Showing posts with label south america. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south america. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2008

More news from our Pam!

Hi again, This will probably be the last report from the ship as tomorrow is our last night aboard, and we disembark the 3rd in the morning. Boy, has the time gone by fast! But, as fun as it all has been, I know everyone will be glad to get home to familiar surroundings and share all the goodies and stories we have accumulated. After we left the Falklands, we had two at sea days, just cruising. The weather and seas have been basically calm. We fill the time with reading, giving money to the blackjack tables, listening to talks on the area and upcoming ports of call, walking the deck, and there are different classes that people participate in. I chose the cooking class, and there were 3 altogether. They seem to hold them while we have “sea” days. Lots of fun, just 12 people, hands on cooking,with one of the chefs onboard, Sheldon. We go to a show every night, and they have some great ones. Lots of music and singing, with a comedian in between, last night a violinist. The main event however seems to be stuffing our faces! We meet for breakfast between 8-9, chat, then off to do individual things, lunch can be at the dining room or buffet, and dinner is at 8 in the dining room. All the food is included in the price of the cruise, whether in the dining room or at the buffet. We just pay for drinks. Actually, I think it’s rather a good deal for the price. The food is wonderful and varied. They serve 6000 meals a day on this ship! Because of all the illnesses that can occur on a vessel of this size with all these people, measures are taken to avoid contamination. There are hand washing stations everywhere with that antiseptic liquid that you just rub on your hands and it disappears. They squirt it on your hands when you come and go from the ship and always before you eat or enter the dining rooms. So, in general, everyone has been very healthy, just fatter! Our next port was Buenos Aires, Argentina. A lovely city with beautiful old cathedrals, and lots of green areas. Very alive and vibrant with activity. Quite European actually. Kathe here- please note that I am just now adding photos to text written by Pam well over a week ago. We had issues with our internet service while onboard and I am slowly but patiently uploading images to go with Pam's fine descriptive words. I feel like Pam has been "Lois Lane-intrepid onsite reporter " while I have been "Jimmy Olsen -cub reporter and photographer" for our "Daily Rotterdam". Of course that means that Tom has been our "Superman-Tour Guide of the Year" !!!! Hahahah .....enjoy the photos and the finely written descriptions of our lifetime adventure! Plaza de Mayo, Buenos Aires, Argentina Interior of building that housed a small shopping area where some of us found handmade treasures among other things! Recoleta Cemetery where Evita Peron is interred............ La Boca neighborhood........tourist trap by day and tourist danger by night... Joel doing the Tango...... and then there's Lou doing the Tango....wow! Patty and Keith......... doing their version of the Tango.......Mama Mia! We had a couple of city tours, and two great “shows.” One was at Senor Tango’s, a huge Vegas style club. Dinner and show. Well, we all just expected the usual, and maybe not so much from Buenas Aires. Were we wrong! We had a nice dinner, all the wine you could want, and were treated to one of the BEST shows I have ever seen! The music was fantastic with musicians of all ages, who could be in any world class orchestra. The group was small, maybe 6, but they put out the sound! The tango dancing, by about 12 people, was unbelieveable. The speed and precision of their steps, the costumes, their beauty as performers, was unsurpassed. We were treated to this spectacular show, alternating dancing and music, for three hours! Our butts were a little sore, but it was so worth it! I have a few pictures, but it really is something you have to see to believe. Perhaps one day this group will come and tour in the US so more people.can see it! The next day (kind of early after that night!) we piled in our nice comfy bus, and headed off to the pampas country outside the city, to visit a 5000 acre ranch. This ranch was started in the 1920’s by a couple from Ireland, who came in and bought 1 acre. Their family still runs it, and has turned this working ranch into a kind of museum and example of what a large working ranch does in Argentina. After being greeted with juice, wine, and empanadas (little meat pies), we wandered around to look at the area, the beautiful gardens, and the original house that had been turned in to a museum. We looked at the lovely things in the gift shop, as Argentina is known for its leather goods, and were then treated to a lunch and little show, with another example of tango and dancing with golf balls (that size, but of some other material) flung around at top speed at the end of ropes It was quite exciting! The meal was HUGE portions of homemade and barbequed sausages, chickens, steaks, salads, all the meat cooked on a gigantic barbeque (for 250 people), all the beer and wine you could drink, finished off with a sweet dessert and coffee. I’m still too full! This was all followed by an Argentinian horse game, where the dominant mare wears a bell and all the geldings (matched colors) followed her and the cowboy, doing whatever the cowboy told them to do. There were about 6 groups of 7 horses each. Really pretty! Then there was a game where the cowboys rode at top speed to grab a little ring off of a stick, and they would then take the ring to a lady in the crowd and give it to here in exchange for a kiss! When all of this was over, some of the gals got a ride with the cowboys, and of course our Susan was first! She has been quite the hit this trip! We came back to port, and set sail for Montevideo, Uruguay, where we stayed for one day. It rained like stink, but we took a city tour again. Uruguay is a very small country of about 3 million people, 1 ½ of whom live in the city. Probably the most lovely building of our tours was there, a building for the Congress. The marble work was just beautiful, and very unique. All of the countries we have visited, with any beaches, are certainly developing them for their citizens and tourists. Rightly so, because they are white sand and perfect for that sort of thing. However, their season is only about 3 months, and the rest of the year seems to have rather bad weather! From Montevideo, we are headed to Brazil and Rio. These are 2 sea days, and because we stayed up last night listening to shows, and visiting, we slept in! Went to a special lunch today at the Pinnacle Grill, which is very fancy. We had a gift certificate so it was free to us! FAB! Then off to 2 lectures, one on Rio and the other a talk from the ship’s officers, well really a questions and answers session. Interesting and informative. So tomorrow we will have to start packing up once again. I don’t know how everything is going to fit!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Weather is quite rough, and has been since we left Uruguay. Thank goodness Harry and I are not prone to seasickness, and the ones in our group who are, have the patches, which seem to work. When the ship pitches, the water in the on deck swimming pool, flies into the air, about 12 feet! Then it rolls down to one end of the pool and does the same thing all over. I wonder just how long the water will last! Tonight’s dinner is our last formal night and we are going to have a group picture taken on the grand staircase! I’m finishing up the last load of laundry, so need to go get it! Bye for now, hope you haven’t been too bored with all this, but someone has to be the reporter! We miss you all and can’t wait to see you, after this grand adventure! Hope all is well, and if I have time, I will write once again before we leave South America. Much love to you all, Pam and Harry ( You know that all of our fellow travelers say hi too!)

