Panama Canal

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If we had proceeded at our usual speed as we neared Cristobal, we would have been half way through the Panama Canal before any passengers had woken up. Luckily, the captain reduced speed and cruised gently and gracefully towards this interesting spectacle so that we entered Limon Bay at about 7am and stopped, waiting to enter the canal.

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The pilot came on board. This small stretch of water is the one place where the captain is not in charge of the ship. Traversing The Canal, the Canal Authority Pilot is in command and orders all the instructions with regard to the ship’s operation.

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We glided up to the entrance of the first set of locks: the Gatun Locks, at about 8am. A small rowing boat came up to the starboard bow and took on a line from the ship. The dinghy then returned to the side of the lock where the line was attached to a waiting Mule: an electric towing locomotive. A line was also passed from the port bow to a Mule on the other side of the lock. Both machines swung into action and we proceeded into the lock and stopped.

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The technological system which comprises the Panama Canal is fascinating and intriguing. The history is relatively well known. The different attempts and approaches used by the French and then the United States; the mighty problems encountered; the many thousands of deaths of workers; the conflicts and intrigues around its acquisition and ownership. As we progressed through the Canal we were informed and entertained by a Canal Authority Guide who outlined these interesting details. She also pointed out features of the surrounding land. If you make the passage, or have made the passage, you will become familiar with these facets.

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For me, the technology of the system was my greatest fascination. Remember the project was started in the late 1800s and the first ship progressed through in 1914. There were certainly no integrated circuits involved in its development.

 

Many river locks raise boats by closing off the flow of the river, letting the boat enter the lock, opening faucets in the opposing gate to let water in or out and to raise or lower the boat. Then the opposing gate is opened and the boat continues on its way. The natural flow of the river fills the lock, and then the locks empty into the river after being filled.

 

However, the Panama Canal is not on a river. It is not a waterway flowing from mountains out to the sea. And, while it is a cut between two oceans, it is not a direct cut. The mountains proved too difficult to slice through, so it was necessary to flood a large area of land near the Atlantic coast so as to raise the level of the whole system thus requiring less cutting through mountains.

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The Locks at each end of the Canal are in fact a set of 6 locks. Two lanes of locks with three locks for each lane. Each lock raises ships by allowing water from the adjacent lock to flow through into the lock by underground pipes while the following gate is closed to stop the water from flowing away. No pumps are used, gravity allows the water to flow until it finds its own level and then gates are opened and closed, the ship moves forward, gates are closed, water flows through underground pipes and a giant steel ship weighing thousands of tonnes is raised smoothly and effortlessly up and down over 25 metres.

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While one ship is moving through the locks from the high end, another is moving up from the low end. The operation is synchronized to keep dozens of giant ships moving through at a steady and very efficient pace. Not only that, but much of the water flowing our of one lock to lower one ship is reused into the lock in the other lane to raise that ship.

It’s all very clever, very well organized and provides a wonderful service with seeming ease and efficiency. I did enjoy transiting the canal, as, it seems, did the other ‘older guys’ lining the decks as we sailed through.

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Persephone

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Persephone joins the ship overnight. Initially named Percy, it is discovered by an ornithologist, also a passenger, that he is in fact a female bird. Persephone is a young peregrine falcon who has accidently found herself on board after we left Madeira.

Feelings for Persephone change over her time on board from the initial excitement that a land bird is now travelling on a ship to utter disgust that she is catching and eating all the young sea birds who come to rest on the masts.

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I must admit it is a little disconcerting to find feathers and carcass remains on the deck during our morning walk.

 

As predicted by ‘The Bird Lady’, as our travelling ornithologist is now named, Persephone is no longer with us when we approach the Caribbean. A soon as she saw land she obviously flew off to a new home on the other side of the Atlantic. Falcons are not sea birds, so she has done well.

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Her presence has however, made us all more aware of the bird life around us and it is not long before ‘The Bird Lady’ is asked to give some talks. To her surprise the theatre is full for each talk. Before each port of call, we learn about the bird life to expect to see. Having not been particularly interested in birds, I am surprised to find myself enjoying being able to identify different ones.

 

Castles

Day 29

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It is not surprising that travelling through Europe we’d come across castles and I suppose that having a young granddaughter who loves stories of princesses made us even more aware of them.

When we booked our holiday apartment in Edinburgh it was advertised as being near Edinburgh Castle. I thought that probably many apartments would he advertised as such and would have tiny views of the castle. I gave it no more thought.

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Imagine our delight as we entered the gated community of our Edinburgh apartment to have the castle looming above us. In the late afternoon autumn sunlight the sight was both surreal and magical.

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Monmatre

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Monmartre

No matter how much you plan and prepare before you venture off, there are always surprises. That’s one of the many great things about travelling, revelling in the surprises!

Visiting Montmatre was quite a focus of our visit to Paris; not so much the buildings, but more the people. After taking in the spectacular views of the city, we meandered around the streets intrigued by all the ‘artists’ setting up their easels ready for another day of tourists. We reflected on how this area would have been many years ago when Toulouse Lautrec, Renoir, Picasso and Van Gogh lived and worked here.

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In our wanderings we discovered the Dali Exhibition. What a display! Time just flew by as we pondered over the melting clocks and his other works of art.

