could have taken a bus tour to Mendenhall Glacier, and probably would have, but then we came across a brochure about a scenic river raft trip.

“See Mendenhall Glacier from the water,” it proclaimed, conjuring up visions of rafting among the icebergs below the glacier, looking up at a towering mass of ancient ice overhead.  That sounded like a much more fun way to see the glacier than a bus tour.  We also couldn’t resist buying tickets for the Mount Roberts Tramway, as they did not cost very much.  We hoped to have time to use them, figuring we definitely wouldn’t have time to wait in line for them when we got done with the raft trip.  And the person at the shore excursion desk did say we could return them if we didn’t use them.

The Norwegian Sun was one of the bigger boats touring around Alaska at the time.  We saw a Princess boat or two about the same size at some of the ports, but everything else looked considerably smaller.  Juneau had a dock a short distance from town for the larger ships like ours.  Shuttles ran back and forth to town.  We got on the bus for the raft tour.  It stopped in town to pick up some more guests from the smaller Holland America boats docked right at the base of the tram in the touristy part of town.  That’s where the shuttles go, the driver explained, in case anyone wanted to get off there after the tour.

At this point in time, Sarah Palin was still governor of Alaska, after her failed attempt to win the vice presidency.  As we drove past the governor’s house, the tour guide made a point of saying that in Alaska governors are real people and live in a house like everyone else.  A nice house, but they don’t get a mansion.

“Traditionally,” the guide said, “They’ve always kept chickens in the back yard at the governor’s house.  They’re gone now though.  Shortly after the lost election Sarah Palin had a big party and invited all sorts of people from town.  She served up chicken cooked in a variety of ways.  When asked why she had all the chickens killed she replied that she couldn’t get any peace and quiet with them all out there saying Ba-ROCK,  Ba-ROCK all the time.”

I have no idea if there was a shred of truth to this, but it definitely made a good story to tell a busload of tourists, most of whom had never seen Alaska before.

on the shores of Mendenhall Lake

Mendenhall Glacier looks closer through the camera

The bus pulled up on the shores of a frigid lake sparkling in the sunshine, where everyone donned rubber boots and rain suits.  Rain or shine, raingear is standard attire for the raft trip.  We walked down to the beach where the guides divided people into groups for each of the waiting rafts.  Off in the distance, we could see Mendenhall Glacier, a large white speck on the hillside.  When asked if we would get better views later, they said no, this is the only place we see it at all.

duck ice

bergy bit looks like a duck

The lake did have some bergy bits floating around, but nothing large enough to consider an actual iceberg.  Up until this point, all the shore excursions we had ever taken had always met our expectations.  This was the first time we encountered exaggeration in the description.  It’s not an isolated thing though, on a later cruise on a different cruise line I took an excursion that downright lied about what to expect.  One would think they would tell the truth because customers who get the excursion they intended to purchase leave happy, customers who don’t leave disappointed.  And they tell other people.

river rafting in Juneau Alaska

river raft

It’s not that we didn’t enjoy the raft trip, because we did.  It’s just that we went to Alaska with glaciers in mind, and now had passed on our opportunity to see one up close.  I felt a bit guilty about this because this was my pick on the excursions.  We did learn that rather than taking a ship’s bus tour to the glacier, a person could just catch a bus to the glacier from the town square sort of place where we picked up the Holland America passengers.  Far cheaper that way.

Unlike a white water raft trip I took later, on this scenic float the guide did all the rowing.  On the white water trip everyone had a paddle.  On this float the guide had a set of oars.  The rest of us just got comfortable and enjoyed the view.  We saw swallow nests in the side of a cliff with swallows flitting about, and eagles flying around overhead.  The guide talked about the native fauna and flora of the area.  He explained that for the most part they navigate around fallen logs and things to keep the river as natural as possible.

bridge over Mendenhall River

bridge on the scenic river float

During the mostly smooth ride, we did hit one small patch of minor riffles.  Justin was very disappointed that it didn’t get wilder.  He probably didn’t know the difference between scenic float and white water rafting when we chose a raft trip, although had it gotten too wild he wouldn’t have liked that either.

At a bend in the river, we came to a wall of cars.  Apparently at some point in the past, Juneau had issues both with an eroding riverbank and nowhere to put junk cars.  They thought they’d solve both problems by using the junk cars to buffer the riverbank and keep the water from eating it away.  Now though, they’ve had some environmental problems with the car bend.  It did make something pretty interesting to see along the way though.

 At the take-out point we had a snack and traded our raingear and boots for our shoes.  The bus took us back to the town square just in time for a brief ride on the tram.

More Posts About Juneau

Ziplines, Mount Roberts Tram, Mount Roberts Tram in a storm, Mendenhall Glacier, Mendenhall Glacier Visitor’s Center, Glacier Gardens

Posted in Alaska, Norwegian, Shore Excursions, Sun | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

How to Fold a Towel Elephant

how to make a towel elephant

towel elephant

The towel elephant, the one that started it all.  Once on Thanksgiving I posted a picture of a towel turkey on facebook.  Then Lauren of Australia (who does not understand about Thanksgiving, being Australian and all) posted a picture of a towel elephant, saying it trumped my turkey.  I put up a poll about that, and after it kept getting a ton of google hits from people wanting to know how to fold towel animals, I decided I needed to write a blog about it, even though I wasn’t very good at it at the time.  I’ve learned a lot more now, partly from the videos we made on our last cruise, but mainly from dissecting them into steps for these blogs.

 What You Need to Make a Towel Elephant

Supplies needed: One bath towel, One hand towel, eyes (which can be paper, felt, googly eyes, whatever works.)

How to Fold a Towel Elephant Body

Start with the bath towel.  This one does not take the standard body so many of the other animals use.

How to fold a towel elephant

Lay the bath towel flat, and fold the long sides over a few inches

Lay the bath towel out flat and fold a few inches over on both long sides.

How to fold a cruise ship towel elephant

one side rolled to the middle

towel origami elephant

both sides rolled to the middle

Roll both ends into the middle.

towel elephant body

fold rolled towel in half and stand for elephant body

Fold in half with rolls to the outside and stand up for a body with four sturdy round legs.

How to Make a Towel Elephant Head

towel art

hand towel hanging on a wall hook

Using the hand towel, either tuck a bit of the center of one long side under your chin, or hang it on a hook or peg on the wall if you have one available.

how to make a towel elephant head

Roll both sides at the same time. Photo only shows one because my other hand was on the camera.