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Going Around the Horn

Here are our certificates for "rounding the Horn". It was an epic moment for me-a stellar and unforgetable day. How fortunate can one be?



A simply beautiful day ...with calm seas and sunshine.
Hard to believe we are here!



Below are some more photos taken on this lovely day.........









Thursday, February 21, 2008

Coming into Punta Arenas

We had to be up and at it early this am to meet up with our guides to Punta Arenas. I watched the tugs gently tuck our ship into it's berth.




Our tour bus never showed up...so we managed to snag two enterprising free lancing
van drivers to take us out to Cena Otway. It ended up being the same cost as the original tour and since we had not paid up front we were not out any money.



On the way out we pulled over to view some unexpected wildlife...Rheas!



Maybe you know them as Emus?


Finally we arrive at Cena Otway and after a short walk in high winds we saw the little guys we had come to see.....they are so stinking cute!





Kathe here-this video was taken by Russell of the darling penguins-we think that the penguin feeding another is perhaps a mating ritual-not necessarily a parent feeding a baby.

Lunch at Restaurante Sotito's in Punta Arenas


Looking out over the town.....




A fabulous meal at such good prices.....I would have taken photos of the food but we were so damn hungry we devoured it on site and only left these licked clean
plates and empty bottles!

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Beauty in Patagonia




Southern Patagonia
Yesterday we went through the Darwin Channel. It is amazing to me to be here-so far away from anyplace. Seeing the glacier, the floating ice and traveling through fiords
is a big reason why I am here. I love being here.
Tomorrow we will be at Punta Arenas where we will disembark for a tour of Cena Otway where we will be able to see some Magellan penguins.
As we have been going by the coast of Chile I cannot imagine what it must have been
for the explorers and scientists. Here we are on the floating fully equipped city and they
had only the bare necessities for survival.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Oxleys Odyessy

