Finally … Vacation to Europe blog archive finished

Posted By on July 31, 2009

Big BearWhew! I’m finally up to date with our European vacation archive … and a bunch of photos didn’t make it into my14 days of blog posts. Oh well,  there are plenty to enjoy … except just this one loner photo and it will get its own post. It’s my daughter’s 23 year old “Big Bear” who’s taken every trip with her since birth.
😀

Listing Summary:

  1. Day 1:  South Hampton and boarding NCL Jade
  2. Day 2 & 3: Atlantic Ocean
  3. Day 4 & 5: Magala and Barcelona at night
  4. Day 5 & 6: Touring Barcelona
  5. Day 6: Sailing East
  6. Day 7: French Riviera
  7. Day 8: Liverno, Pisa and Tuscany
  8. Day 9: Rome and Vatican City
  9. Day 10: Sailing West
  10. Day 11: The Rock of Gibraltar
  11. Day 12: Lisbon and Sintra, Portugal
  12. Day 13: Vigo and Baiona, Spain
  13. Day 14: Final Night
  14. Arrived Safely Home

Smartphone ownership may not be so fiscally smart

Posted By on July 31, 2009

ShipfinderWhile on vacation ( updated blog posts here) I happened to meet a UK ‘tech writer’ who was up-to-date on the current smartphones. He has several phones and was comparing both the Palm Pre and iPhone 3Gs ( no UK GSM phone service for Pre yet). I found his comparison interesting and was very impressed with the speed of the iPhone 3Gs — the Palm Pre sure seems slow in app response and loading in comparison?  Being on the aft deck of the ship with him that evening, I was particularly impress with the app he was using on it call “Ship Finder.” Very nice.

But after all the ‘cool’ apps excitement disapears and one is left with a monthly bill, what the device is really being used for?  PCWorld did a comparison between several US based phones and plans — seems the Sprint Palm Pre looks pretty good?

Cost of Smartphone
Larger Chart

Palm’s “in your face advertising”

Posted By on July 30, 2009

Palm Pre in WSJ

I’ve been noticing that the significant advertising campaign Palm has spent their capital on (as well as Sprint) hasn’t seemed to slow all that much since it received free-press “pre-release” remarks and articles. From full page ads, to billboards, the sharp looking smartphone has certainly seen the “Apple” treatment in the ad spaces. Even the online WSJ has “in your face” Palm Pre advertising on the front page.

Blog note— added one more day (Day 9 Rome & Vatican City) of our vacation with about 100 photos.

Musei Vatican Ticket

Arrived safely home and looking at a busy Monday

Posted By on July 26, 2009

Flying into CVGThe final flight crosses the Ohio River and lands at CVG

We arrived home safely after a long day of traveling. Up at 4:45 AM in Southampton UK (5 hrs ahead of home EST) and grabbed a quick breakfast on the NCL Jade before ‘debarking’ and recovering our luggage. The trip to London Heathrow was slow, but comfortable as I had a bus seat all to myself.

Unfortunately we still arrived at the airport well before our flight and was questioned by both my wife and daughter about my lack of planning the flight home (a concern for my daughter since her “Prologue’ for M3 starts at 8AM Monday and she still had to drive to NEOUCOM). Finally aboard our Boeing 777 we enjoyed row 17 (better planning & seat picking as it is the extended leg seat behind first class and a hint for overseas flights) and took a nap after our decent tasting airline food chicken lunch.

We cleared customs after a ‘cattle maze’ and waited an hour or so for our flight to Cincinnati. After adding the 5 hours and drive home … we were pretty much ready for bed knowing it will be a busy day on Monday.

Hopefully I’ll get the Word docs and photos posted to my blog covering the several missed days shortly, as I wouldn’t mind having them there for posterity.

_

Final night of vacation, but the time away felt about right

Posted By on July 25, 2009

REsolution

Passing close enough to a container ship in the Atlantic to read containers

The blog is missing a few days in posting due to a shortage of Internet minutes while on the cruise ship ($$$) and although there have been a few connections (very few public ‘free’) along the voyage, I’ve spent more time enjoying the vacation than updating my blog. That’s not to say that I’ve not typed a few thoughts to a Word doc and copied a few photos from my Canon XTi SLR camera, but I’ll just wait for home to archive them for posterity.

Is the Safe Locked

There have been a few moments along the way that seem to stand out … and one such moment is my “Is the safe locked?” question as we exit the cabin. Seems this will be remembered.  (could have easily picked the 14 days of wrong turns while following Katelyn and Brenda around the ship … but I wouldn’t dare mention that!)
😈

We are spending our final night aboard ship over eating and enjoying a final show and mandatory family game of Rummy (we’ve had fun with this). While the girls are out and our bags are packed and outside our door, I thought I would use up the few last prepaid minutes with this post … sort of saved a few back for Katelyn to check her email and Facebook, but she was fine not logging in; must be nice not to be overly addicted to online services?
😀

Day 13: Vigo and Baiona, Spain

Posted By on July 24, 2009

Casto CastleIt seems like a long time ago, but as I write this post it has only been about a week since we were in Spain. Our last port of call was the city of Vigo, Spain.