Roll both sides toward the middle so it ends up somewhat triangular with two rolls.

how to make a towel elephant

rolled towel

If you have a good imagination, it resembles a paper airplane at this stage.

making a towel elephant head

turn it over to fold down the middle bit for the forehead

Turn rolled towel over and fold the middle part at the wide end down to make the forehead.  Then pull the ends of the rolls out to each side to shape into ears.

how to fold cruise ship towel animals

pull the side bits into ears

towel origami

curl the tip of the trunk and shape the ears as desired

Curl the pointy end into a trunk.  Position trunk as desired.

Shape the ears, place onto the elephant body and decorate with eyes.  For a sturdier, more portable elephant head you can safety pin the rolls together on the back, or run a pipe cleaner around it under the fold.

towel origami

finished towel elephant

Now you have a finished towel elephant.

Cruise ship towel turtle

Towel Turtle in Carnival Liberty Atrium Elevator


Coming up next in this towel animal folding series:  TOWEL TURTLE

Click this link for instructions on how to fold a variety of other towel animals.

Copyright My Cruise Stories 2012

Posted in Towel Animals | Tagged , , , , , | 12 Comments

Rogue Child on a Cruise Ship

ship at the dockCruises make a great family vacation.  Bringing children along provides many entertaining, interesting, and sometimes exasperating moments.  The cruise lines all have children’s programs with different activities for kids ranging from preschoolers to teens.  Norwegian’s was called Kid’s Club at the time we went on this cruise, but they have since updated their children’s programs.  The youth programs on the cruise ships serve the dual purpose of giving the kids not only something to do, but a place to meet others near their own age, and giving the parents some child-free time to explore the adult areas of the ship.  All the big cruise ships have casinos and bars, and some also have adult-only pools or deck areas.

While exploring the Norwegian Sun, we found the kids area, and the appropriate room for six-year-olds like Justin.  While we talked to the people in charge, Justin wandered about the room discovering toys and a TV where kids could watch movies or play video games.  Nobody else was using it at the time, so Justin got into playing a game, and wanted to stay when Chris and I were ready to go.  That’s what the kid’s area is for, right, leave the kid and go off and do your own thing?  Yeah, we thought so.  Time to hit the casino.

At the casino they gave us coupon books with special deals for a variety of games.  Slot machines were always open, but some of the table games just had dealers in the busy evening hours so we couldn’t try everything at that time.  After a bit one of us thought we needed to get something from the room, so we went back there intending to return to the casino afterword.  We entered the room and saw the message light on the phone flashing ominously.  Kid’s club had called.  The free play time Justin wanted to stay there for had ended, and when a scheduled activity started that he had no interest in he became quite disruptive and they wanted us to come and get him.  No more casino that day.  We went to get him and found him isolated and shoeless in the time-out area with a frustrated-looking caregiver who couldn’t possibly have looked any happier when we said who we came to pick up.

towel elephant on the Norwegian Sun

Justin with a towel elephant

A schedule of the next day’s events appeared in our room each night alongside the nightly towel animal.  This schedule also included a list of times and events for kid’s club activities as well as when they had time for free play.  So we decided never to leave Justin there randomly again, but to first go over the schedule and make sure any activity that would happen during his time there was something he chose and wanted to do.

He chose an activity, and we brought him there early for the free play time, which he quite enjoyed.  Once again though, when the scheduled activity started Justin could not manage to behave himself like all the other kids even though this time he had chosen what he wanted to do.  Again he ended up in time-out, this time for hitting someone, and we got paged.  A couple more coupons through our casino book, but still a lot left.

One day they had rocket-making as one of the kid’s club activities.  Justin said he really wanted to do that.  So we tried again, bringing him early for his favorite free play time.  They must have had some good video games.  We still did not get through our coupon book before getting paged to go to kid’s club.  His rocket did not turn out the way he wanted it to, and he took out his frustration by smashing other kid’s rockets before they got to test-fly them.  Back to time-out for him.  Third strike, you’re out.  We were asked not to bring him to Kid’s Club again, not even just for free play.  The rest of those unused casino coupons were doomed to stay unused.

smashin rockets

Now your rocket won’t fly either!

We still had a great time on this cruise.  After that we just picked activities that included Justin.  He probably saved us some money that we didn’t lose in the casino.

Justin had a lot of energy.  He liked to run down the hallway on the way to our cabin.  Chris frowned upon this behavior and never allowed it.  When I was alone with Justin though, I never saw the harm in it if it was mid-day when nobody was likely to be in their room sleeping.  Good way for him to work off some energy I thought.  He’d run right past our cabin door, but when I got to the door and he’d turn around and run back.   So much the better, that much more energy used up.

Justin has always been a very hard child to feed.  There is an extremely limited menu of items he will actually eat, and those only if they are presented exactly to his liking.  On a cruise ship full of more food than anyone could possibly eat, he could actually starve.  The only things he ever ate at dinner were either a grilled cheese sandwich or pizza.  We saw other people’s kids eating lobster on lobster night, but while we enjoyed our lobster, Justin ate grilled cheese.  At least he ate something.

His mother said he would eat broccoli.  We found some on the lunch buffet one day, but his idea of eating broccoli was to slowly nibble so few of the very tips that after half an hour of grazing on the same piece of broccoli, it just about took a magnifying glass to actually find any gone.  Perhaps he ate it better at home, but we didn’t try feeding it to him again that trip.  He found something wrong with just about everything at the buffet.  He didn’t like the color of a perfectly normal slice of cheese, wouldn’t even eat bread or a roll sometimes, and that’s normally one thing he’ll eat.

picky eater

The Evil Strawberry

One morning when we decided to have breakfast in the dining room Justin ordered french toast.  We told the waiter plain french toast with nothing on it.  The plate came with powdered sugar on the toast and a strawberry off to the side.  Justin wouldn’t touch it.  We had to ask for another plate, stressing just the french toast, nothing else.  Apparently the chef had issues with an ungarnished plate because the next one came out with no powdered sugar, but still a strawberry.  No amount of pointing out that we could take the strawberry off the plate and it hadn’t touched the french toast would convince him to eat it.  Nope, they had to bring out a third plate with nothing but the piece of french toast on it before he would eat.

His slow eating did come in handy one day.  The ship was scheduled to go through Tracy Arm for glacier watching, but for some reason went through Endicott Arm instead.  Being in an inside cabin, we obviously could not watch from our room, so we opted for a slightly early dinner at the very beginning of the time they started serving it.  The fanciest of the two main dining rooms had some nice large windows and since we got there right when it opened we got seated next to one, as was our plan for going there at that time.  We also got lucky in that all the glaciers turned out to be on just one side of the boat, and we got seated on that side.  We had such a great view even the waiter found excuses to come often and pause by our table.  For once long after Chris and I finished eating, we didn’t mind how much time it took Justin to nibble his way through his food.  We just sat back and enjoyed the view.  Justin’s slow eating ways gave us an excuse to stay for a long time, but even he eventually finished eating so finally we had to leave our wonderful view in the dining room.

Alaskan glacier

Glacier watching in Endicott Arm

We stopped by our cabin for coats and went up on deck to see the glaciers from outside.  Justin found another little boy there who could have been his twin in size and personality.  The two of them ran around the deck having a great old time while everyone else looked for glaciers and watched chunks of ice float past, some with birds of one type or another sitting on them.  The other kid had some toy cars that the two of them drove around in the recessed area next to the railing intended for draining water off the deck when it rains.   Luckily that deck was not very crowded.

Children on a cruise ship will likely behave similar to the way they behave at home.  This particular child got suspended in kindergarten for throwing stuffed animals at his teacher.  We actually thought that was a bit ridiculous since his dad once threw a chair at his kindergarten teacher and we didn’t even hear about it until the parent-teacher conference.

children throw things at teachers cartoon

Changing Times

Posted in Alaska, Norwegian, Shipboard Life, Sun | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The Sunshine Award

Wow, I feel special now.  After getting nominated for the versatile blogger award last week, now another award nomination!  The Fotobird has nominated me for the sunshine award.  This is an award for bloggers who creatively and positively inspire others in the blogosphere.  Thanks for the love!

All these blog-to-blog awards come with some rules.  The rules for this one include posting the award logo in a post or on the blog, answering 10 specific questions, and nominating 10-12 other bloggers.  Also to put comments about their blogs with links to them on the post, and comment on their blog informing them of the nomination.  Also include a link to the person who nominated you.

So here’s the 10 Questions

1. What is your favorite color?

Blue, the color of the sky on a sunny day.  (A rare occurrence here in the rainy Pacific Northwest.)  Also the color of the sea, in particular the vivid bright blue of the warm seas near the islands of the Caribbean.

2. What is your favorite animal?

I like all animals (well I might not go so far as to like slugs).  I’ve had a variety of different pets over the years, though currently I just have one dog and two horses.  One thing I’ve never had though is a real live gecko and I think geckos are awesome.

3. What is your favorite number?

I could go with the standard lucky 7 on this, but to be a little different I’m going to say the one on my paycheck.  Except it’s never big enough.

4. What is your favorite non-alcoholic drink?

Everything I drink is non-alcoholic.  Hard to pick a favorite, but I’ll go with chocolate milk.

5. Do you prefer Facebook or Twitter?

I have to say Facebook on that (check out My Cruise Stories Facebook Page).

6. What is your passion?

Traveling.  There’s so much to see in this world.  That’s one reason cruises are so great, unpack once and see several different places while the getting there is as much fun as the being there.

7. Prefer Getting or Giving Presents?

Giving definitely.  Opening gifts is anti-climactic compared to shopping for that special gift that I think someone else will love.  (Of course there’s no guarantee they won’t think it’s useless junk.)

8. What is your favorite pattern?

Um, I haven’t used a pattern for anything since Jr. High Home Ec sewing class…  OK, all kidding aside, I’ll go with fluffy white clouds in a blue sky.  Maybe that’s not a standard pattern like stripes or plaid or something, but whatever.

9. What is your favorite day of the week?

Honestly, any day I don’t have to go to work.  But if I had to pick just one I’ll say Sunday.  By then usually the major work for the weekend is done.

10. One Thing Which I Would Like to Improve About Myself?

I’d like to get in better shape.  It’s just so hard to find the time to exercise on a regular basis.

My Nominees

Sunshine on My Shoulder – It’s the sunshine award, how could I not nominate a blogger who goes by the name of Sunshine?  Plus she jumped off a cliff while cave tubing in Belize.  (They didn’t do the cliff thing when I went cave tubing.)

Travel . Culture . Food – She nominated me for the versatile blogger award, which definitely brought sunshine to my day.  Time to share the love.

Travel With Kat – Virtually travel the world through all the photos on this blog.

Weird News Around the Bend – Oddball news items that are so offbeat they’re entertaining.

1001 Scribbles – lots of great photos to brighten the day

Denisa Aricescu – it’s in a foreign language, but the layout is cute and she “likes” all my posts, and that definitely brings me sunshine.

Modern Scottie Dog – lots of cute dog photos, and what’s better than a dog to bring sunshine to any day

Writing With Light – a photoblog

Pause – mostly a photoblog

Belle Grove Plantation -Lots of history and a bed & breakfast that looks like a nice place to stay.

beautiful blue

Sunshine in the Caribbean

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Boating with Dogs

Portage Bay, Seattle

Isabelle enjoys the view

It’s summer and boating season has arrived.  John’s boat spent a number of years in Canada, so it’s been ages since we’ve gone boating.  We recently had a rare Saturday that we both had free on a sunny day so he suggested taking the boat out. He’s been wondering about taking our dog, Isabelle, fishing so we brought her along to see how she’d like the boat.

life jackets for dogs

pet vest life jackets save furry little lives

On the way to Lake Washington, we stopped at West Marine to buy a pet life vest.  The salesman in the store said one had saved his cat a couple times when it fell in the water trying to climb poles on his boat before it learned they weren’t like trees.

Lake Washington

Leaving Coulon Park

We went to the boat launch at Coulon Park, which neither of us had seen before.  It’s a pretty big park with lots of amenities.  It seems nice enough for anyone who can manage to stay out of the bathroom.  A venture into the ladies room found water several inches deep on the floor, deepest over the non-functioning drain which was probably clogged by the abundance of toilet paper people had thrown all over the place.  I can’t really blame this on the Parks Department though, since the next bathroom down had a woman at the sink rinsing out her child’s beach toys and pouring the water onto the floor rather than back into the sink.

City of Seattle Boat Police

Seattle Boat Cop

After a quick launch in one of the 8 lanes, we set out into the lake, noticing an Ivar’s restaurant right in the park.  We decided to head for Portage Bay and see if we could find the first house I ever lived in.  We passed the floating bridges and the arboretum.  Near the entrance to the Montlake Cut, we saw a Seattle boat cop hanging around pulling people over and writing tickets.

dogs on boats

Isabelle trying to hide when the boat went fast

When the boat went slow, Isabelle would pop up and look over the side, sometimes even putting her front paws on the empty seat or the edge of the boat to see better.  When it went fast though, she crouched at our feet.  I think she would have preferred a bigger boat where she had somewhere inside to go.  Not all dogs feel that way though, we saw several riding out on the bows in a variety of boats.

University of Washington

Husky Stadium, home of (what else…) The Dawgs!

Husky Stadium looms large at the entrance to the Montlake Cut.  Quite a few people paddled about in rented canoes with University of Washington painted on their sides.

bridge at Montlake Cut

Castle-like bridge house

The bridge house on the bridge over the Montlake Cut somewhat resembles a castle.  Since we have no real castles here we have to make do with poor imitations.

Most boats fit under the bridge, but a sailboat came through so it had to open up and let it pass by.

Portage Bay is home to many houseboats.  We went down the row, knowing we had to look near the University bridge, below the Red Robin restaurant.  We found the house more by landmarks than by looks since the house has been remodeled and the houseboat in front of it stripped down to the float and rebuilt in a totally different style.  Or maybe even replaced completely.  Where the original cabin that once came from the woods sat, now an odd modern artsy structure stands in its place.  The houseboats are high dollar real estate now, but once were the cheap place where folks who couldn’t afford land houses lived.

drawbridge

University Bridge (with I-5 bridge behind it)

My grandmother lived in that houseboat, or at least one that sat in that spot, when I was very young and we lived in the house behind it.  We were in too shallow of water for a floating house so ours sat on pilings.  The back side opened onto a dock and deeper water, but in front looking down in the crack between the porch and the boards that held the edge of our yard, we could see water lapping at the shore.  The house has grown and changed color, but it’s still my first house.

Portage Bay floating homes

a tiny corner of the first house I ever lived in peeks out behind 2 houseboats

The current houseboat is too tall to see over so all we could see of the house is the end that sticks out beyond the houseboat behind its boat moorage space, which did not have a boat there at the time.

Ride the Duck amphibious vehicle

Ride the Duck in Lake Union near the Space Needle

Not far beyond the other side of the bridge in Lake Union, there’s a ramp where the Ride the Duck amphibious vehicle tour drives into the lake.  It’s a pretty fun tour.  You can even buy duck-bill shaped whistles that quack instead of whistling.  People on the ducks waved and quacked at us while we took photos of them.  The tour starts just across the street from the space needle.   The ducks make a loop on that side of the bridge, passing a row of houseboats which includes the one from the movie Sleepless in Seattle.

ride the duck tours point out which houseboat was in Sleepless in Seattle

Houseboats in Lake Union

There’s a lot of interesting architecture along the shores of Lake Union, which is where you end up at the other end of Portage Bay.  We saw what looked like a house made out of an old ferry, and nobody could miss Gasworks Park, where Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles played paintball in the movie Ten Things I Hate About You, although it is not actually a paintball venue.  When the land became a park much of the old gasworks was left in place, historically significant as the last remaining gasification plant where once upon a time people turned coal into gas.

ferry boat house

a ferry good home

once this structure turned coal into gas

Gasworks Park

In Lake Union, we saw a couple people kayaking with dogs.  One had an open topped kayak and a big dog.

kayak on Lake Union

kayaking with a big dog

The other had a traditional kayak with a small dog who seemed to enjoy hiding down inside and then popping up to peek out the hole.

dog on a kayak

kayaking with a small dog

We also saw small dogs running around the sterns of larger boats tied to docks along the shore.

cruise on the lake

Argosy Cruise

It’s not hard to get out on the lake.  There’s a variety of different cruise lines operating on Lake Union, including a paddlewheel boat.  Also small passenger ferries and rental tour boats.  Or for the more adventurous folk, seaplane rides with Kenmore Air, which has terminals in  both Lake Washington and Lake Union.  Of course dogs are probably not allowed on public tours.

I stand corrected. Apparently dogs are allowed on some public cruises.   Captain Larry Kezner was kind enough to add a comment to this blog.  He says: “Dogs are allowed on the Sunday Ice Cream Cruise, Friday Brown Bag Cruise and Saturday Lake Cruise on the m/v Fremont Avenue. Also on the Seattle mini-Ferry.” http://www.SeattleFerryService.com

paddle wheel boat, Lake Union

Queen of Seattle Paddle Wheel Cruises

After cruising around Lake Union a bit and taking some photos of the space needle, we headed back toward the boat launch.  Going back through the Montlake Cut, most everyone obeyed the speed limit and no wake zone signs.  Everyone except one larger (for a lake boat) fancy boat that looked like kids out in Daddy’s big expensive boat.  They went so fast a poor guy on a stand-up paddle board had to drop to his knees and cling on to keep from getting dumped in the water when their wake hit him.

We figured if that cop was still there, he’d catch them when they came out in Lake Washington.  They slowed down when they saw him.  I got out my camera to get a picture of the boat cop.  His blue lights started to flash.  He didn’t go for the speeders though, he headed straight for …….us.  Is it illegal to take a picture of a boat cop, I wondered.

paddle boards, houseboats, and a bridge

paddle boarders in Lake Union near the floating homes

We stopped and he pulled up alongside amidst Isabelle’s barks and growls.  He said he couldn’t see the registration numbers on our boat.  Apparently they are up a bit too high for his liking, kind of in the curvature of the boat’s structure and he couldn’t see them from 50 feet or so away.  This is a 1980’s boat and the numbers are in their original location.  It’s never been a problem before, but he said they should get lowered next time the boat is up for registration renewal.  Meanwhile we mentioned thinking he’d stop the kids and he said he knew exactly who we meant, but they’d slowed way down when they saw him.  So obviously he knew they’d been speeding, but chose to go after us instead.

Back at the boat launch, a guy in a boat that pulled up to the dock next to us asked if the cop was nice to us.  He was surprised the cop stopped us rather than the kids too.  At least we didn’t get a ticket.  I wonder if they actually can write a ticket for not liking the location of the registration numbers.

flying with Kenmore Air

float plane just after takeoff

Lake Union Cruises

Argosy

Waterways

Queen of Seattle (paddlewheeler)

Seattle Ferry Service

Virginia V Steamship

Kenmore Air

Posted in Day Trips, Randoms, Washington | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

The Versatile Blogger Award

Thank-you to Miss Zari of Travel . Culture . Food for nominating me for the versatile blogger award.  Check out her blog on ….. travel, culture, and food!

This award comes with a set of rules.  They seem to vary a bit from post to post, but here they are copied right off of the versatile blogger award rules page.

VBA Rules

If you are nominated, you’ve been awarded the Versatile Blogger award.

  •  Thank the person who gave you this award. That’s common courtesy.
  •  Include a link to their blog. That’s also common courtesy — if you can figure out how to do it.
  •  Next, select 15 blogs/bloggers that you’ve recently discovered or follow regularly. ( I would add, pick blogs or bloggers that are excellent!)
  •  Nominate those 15 bloggers for the Versatile Blogger Award — you might include a link to this site.
  •  Finally, tell the person who nominated you 7 things about yourself.