Hi Family and friends! This is the first time I have been able to actually send something to our blog site because Kathe is helping me with all the techie stuff! So let’s just start at the beginning. Our plane flight was great, and LAN has food, unlike some of the other flights we have taken. (this trip is a lot about food!). Anderson’s, Stearns and we traveled together for the first little leg of the trip. So, we flew from LAX to Lima, and there is 3 hour time difference. We arrived in Lima around 12 midnight, went to our delightful hotel in Miraflores just outside Lima and settled at the bar. At 3a.m. we finally hit the sack! We were picked up for our first tour at 9 for a city tour. What fun. We started at the “kissing statue” and a beautiful park. Our guide showed us all around and without boring you, it was great sightseeing. Then out to lunch at a cafĂ© outside, and lots of “pisco sours”, the national drink! It’s kind of a cross between a margarita and a silver fizz. Good! That evening we went to a wonderful dinner, really beautiful restaurant called the Brujas Cachetas. The dining was fabulous and the building lovely. Next day we went to some ruins, Pachecama, that were huge. We drove through the outskirts of Lima for about ½ hour. Lima is truly a desert, and they get NO rain. The most they get is a mist once in a while. All of their water comes from underground. Therefore, these ruins which were made out of just the sand from the huge dunes, and water, have remained quite intact. They have a huge immigration problem, but not from the outside. From their own people who are coming down from the mountains in search of work. Lima has to deal with about 10,000 immigrants a month! We spent a bit of time wandering around doing the tourist thing, shopping etc, and that evening went to one of the most beautiful restaurants I have ever been to, on the end of a long pier. It was elegant, the food superb, the service fantastic, and the ambience unbeatable. All in all a truly wonderful dining experience. (also the most expensive!!!!!) We had to get up at 3 the next morning to catch a 7 a.m.plane for Santiago, Chili. (This was NOT the part of the trip that we got a lot of sleep!). Uneventful and nice flight. AND, they served a nice breakfast! So, this is where we met up everyone else who was going on the cruise. People came in a different time during the next 2 days. The picture I am putting in the blog (and I am only sending ONE because it takes too long on the EXPENSIVE internet), is from when we took a tour of the Santa Rita winery outside Santiago. They are world famous and bottle over 1,000,000 bottles every year! Tom Rosen had made reservations for our group to have lunch there, and again, a fantastic experience. Truly unique, a 200 year old winery, a luncheon made for a king, and our waistbands are now experiencing tightness! We spent some of the rest of the afternoon walking around this lovely and very modern city. Both Lima and Santiago have surprised us with their modern development and look. When you get out in the countryside, it looks a little more like Mexico. Our next tour was to another winery, Veramonte, where everyone tasted and bought wines, as they had done previously at the other winery, to take to the ship. $15 corkage on the ship, but that’s better than $50 a bottle! It’s interesting how they trim the vines, to me anyway. They are practically FLAT, whereas the vines in California are very bushy. Must have something to do with the way they are picked. And at the end of each row, they plant roses. Is this common in other areas? They say that if the roses get a disease, the growers can immediately check the vines, because the roses are weak and the grapes, strong, as far as diseases go. That day was our anniversary and along our way, we all went to a lapis lazuli factory Where Harry bought me a lovely lapis and gold ring! Our friends gave us cards and we had a wonderful day! We then took a bus to Vina del Mar, where we stayed in a fabulous Sheraton, right on the beach. This is resort town, and lots of South Americans come here for vacation. Their summer vacation is just the opposite of ours, Jan, Feb. March, as are all the blooming plants and trees. It seems funny to see the crepe myrtles blooming right now! All the while on this trip between Santiago and Vina del Mar, we had a tour leader who told us over and over again, that we seeing the MOST important, the MOST beautiful, the BIGGEST, most FAMOUS etc, etc. everything. And probably we were, because this area is certainly one of Chile’s biggest in population and development, and tourism. So, this brings us to boarding the ship, the Rotterdam, in Valpariso, the port here. It is a lovely area, but bustling with activity. The boarding process is very organized, and we all were on the ship by 2:00 p.m. the 16th. Our rooms are varied, but all lovely. The ship is large, quiet, and is like a floating city. Everyone has lots to do if they want to, or just loll around and read. Last night we had a late dinner, but a nice dinner, however tonight we made reservations so we could eat at a better hour. There are movies, and tonight we are all going to a live show, music and dancing with costumes by Bob Mackie. Tonight is FORMAL, good grief, and Susan will be in her new red sequined dress from Lima, so our group will get much better service! and here's Rick and Susan.............. Keith and Patty Kathe and Russell Joel and Connie Lou and Dee Pam and Harry Connie Cobb and all her men.......... Tomorrow we have a tour of Puerto Montt on the coast of Chile. We have been at sea since we left, so it will be nice to touch down. Everyone is having a great time and we are a fabulous group together! Kathe will now help me get this to where it belongs and I will try to be shorter next time! Much love to all of you and please someone give my puppies a kiss! Besos, Pam and Harry

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Thursday, January 24, 2008

From Chile to Brazil !


There are 17...count us!! Seventeen of us traveling together on a fabulous cruise. We are on the Holland America Rotterdam leaving from Santiago Chile on February 16th,2008 and arriving in Rio de Janiero Brazil on March 3rd, 2008. We have a splendid intinerary for our 16 day cruise including such places as Punta Arenas, Chile, Ushuaia, Argentina and Buenos Aires, Argentina. All of us will post on this blog-so get ready and get set for some fun reading and great photos! As we blog along you will get a glimpse of a life time adventure!Happy reading and to all my blog partners...get ready get set....South America here we come!