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We acknowledge that many great creative artists were poor, tortured souls. Anyone who has studied art history, which I confess I have not, will probably tear me to shreds, but I kept thinking that Dali’s work was more circumspect. I think that he was pointing out human foibles and frailties. Whatever is the true explanation, this exhibition is not to be missed. We were so glad that we came across it in our wanderings.

 

Marseilles

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Marseilles

In more recent years we have preferred to holiday in small towns or villages and tend to avoid many large cities. I imagine it is because we prefer the contact with the local people that is sometimes not possible to experience in bigger, busy cities.

One exception to this small town preference is Marseilles.

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We love the hustle and bustle of Saint Charles railway station, with the constant announcements blaring out in ‘melodic’ French, the old port with cafes and restaurants all in a row facing the harbour and the exquisite and quirky shops within the back streets.

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Each visit we have lunch along the waterfront. I choose seafood. Bouillabaisse is the top favourite, but a bucket of mussels is equally agreeable. I must confess I have no idea what Gray prefers! After lunch we fossick in shops and usually struggle back to the train laden down with shopping bags.

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We really do love Marseilles!

 

Planning 3

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And Good to Go!

Our sea voyage home is booked. We are now planning the trip to Europe. Roughly calculating how much time we want to visit the various places on our list we settle for September 18th to fly to Singapore. “That’s odd” I announce one morning when I was checking out flights and hotels for Singapore, “everything is booked for 18th, 19th and 20th and it is six months away.” Our travel dates clash with the Formula 1.

So we book our flight to Singapore for September 14th and begin booking for hotels or Airbnb that I have already checked out and noted in the holiday notebook.

Just when we are sure that everything is set, we hear from Gray’s brother that he and his wife have moved to Umbria, Italy. We really cannot spend time in Europe without visiting them, can we? Italy hadn’t been on our itinerary this time.

Once more back to the drawing board, or more accurately the little notebook. We really have to think long and hard about how we are going to fit everything in. We cannot lengthen our stay as we have a ship to board and we cannot leave home any earlier, either. It is tricky, but eventually we manage to slot everything in.

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Planning the packing is another challenge. There will be seasonal changes. We anticipate that Italy and the south of France will still be quite warm, but Edinburgh in October is bound to be cold. But these seasonal changes are only part of the ‘what to pack’ dilemma. Mostly we will need casual clothes for hopping on and off trains, but on the ship coming home there’ll be formal nights requiring suits , jackets and evening dresses. And we really don’t want to be lugging huge suitcases around Europe. Problem solved. We’ll buy new clothes in London and store our 2 large suitcases in London whilst we train up to Scotland to visit friends.

 

There are no luggage restrictions on a ship, so we’ll collect our cases on the way back from Scotland and head for Tilbury.

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It’s all in the planning!!

Planning 2

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With places and people we want to visit on our trip pretty much settled, it is time for us to consider at our modes of travel.

We loathe long haul flights! We have tried all sorts of flight combinations to make these long trips more bearable, but nothing has really worked. With that in mind we talk about traveling by ship for a good part of this journey. A few years earlier we traveled by ship from Auckland to Los Angeles and then returned home by a long flight. The trip home was so bad that it took away much of the joy we had experienced on the sea voyage.

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So this time we think that we’ll look for a sea voyage home. We’ll fly Auckland to Singapore; have a brief stopover then fly onto Frankfurt.

We like to visit Europe after the main summer season but before the winter sets in, so we are thinking about leaving New Zealand in September.

Now most cruise lines head south to our part of the world early in the New Year, so their passengers are escaping the chills of winter and heading into the Southern summer.

We search and search for a cruise ship that would be heading ‘down-under’ in our late spring/early summer. We both search independently as we go about searching the net differently from each other. We seem to be looking for weeks and we are almost at the point of giving up, when I decide to try cargo ships. I put in tentative dates and quite by chance come across a cruise-line called Cruise and Maritime Voyages. They do an annual repositioning trip from Tilbury to Fremantle, Australia with a stop in Auckland! Eureka!

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We book our trip home; then begin working backwards for the middle and beginning bits!

 

 

A Special Birthday! – Planning 1

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On a warm summer evening in the New Year, Gray asks me what I want for my birthday this year. “It’s a special one so we need to do something special to celebrate, don’t you think?”

I think for a moment, then say with a grin , “How about a trip around the world in 70 days, a day for each year!” I shouldn’t really joke when it comes to travel, as Gray needs no encouragement at all to be off and away.

So, it is decided. We begin to plan our Trip Around the World for 70 years. We decide that trying to fit into exactly 70 days may place too many constrictions on us. We begin planning what we really want to do.

The first view is, Europe. We love France, so it is obvious that we’d want to go there again. England is another obvious choice as Gray still has some family there. We wonder about Scandinavia as we have been enjoying watching some Danish TV series. And are intrigued to find out more. Maybe we could travel by train from Paris through Brussels up through Holland. The possibilities for a great trip are endless.

After many long, excited discussions I decide that I need a notebook to jot down all the possibilities for us to mull over. We use the net for most of our research as well as listening to friends about their recent trips.

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Many mornings over breakfast Gray says, “Now, this is just an idea, not set in concrete, but have you thought…?” Sometimes I enthuse and rush for the notebook and other times I mutter that my notebook is looking pretty scruffy with all the cross outs. There are pages titled Final, final, final plans by the time we’d start any bookings.