Versatile Blogger Award

So here’s my nominees.  (15 is too many.  Miss Zari did 10 and even that’s a lot!)

1. Mommy Adventures – a funny take on motherhood with great cartoons. (This blog no longer exists and the name has been taken over by another website.)

2. Pokin on Product – Pokin does product reviews, and also shares things like insights to better marketing techniques.  She draws great cartoons too.

3. Mitzee Mee – Although she doesn’t care for these blog awards, I enjoy reading her blog.

4. I Used to Have Hair – there’s a lot of mommy blogs out there, this one’s a daddy blog.

5. Meg Travels – surprisingly enough, a travel blog.

6. Where’s My Back and Other Stories -a blog about age and Alzheimer’s, with a lot of other stuff thrown in.

7. This, That … and Whatever Else I Can Think Of …  Mainly a photoblog … or whatever else he can think of.

8. Discover and Devour – mainly a mommy blog I think, but she has other posts too.  This one is pretty new to me.  I recently discovered it and haven’t had a lot of time for devouring yet.

Um, yeah that’s enough.  10 is too much, 15 is really overkill.  I had one more I intended to include, but my computer crashed twice trying to go there to get the link so I gave up on that one.  It never crashed just going there to read that blog before.  So if you think I should have included you and I didn’t, that’s why.  Unless of course it would distress you to know your blog crashed somebody’s computer.  In that case it was someone else.  Yeah, that’s it, this is America, it’s always someone else’s  fault.

And the ever-difficult 7 things about myself, which the above rule says tell the person who nominated you, but everyone else I’ve seen win these awards posts it in the blog.

1. I love cruises (no surprise here I’m sure since I write a cruise blog.)

2. I have a traditionally male-type job.

3. I mow my lawn with horses.  The lawnmares I call them since they are both mares.

4. I sell fishing tackle online.  Check out my websites at DartJigs.com, Deep Stingers, and Point Wilson Dart webspecials.  (Who can pass on such a great opportunity as this for shameless self-promotion?)

5. Odd maybe for someone who writes a blog, but I really don’t share that much about myself.

6. Do I really have to come up with two more things?  hmmm, Ok I’m really sick of rain.  Especially when it always comes on the weekend.

7. Last one (Yay!)  Dark chocolate and coconut are the best two flavors ever.  At least that’s my opinion.

I never had any idea getting nominated for one of these awards was so much work. (Mainly because the computer crashing thing took up a lot of time.)  I hope this was a bit more entertaining than the usual list of new nominees though.

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A Rainy Rainforest Hike in Ketchikan, Alaska

eagles fishing

Bald Eagles in Ketchikan, Alaska

On the first page of the first book of the Twilight series, it states “In the Olympic Peninsula of northwest Washington State, a small town named Forks exists under a near-constant cover of clouds.  It rains on this inconsequential town more than any other place in the United States of America.”

That statement, however, is not entirely true.  It rains more in Ketchikan, Alaska than it does in Forks, Washington.  Forks has an average yearly rainfall of 120 inches.  In a really wet year they’ve had as much as 160.  Ketchikan, on the other hand, has an average yearly rainfall of nearly 160 inches, about as much as a record year for Forks.  In a record year Ketchikan got over 202 inches.

Par for the course, the Norwegian Sun arrived in Ketchikan on a rainy day.  On a later-season visit there the next year on the Safari Quest, I did manage to see Ketchikan in the sun.

eagles in Alaska

Bald Eagles in Flight

Since we had a group of three people on a cruise with three port stops, each of us picked a shore excursion for one stop.  In Ketchikan, Chris picked a rainforest hike.  In a parking lot next to the cruise ship dock, we found the bus for our tour.  Although there on time, we were the last to arrive.  We still managed to find seats together on the bus, which took us to a marina.  Bald eagles flocked around that marina the way seagulls flock around the marinas at home.  One sat so still on the top of a nearby piling for so long it looked like a carving on the top of the pole – until it flew away when approached with a camera.

What happens in a rain forest?  Mostly rain.

After giving everyone a chance to use the restroom, the tour guides fitted each person with brightly colored raingear.  The colors varied with each size, an easy system for them keep everything of the same size grouped together to make assigning gear to their frequent tourists a fairly quick procedure.  While we all donned our much-needed protection from the day’s weather, the guide made a comment about 3 weeks of unseasonably nice weather having just ended.  Oh well, it is a rainforest after all.  We got rained on in the rainforest in Australia, (yes Australia does have rainforests.)  Might as well get rained on in the rainforest of Alaska as well.

The guides escorted our group down a dock where we all piled into a very large inflatable boat.  Looking at the people around us we noticed that not only was Justin the only kid, but other than him and Chris, I was just about the youngest person there.  (I’m fairly young as far as grandmothers go.)  A bit surprising for a hike.

Passing by the shoreline of a neighboring island, we saw a moose standing near some trees above the beach.  Most of Alaska is fairly remote, although some places are more remote than others.  Near to a city wild places need protection even there.  The island where we landed is not only uninhabited, but also requires permission for hiking.  Something  the tour people take care of, cruise ship passengers just pay for the excursion and let other people deal with the rest.

Ketchikan Alaska, boardwalk trail

Boardwalk Trail into the Rainforest

We all climbed out of the boat and onto the beach.  Then the group set off into the woods single file on a boardwalk trail.  Apparently south-east Alaska has a lot of boardwalk trails.  I suppose they need it on the boggy ground from all that rain.

Trees of the coastal temperate rainforest

While we walked through the forest, the guides talked about the things that grow there.  Much of south-east Alaska is part of the Tongass National Forest, the largest National Forest in the US.  It is part of the larger Pacific temperate rainforest ecoregion.  The main tree species growing in the Ketchikan area include Sitka spruce, western hemlock, western red cedar, and Alaska (yellow) cedar.  Although logging this remote region is no longer profitable, and actually sustained by government subsidies, logging continues into old growth forest areas not protected by wilderness status.

Near Forks in the Hoh Rainforest of Washington State, in addition to the Sitka spruce, western hemlock, and western red cedar found in Alaska, the forest also contains Douglas fir (the predominant tree of most of western Washington) as well as some deciduous trees like cottonwood and several species of maple.

rainforest hike near Ketchikan, Alaska

giant rootball of fallen tree

In the greenish light filtering through the canopy of the rainforest trees we saw giant rootballs of large trees upended in winter storms.  These fallen trees become nursery logs as the next generation of trees grows on top of them, attaining their nourishment from the log in their early years before their roots reach the forest floor.