The west coast city and metro area is home to a half a million people with historic Kingdom of Galicia roots (one of the first kingdoms of Europe). Our day started rainy (first and only of the trip) although the mist was really not all that bad. We has some clearing as we climbed (by bus) the steep hill to the Monte do Castro estate. Although we didn’t tour the estate, we did enjoy views of the city and coastline from a park at significant elevation from sea level … and yes according to our driver, this is the Castrelos district and “Castro” family is the one known to westerners as Cuba’s Fidel Castro.

View from Monte do Castro

Billboards in Vigo

Vigo has all the business of a working class city, with billboards, car dealerships and industry. The housing is apartment complex oriented for a large segment here in Vigo and for those who appreciate urban living wouldn’t be a problem … but for many of us who appreciate elbow room, rural and suburban living … life here would be a big change.

Baiona Spain

The weather began to improve as we worked our way to Baiona,  a tourist community which has beaches and restaurants. The people living in the cities and from around Spain and Europe regularly vacation in this area and shops and restaurants along the waterfront cater to them. The tides and shoreline remind me a bit of the northeastern part of the US, as do the boats.

Sign for BaionaStatue

We hiked up to the statue that welcomes sailors home from the sea which has been its tradition since they were first to hear the news that Columbus discovered America. There is a replica of the Pinta (ship that returned) in the harbor that also marks Baiona’s notoriety.

Pinta replica

Brenda and Katelyn sailing on the Pinta
Photo needs a caption: “Land-Ho” — Katelyn and Brenda “sailing” the Pinta

Sailing the Pinta Working on the Pinta

Sir Frances Drake, the famous English sea captain is also notorious in Baiona … but as a pirate that they called El Draque that the town repelled in 1585.

Mussel digging

The weather was still a bit damp as we walked through the town and watched locals dig for clams … or probably mussels. The town was beautiful and with the old building, walls, statues and bridges being maintained so well, it would be a nice place to re-visit. We took back roads which offered gorgeous seaside views on the way back, as well as old churches and bridges (below).

Old Bridge from Baiona to Vigo

Once back to the city of Vigo it was more industry and city living, with a mix of old businesses and buildings being restored. Many of the old structures are re-habs of the old fishing houses along the harbor. A little renovation would go along way.

Port view

Back on the ship and headed for Southampton and our flight home. BTW, this was the only port where I noticed ‘free’ wifi in the port area. Unfortunately it was so heavily used that it was practically unusable, although I did make some Skype to phone calls using my “convoluted” method.

Puerto de Vigo
Palm Pre photo from NCL Jade at Puerto De Vigo – click for larger

_

Day 12: Lisbon and Sintra Portugal exceeded my expectations

Posted By on July 23, 2009

Liboa / Lisbon Portugal map

Lisboa or Lisbon is the capital of Portugal and the wealthiest of the country. It has remained the capital city since its conquest from the Moors in 1147. The architectural style is a combination of old and new, European and Middle Eastern … especially in historic areas and in the Sintra region – both a town and Portuguese municipality.

Lisbon Bridge

The most significant Arab architectural influence that we noticed was in the beautiful Pena Palace and Castelo dos Mouros which sit on a hilltop that is near the town Sintra and overlooks the entire Lisbon area. The view is beautiful and climate a bit cooler (think mountainous), but the grade is steep. The area is now protected as a Sintra-Cascais Natural Park and has very lush vegetation … unlike most of the areas we have visited.

Pena Palace in Sintra

The Pena Palace was the summer residence for the king and queen of Portugal in the 15th and 16th centuries and although impressive to look at, has room sizes much smaller than many of today’s homes. Some say this was partially due to being easier to heat with a fireplace in order to take off the evening chill, others suggest that it was merely a summer place and very little formal entertaining was done there. Nevertheless, they had each room set with furnishing as if the king and queen were still living there. Brenda enjoyed the fact that the queen had ‘better’ accommodations than the king … and as she pointed out, “more square footage.” (War of the Roses).

Lisbon Waterfront and Lisbon Cathedral

After walking along the flower lined sidewalks and old narrow stone roads (pre-cars), we had a nice lunch and headed back to tour Lisbon, the waterfront and the Lisbon Cathedral.

Slideshow: https://photos.app.goo.gl/Ao74pHqkg5qXSCcH7
_

Day 11: The Rock of Gibraltar

Posted By on July 22, 2009

GibraltarWe spent day eleven visiting the Rock of Gibraltar and I particularly liked learning about the history of this fortress. The huge fortified hunk of rock guarding the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea from the Atlantic Ocean has seen it share of conquest and struggle. Over the years, a series of 32 kilometers of tunnels crisscrossed beneath this mountain of rock and during WWII  housed as many as 10,000 troops. The well equipped facility had  everything those living on/in Gibraltar would need to defend themselves in the event of an invasion. There were large gunnery emplacements and several tiny entrance areas where soldiers could look out and protect the walled city below or observe an invading force from Spain … or the sea. The view to the east overlooks Gibraltar’s airport which divides the present day UK Gibraltar from Spain (still a bit of squabbling going on over this place).

Gibraltar Narrow and Steep Roads

I was amazed at the steep roads in which small buses crawl up the slope. In the early days they used ropes/cables connected to iron rings locked into the mountainside … who knows how many animals and men perished by slipping off in trying to work on this ‘cliff.’

Gibraltar View

The views from Gibraltar were spectacular as one can see Africa, the Med and the Atlantic Ocean.


Gibraltar Slideshow — 53 photos

_

Another day – this one sailing west toward Gibraltar

Posted By on July 21, 2009

Sailing west

Today, we mark our return sail back toward the west steaming east in the Mediterranean on this near perfect day. The sky is blue, the water bluer and there is just enough breeze for a lone sailboat to make way well out in the clear horizon (digitally enlarged 300mm telephoto above). It’s now day 10 here and there’s no doubt about it – some serious diet and exercise is on my prioritized task list when I return home. I’m over eating and sleeping too much while detecting a definite bulge around the beltline that has become uncomfortable.

Brenda Kissed by a Dolphin

While Brenda and I enjoyed the view and the Mediterranean breezes this Tuesday morning on the balcony, I noticed what must be one of the premier window washing jobs in the world. The spectacular view probably doesn’t get much better than that – I wonder if they would hire someone like me for that job as payment for an early retirement cruise?
😀

NCL Jade Window Washing

Day 9: I’m going back – Rome can’t be appreciated in one day

Posted By on July 20, 2009

Colosseum Wall looking up

We debarked in Chivitavecchia, Italy on Monday and headed by bus to the ancient city of Rome (Roma) and a visit to the Vatican. The thoughts that I had prior to visiting Rome  were of  just another old and somewhat dirty city, but the impression I left with was one of awe … and a “we must return” attitude. For those contemplating traveling to Italy, you need to spend more than a day; there is too much to see and appreciate if you try to do it with less time. A view of Ancient Rome (below) from a distance is impressive to me and can give a slight idea of what it is like ‘just’ trying to see Old Rome in a day … let alone the Vatican too!

Arch of Constantine
The Arch of Constintine
– Ancient Rome


View of Old Rome

We started with a drive into the city and explored the ruins and ancient buildings on our own, Small Church in Old Romealthough a tour or English guide book would have been helpful. One detour took us down a winding street which ended in a small, but old church (left) that wasn’t really tourist-y.

Map of Ancient RomeThe massive Colosseum of Rome (below) is perhaps the most well known structure, but there are so many other structures that triggered memories of history lessons and biblical stories … it would have been better to have been prepared prior to walking. (to the right is a map of Ancient Rome — click image for larger, same for photos)

Colosseum of Rome

Perhaps there is an audio walking history MP3 for one’s iPod or phone … that in my opinion would have been great.

Base of Colosseum pillars

After our busy and whirlwind morning in ancient Rome, we ate lunch at an efficient, but less friendly restaurant than we had lunch at the day prior. We  joined up with a tour (highly recommended) of the Vatican after some tasty Italian pasta and wine thinking about the Spanish siesta which were the norm just a couple days earlier (Malaga, Spain pretty much shuts down from 2PM til 4PM).

What a fascinating city/state Vatican City is … and very full of tourists. We thankfully had a couple audio headsets and an English speaking guide to help us through the crowded museums and massive halls stuffed with ancient statues, followed by the Sistine Chapel (a bit disappointing and very crowded) and St. Peter’s Basilica (extraordinarily beautiful and massive). Our visit was on Monday is considered a busy day and since it was summer and just a couple days after a visit from President Obama, we had people everywhere. Again this is another place one could spend days looking at art and learning details about. I do know that with my limited historic perspective of the Catholic Church, I came away with much more appreciation of the history recorded and preserved behind the Vatican wall for all who appreciate Christian and ancient history. This is a ‘Bucket List‘ visit for everyone.

Sistine Chapel
Full 2.5meg “illegal” photo
of ceiling of Sistine Chapel (no photos permitted) :mrgreen:

Instead of including individual photos, here’s a Google Picasa slideshow … or click for a larger version.

Caution: ONLY 92 photos from the Vatican in this slideshow. 😯

_

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog