Monday, December 23, 2013

Nassau, Last Stop Before Ft Lauderdale




The final port Silver Spirit visited on this leg of our Caribbean cruise was Nassau, Bahamas.  Neither Michael nor I had ever particularly wanted to go there but it was on our itinerary so we decided to walk around this tourist trap of a city and see what was there.  The day was warm and clear and we had two pleasant walks around the town. The best sights were those farthest from the pier.  To see them we first had to make our way through the tacky terminal and along streets advertising diamonds and souvenirs.
Coming into the Harbor, The Atlantis Resort Dominates the Skyline

Next to Us the 3000 Passenger Norwegian Sky

Captain Pontillo Looks Concerned

These Line Handlers Were the Cause of His Concern

Another 3000 Passenger Cruise Ship - That Means There Were More Than 6000 Visitors In Town.  Fortunately Most Went to The Atlantis Resort and Casino

Inside the Cruise Terminal

Diamond Stores and Gift Shops on Front Street

The Anglican Church - A Bit Up the Hill From the Pier.  Notice the Lack of Tourists

Bahamian Houses on a Side Street

Colorful Home

Ft Fincastle, the Tallest Point on the Island (160 Feet)-The Water Tower Behind It is Another 130 Ft Tall

Schoolgirls Waiting for Their Bus

Parliament House with Statue of Queen Victoria

Back at the Pier - Hair Braiding Anyone?



Samana, Dominican Republic




Michael and I took an excursion during the Silver Spirit’s visit to Samana, a beautiful bay and peninsula on the north coast of the Dominican Republic.  The Dominican Republic, nominally a democracy, is poor yet is much better off than Haiti with which it shares the island of Hispaniola.  The Samana region has been set aside as a national park and ecological preserve.  Cruise ship passengers are offered tours of the park as part of the country’s developing eco-tourism efforts.

Silver Spirit anchored in the bay.  We took a tender to Samana pier and then boarded a speedboat for a fast trip across the bay to the nature preserve.  We saw birds in plenty, motored slowly through mangroves and were conducted through two different caves that had pictographs and petroglyphs (painted and carved respectively) made by the pre Columbian Taino Indians.  It proved a fascinating glimpse into the past and we saw unique plant and animal life.  What could be more fun than a hike in the rainforest with caves and a speedboat ride? These photographs are taken with my small Fugifilm camera.  I didn't want to risk my good camera.
Starting off in the Speedboat

Pelicans at Bird Island

Limestone Formation - Many Caves are Hollowed out Here

Stalactite meets Stalagmite

We Enter the Cave Lit Only by Flashlights

Taino Indian Pictograph, Somewhat Fuzzy by Flashlight

Large Mangrove Roots

Approaching the Second Cave

Cave Rock Drapery

A Walk in the Rainforest

Birds Perched on the Remains of a Pier

Dominican Fishermen

Fast Ride and We are Back to the Silver Spirit

Sunday, December 22, 2013

New Port of Call




El Morro Fort as we Arrived
I have been to many parts of the world but never before to Puerto Rico.  I was delighted that the Silver Spirit’s next port was San Juan, Puerto Rico.  We docked right at the entrance to Old San Juan the historic earliest settlement, founded by Ponce DeLeon.

Since San Juan is a U.S. port, U.S. Customs took an extra hour to clear the ship.  Customs inspectors had found some violations last summer on SilverSea’s Silver Shadow in Alaska and they have been giving all SilverSea ships especially thorough inspections, delaying permission to go ashore and holding up departures ever since.  As Michael says in his blog, ‘they never forgive and they never forget.” As we planned to make our own walking tour of Old San Juan, the delay in gong ashore was only a minor annoyance.  I felt sorry for the tour staff who had to get many passengers on various tours around San Juan and the rest of the island. They handled it brilliantly.




Michael and I had a wonderful time.  We walked along the Old San Juan city walls, through sleepy streets and across some beautiful parkland to the El Moro fort. I had my new camera and took many photos of the streets, walls fort and anything else that looked interesting.  After an extensive exploration of the fort, we walked to a second fort, San Cristobal, at the other end of Old San Juan.  At San Cristobal, we met a group from Silver Spirit taking the escorted walking tour and exchanged greetings.  We continued into the fort and they went the way we had come.  I later looked up their itinerary and discovered that Michael and I saw about twice as much as they saw.







Having explored two forts and walked several miles on cobbled streets we were hot, tired and ready to return to Silver Spirit for a somewhat late lunch.  After lunch, we returned to explore the streets nearer the pier, take more pictures and buy some supplies at a CVS. It was great to be in U.S. territory.  Not only were there familiar stores that use U.S. money, our phones worked on standard rates and we were able to get our e-mail.   



E-mail aboard Silver Spirit was at best iffy.  Something was wrong with their internal Wi-Fi system and connection to the Internet dropped in and out constantly.  The 50 cent per minute counter, however, worked perfectly even if there was NO Internet.  Michael was able to straighten out the billing even though it took until the end of the voyage.




Our already somewhat delayed 5:00 pm departure was delayed even longer.  Michael and I could see the Captain and bridge crew from our veranda.  The captain didn’t look particularly disturbed. Usually if something does not go to plan he paces up and back scowling. He seemed calm.  Eventually we spotted two people running down the pier, dragging luggage behind them.  We had been waiting for someone to join the ship.

The next day Michael met Helen Harrison in the lobby.  She was once the travel desk manager on the Song of Flower, the first ship on which Michael had cruised.  Now she is a SilverSea manager of tour operations.  She was the one for whom the Captain had held the ship. Her flight from Ft Lauderdale to San Juan had been delayed.  She had been convinced that she would miss the sailing but was able to call the Captain and tell him where she was and how late she would be.  The captain decided to wait for her.

We were glad that she was able to join Silver Spirit.  We had a long lunch with her a few days later and I heard her and Michael tell stories about that first Song of Flower Voyage.  They both remembered it it great detail.  The Song of Flower was a very special ship.

San Juan turned out to be one of the most photogenic stops on our voyage and provided Michael the unexpected pleasure of meeting another old friend. As we departed San Juan I took some spectacular pictures of the sunset.