Lots of moss grows everywhere, although trying to determine north by the moss on the trees doesn’t work well there as it grows all the way around them.  Large fungi often protrude from the trunks.

How slimy is it?

At one point the guide stopped the group to view some local wildlife.  He’d spotted a banana slug just off the boardwalk.  He convinced a skeptical Justin to hold the banana slug.  Apparently he enjoyed it as he developed an affinity for slugs from that point forth.  For awhile after this trip, often times after he came for a visit I would find a little brown slug on the swing in the yard.  Somehow I really don’t think slugs enjoy swings.  They do enjoy the plants in my garden though.

banana slug in the rainforest

Justin’s new friend – the banana slug

At the end of the hike we stopped at a small clearing in the woods where one of the guides had stayed behind and made a campfire.  Everyone sat around the campfire on logs circled there for that purpose nibbling on snacks and sipping hot drinks.  Well almost everyone.  As usual, Justin couldn’t find so much as a cracker to his liking, and he’ll never drink anything hot.  They might have come up with some juice for him, but I don’t remember for sure.

After a boatride and busride back to the ship, we had some time left in port.  We headed out to see the town, but having left the rain gear back at the marina for the next tour, we now got soaked before reaching the first nearby gift shop, so that was as far as we went.  We bought a few gifts for people not on the cruise with us, and then hurried back to the ship for dry clothes and a warm meal.

Things to do in Ketchikan, Alaska

Ketchikan has a large visitors center right near the cruise ship docks that can set people up with a variety of tours.

Ships also offer an abundance of shore excursions including tours by land, sea, or air, fishing, wilderness adventures, and tours featuring local cuisine, active adventures, native culture, or wildlife.

sea creatures

things that live under the sea in Alaska

Try snorkeling in a wetsuit where you actually stay warm while seeing what lives under the surface of Alaska’s cold sea.  Or maybe a crab boat experience on a ship once featured on  Discovery Channel’s Deadliest Catch show is more to your liking.

young black bear catches fish

Bears fishing at Neets Bay Fish Hatchery

Visit Neets Bay Fish Hatchery by boat or plane, where you might catch a glimpse of a bear come to fish in the river.  Or you could book a fishing charter and catch Alaska’s wild salmon before the bears eat them.

More Blogs About Ketchikan

Dolly’s House
Duck Tour
Trolley Tour
Snorkel Alaska
Walking Tour

 

 

Posted in Alaska, Norwegian, Shore Excursions, Sun | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

How to Make Towel Animals – Folding a Towel Pig

Cruise Ship Towel Animals

Towel Pig on Carnival Liberty

SUPPLIES NEEDED TO MAKE A TOWEL PIG

One bath towel, one hand towel, one washcloth, two eyes (paper, felt, googly eyes, whatever works for you.)  Any other desired embellishments such as felt or paper nostrils.

HOW TO FOLD A TOWEL PIG

Making the towel pig body

How to make a towel pig

roll each end to the center

Starting with the bath towel, make the standard towel animal body.  Lay the towel out flat, and from the short sides roll each end to the middle.  Start each roll with just a small amount of towel folded over.  Make the rolls tight reasonably tight, but not so tight you won’t be able to pull the ends out of them later.

how to fold cruise ship towel animals

Fold towel in half with the rolled part on the outside

Fold the rolled towel in half, with the rolled part on the outside.

how to make a towel pig

pull the tips out of the ends of the rolls

Pull the tips out of the end of each roll.

making a towel pig

take the tips from the two rolls from the same side of the towel in one hand, and the two from the other roll in the other hand

How to make towel animals

pull on the tips of all four rolls at the same time until the rolls stretch into legs and the towel becomes an animal body

Hold the tips you just pulled out of the ends of the rolls with the two tips from one roll in one hand and the two tips from the other roll in the other hand.  Pull all four at once until the rolls pull into legs and the towel becomes a body.

standard towel animal body

all four rolls stretched into legs to make a body

making towel animals

towel animal body turned over

Place the body into a sitting position.

Towel Animal folding instructions

place towel body into a sitting position

How to fold the towel pig’s tail

how to make a washcloth pig tail

fold washcloth in half like a sloppy triangle

Use the washcloth to make the towel pig’s tail.  Start by folding the washcloth in half like a very sloppy triangle in which the end points totally missed each other.

how to fold a washcloth pig tail

roll the washcloth, starting from the long straight end

Roll from the straight end so the points end up on the outside of the roll.

How to fold a towel pig

tuck one end of tail under body and position as desired

Tuck one end of the tail under the body and position as desired.

How to fold the towel pig head

How to fold a towel pig

fold a hand towel in half to start the pig head

Now comes the hard part for this towel animal, making a towel pig head.  Use the hand towel for this step.   First fold the towel in half crosswise (not too hard yet…)

How to fold cruise ship towel animals

fold down the corners of the folded side to make a pointy end

Next fold down the corners of the folded end so that end has a pointy tip.

making a towel pig head

fold the pointed end under

Tuck a fair portion of the pointy tip down under the towel.

folding pig head from a hand towel

roll both sides to the center

Now it starts getting a bit harder.  Roll in both sides to the middle.

folding a towel pig

pig snout before sculpting

Pick the towel up and turn it to see the other side.  The pointy tip previously folded under will sort of resemble a pig snout at this point.  Sculpt it a bit rounder with your hands until it actually looks like a pig snout.

how to make a towel pig

snout after sculpting

how to fold towel animals

move each of the rolled ends off to the side a bit

Now the really hard part.  The back of the head has two rolls.  Bring the top of each one over a bit toward the side of the head it is on, as those bits will become ears.

How to fold cruise ship towel animals

fold the middle of the rolled part from between the ears down to the snout

Then fold both layers down to the snout at the middle.  Sculpt the snout and ears as desired and place the head on the body.

how to fold a towel pig

place the head onto the body

Decorate as desired.

towel pig

finished towel pig

To add more stability to the head if you want the pig to be easily transportable a safety pin or tape could be added to the back, or a pipe cleaner wrapped around it under the fold.  Of course the tail isn’t attached either.

Click link for a list of blogs with instructions on how to fold a variety of other towel animals.

Next up in this series on how to fold towel animals is: Towel Elephant

towel elephant on Carnival Liberty

towel elephant

Copyright My Cruise Stories 2012

Posted in Towel Animals | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Discovering Shipboard Activities while Cruising on the Norwegian Sun

Vancouver BC cruise ship port

Norwegian Sun docked in Vancouver BC

On my previous cruises at this point, I hadn’t really made use of all the ship had to offer.  Sure we had attended some shows, but that was about it as far as participating in the activities the ship has to offer goes.  My first cruise to the Bahamas was so short, and most of the time spent cruising was overnight so there wasn’t time to do much.  We did go to a show and Sheri tried singing Karaoke.   That pretty much filled all the time we had other than sleeping and a shore excursion.

The next two were the Card Player Cruises to Mexico, on the Spirit and the Oosterdam.  The poker room for the card player people gave us a full-time activity there for all time the ship spent at sea, so we didn’t investigate much the ship had to offer then either.

On the Reef Encounter, (except when the boat was in transit from reef to reef) we spent most of our time diving or snorkeling.  When on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, the sea is pretty much where you want to be.

Finally on the Norwegian Sun with some sea days and nothing specific to occupy them, we started finding other things to do.  Justin was 6 at the time.  He loved the comedy shows, but not so much the production shows, even when they had one of Peter Pan.  I guess he is not into singing and dancing.  Unless of course he is the one doing the dancing.  We went to bingo early one day and they let him dance to his heart’s content on the empty stage until more people came and they needed to get the bingo game started.

Since this cruise happened not only before I started this blog, but also before I owned a digital camera, I have a limited supply of pictures supplied by Chris.  So in order to supplement things I don’t have photos for I’m stealing borrowing an idea from my daughter Sheri at mommy adventures and drawing some cartoons (which I am not very good at, hers were much better. Unfortunately you can’t see them as her blog no longer exists and the name has been taken over by another website).

Justin makes his own fun

Where’s the video camera?

At each bingo game they had raffle tickets, giving out so many for each bingo card purchased.  On the last day of the cruise they had a drawing  for a free cruise from those tickets.  One day when Chris got to the line to buy the bingo cards at about the same time or slightly before another passenger on the ship, he did the polite thing and let her go first.  The raffle tickets are all in numerical order, so she had the set just before ours.  When drawing day came they had everyone stand up at the start and then sit as the tickets in your hand no longer matched the numbers called so far.  Near the end it got down to just her and me.  Then they called the last number.  These were the tickets from that particular game, and mine was one number too high.  Yup, had Chris not been so polite we’d have won a free cruise.

tanzanite jewelry

tanzanite and diamond necklace with tanzanite earrings

On this cruise we also discovered jewelry lectures where we first learned of the existence of tanzanite, alexandrite, and other sorts of rare stones.  Also how to get free things at port stops.  Interestingly enough, Justin seemed to like jewelry lectures, or at least did not get bored enough to misbehave.  One would think a small child would find a stage show more entertaining than a lecture, but apparently not, at least not this child.

Star Wars Yoda as a towel (actually a towel as Yoda, but whatever)

my own creation – towel Yoda

We also tried attending the towel animal folding demonstration, but we didn’t get good seats so we really couldn’t see much, and the steward doing the demonstration didn’t speak English very well so we didn’t really understand a thing he said and gave up on it.  We remained clueless about how to fold cruise ship towel animals at that time, though I have since learned and now I even make up my own.

Fun With Hand Sanitizer

You never know what might entertain a 6-year-old.  On this cruise, one of Justin’s favorites turned out to be the hand sanitizer.  At the entrance to every food venue, in addition to a stand filled with hand sanitizer you could use on your own, they also had an employee stationed with a spray bottle of it to insure that each and every person got their hands sanitized before going in.  They took every precaution they could to keep people from getting sick since this was the year of the big swine flu epidemic, at about the time it had started migrating north from Mexico (where a lot of the boats going to Alaska at that time had just come from.)  Justin would get a spray of hand sanitizer from the person and then still use enough for about 10 giants from the sanitizer stand and enter the food venue with his little hands oozing and dripping with the stuff.  Sometimes he probably would have ran the stand dry if someone didn’t stop him.

one kid could use up the entire ship's supply of hand sanitizer

Did I get enough?

Cruise ships have lots of stairways and this one had someone going up and down them all day cleaning the handrails to try and prevent passengers from spreading germs that way as well.  They did all they could to keep anyone from getting sick.

When mistakes make the best photos

Justin loves to pose for photos and although Chris and I are both totally unphotogenic we had fun posing anyway.  Most of the port stops had someone dressed as a moose or some such character for the kids to pose with.

greenscreen photo shows ship in green shirts

Ship in Shirts

When we first boarded the ship they took the photo against a green screen and then added the ship in later.  Ours had the ship going through people where Chris and I had worn green shirts.  They offered to fix it, but Chris said then he wouldn’t want it.  He bought that one and liked it so much that we all wore green shirts for the initial boarding photo on our last cruise hoping to get a photo with a ship through us all, but it didn’t happen, we were just people in green shirts.

It worked for other people

Whenever Justin picked a Kid’s Club activity he thought he wanted to do, we would drop him off there early for the free play time when he could watch cartoons or play video games and then try and use the casino coupons the ship had given us while we had some kid-free time.  We never did get to use all the coupons…..more about Justin and Kid’s Club in a future blog.

Fun and Games Cruise Ship Style

There’s some activities I have yet to discover though.  Other than Sheri’s one crack at singing karaoke, we haven’t gone to compete in, or even watch, any of the various games or other competitive events ships offer for passengers to do.  I hadn’t really given this much thought until reading in Canadian Bald Guy’s blog about winning a ship on a stick at such an event.  Not that I need a ship on a stick or any other such bauble, but the events themselves could be fun.  (I’m currently in de-clutter the house mode, selling everything I think we don’t need on e-bay.)

Come to think of it, a couple teenagers passing us in the hall one day on our last cruise asked for a towel animal for a scavenger hunt, but as the ship charges for missing towels we declined going back to our cabin to get them one of ours.  Good thing they didn’t pass by early one morning when I was actually carrying a towel animal around to take photos for my Towel Animals Tour the Ship album on My Cruise Stories facebook page.  If they’d had a towel in hand and a couple minutes to spare I could have made them a snake.

Cruise Ships are perfect for Indoor Explorers

We also spent some time on our Alaska cruise doing one of my favorite shipboard passtimes, exploring the ship.  The Sun had a lot more dead end passages and places where you had to go up, down, or around things to get through than any other ship I have ever been on.  It also had a lot more eateries scattered about the ship, though a number of them cost extra.  (Chris splurged for the sushi a couple times saying the $10 was well worth it.   Justin and I ate at the buffet those nights, as neither of us had any desire to eat raw fish.)

The Norwegian Sun had a small children’s waterslide which Justin eyed longingly.  The weather on  our trip was just too cold to let him use it.  We never used the pool either, as this ship did not have one of those sliding covers some ships have that make the pool area indoors.  It would have been a definite advantage on this trip.  We did use the hot tub some nights.  We’d make a run for it from the nearest door, drop our towels and jump in.  When done we got out as quickly as possible, slipped on the flip-flops while wrapping ourselves in towels, and made a beeline for the door back to the warmth of the inside.

Like all the major cruise ships, the Sun had some shops.  We didn’t make any large purchases, but we did find a few trinkets we liked.  Justin found a book about a  cruise ship named Peter who took an Alaskan voyage.  And I found a Norwegian Sun Christmas tree ornament.

tiny model cruise ship

Norwegian Sun Christmas ornament hanging on my tree

Posted in Alaska, Norwegian, Shipboard Life, Sun | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Cruising to Alaska from Vancouver B.C. Canada

cruise ship port, Vancouver BC Canada

Norwegian Sun in Vancouver BC

Several years back, I decided I’d like to go to Alaska and see some glaciers before they all melt away.  Having been to Alaska quite a few times on fishing trips, my husband did not want to take a cruise there.  My son, on the other hand, also had never seen Alaska and decided to come with me.  We also brought his son, my grandson along.  This is the last cruise I took before starting this blog, and since Alaska cruise season starts about now, it seems like a good time to write about it.

As usual with us when booking a cruise, budget pretty much topped the priority list.  We also had to make sure our itinerary included Skagway because grandson Justin loves trains so we wanted to take the train ride there.  We found that most of the ships departing from Seattle did not have Skagway as one of their port stops, while the ones leaving out of Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada often did.  After searching the internet for the best possible price we could find, we booked through NCL on the Norwegian Sun, making sure to choose a cabin that slept three.

Due to budget constraints, we picked an inside cabin.  The taxes and port fees cost more than the room for the third person.  Our cabin had the usual two beds that could be pushed together as one if a couple booked the room, plus a couch that made into a bed for the third person.  We had our 3 little beds in a row, with a narrow aisle and a night stand on either side of the middle one.  The room had lots of closet and drawer space, and between the closets and the beds it had a fair sized square of floor that gave Justin enough room to play with his toys.

The Electronic Window

We made use of the bow cam channel on the TV as sort of an electronic window.  If we left it on at night with the sound off, the screen stayed dark enough throughout the night that you wouldn’t really know it was on, but when the sun rose and the screen once again had a picture we would know morning had arrived.

This was the only cruise I’ve ever taken where I really made good use of the gym.  I normally woke up long before the other two so I’d slip out and visit the gym, then return and have a shower before they even got out of their beds.  Now waking up early on a cruise means quiet time for writing blogs.

We booked this cruise months in advance of the departure date.  Our trip took place near the beginning of the Alaska cruise season.  Although we had heard that the weather in Alaska is normally better later in the summer, we had to go while Chris would be in the area.

But WE are NOT swine!

oink

towel pigs don’t carry swine flu

It was 2009, the year of the big swine flu epidemic that started in Mexico.  This was also before Mexico had so much unrest and at that time the majority of the ships doing the Alaska run in the summer went to Mexico in the winter.  So whether or not our particular ship came from Mexico, we were bound to run across people at port stops whose ships had come from there.

By the time the whole swine flu thing started we had long since booked our cruise and weren’t about to cancel it even when my daughter called from Australia begging us not to go.  She said they had a cruise ship full of sick passengers there quarantined out in the bay and not allowed to dock.  We told her we’d be fine.  We never have spent the extra for trip insurance, so cancelling wasn’t really an option even if we had wanted to, which we didn’t.  We’d looked forward to this trip far too long to let a little thing like a major swine flu epidemic get in our way.

Neither of us had GPS in our cars yet, so we set out for Vancouver in Chris’ car with a set of directions from Norwegian’s website, and a second set from mapquest.  We passed through customs without any difficulty, found Vancouver without any trouble, and set out through the city looking for the port.  Vancouver has all sorts of signs posted directing people to cruise ship ports, but they have more than one port so you have to know where you are going or the signs could lead you astray.  Having two sets of directions that did not always agree didn’t help either.

We found the ship without more than one or two u-turns from having gone the wrong way.  Someone working in the parking garage there told us where to pull up to unload our luggage.  Then he said we could either park in that garage, or for significantly less money go park in an outside lot a short distance away.  Of course we opted for the less expensive choice.  About the time we got our parking squared away, the shuttle to the ship left just before we could get on it.  The workers said the next one wouldn’t come by for another 15 minutes.

It seemed like a good idea at the time

“The ship’s right there,” we said to each other, looking at the ship about a city block or so away.  “We could walk to it in a lot less than 15 minutes.”

but the ship is right there

So Close and Yet So Far

Walk to it, yes.  It did not take long at all to reach the ship.  We could see people loading supplies onto the lower levels behind fences with locked gates.  What we did not see was any sort of access to the ship for passengers.  We finally ended up having to walk quite a distance past the ship to find an unlocked door into a place that looked something like a convention center where we could find a way up to a higher level.  Then we retraced our steps back toward the ship, only this time higher up.

The street we had started out on passed through a tunnel under another street on the level where we ended up.  We left that building and again saw the ship right there.  We could walk around 3 sides of it on docks where people could stand to wave goodbye to departing passengers.  What we could not do was actually get on the ship.

Eventually we found our way back into the parking garage, and from there finally did find where passengers go to get on the ship.  Of course the shuttle let the people off right there, and several of them had come and gone since the one we hadn’t bothered to wait for.  We did get on the ship in plenty of time before it left port though, and that’s what matters most.  Next time I’d wait for the shuttle.

Things to do in Vancouver B.C.

Vancouver has a lot to see for those who have a bit of time to spend there before or after the cruise.  It also has an international airport and hotels to fit any budget.  In addition to buses and taxis, public transportation includes the skytrains, which move about the city on elevated tracks except in the downtown area where they go underground.  In addition to the large BC Ferries that take people places like Vancouver Island, Vancouver B.C. also has small passenger ferries or aquabuses to take people to places like Granville Island, which has all sorts of things for tourists to see.

Shopaholics won’t want to miss the famous Robson Street, or some of Vancouver’s other many shopping areas.  Vancouver has a host of other things to do.  The many tourist attractions  include an aquarium, museums, space center, gardens, Science World, double decker or trolley bus tours and much more.  The famous Stanley Park, in itself could probably keep a family entertained for a week or more with everything from horse carriage or train rides to gardens, beaches, trails, and even a water park among its countless offerings.  History buffs might like Gastown, the oldest part of the city.

Norwegian Sun towel animal

Towel dog

Posted in Alaska, Canada, Norwegian, Port Cities, Sun | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments