Monday, Feb 13. Zzzze Day. Because this was a Sea Day, I indulged in over-drinking last night. This was a planned maneuver since I knew I had no responsibilities the next day. Woke up in pain at 8AM. I tried to have a simple breakfast in one of the basic restaurants, only to be engaged in a wonderful conversation with my neighbors. The meal was incidental. I had a great time talking about stuff.  But finally the conversation ended and I returned to my bed at noon.

Got up again at 3PM, still feeling ill. But I spent a little time in the gym, then wandered. Had dinner at the ship’s version of Benihana. The appetizers were thoroughly Japanese, but the meal was totally American, as is Benihana. Adequate fried rice, wonderful shrimp, ok steak. I skipped the desert. 

Attended the Prime-time performance of Norwegian’s Fab Four group. I arrived an hour early for good seats, then dozed. It was great singing, but the players were unfit to be Beatle’s lookalikes.

No photos. Tomorrow we arrive in Aruba, where I hpope to have more experiences. 

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Sunday, Feb 12. I walked to the ship. It was supposed to be 2.5 miles but thankfully there was a shuttle bus for the last half mile. The boarding process was faster than expected and I was able to board as soon as I arrived. The “designated boarding time” was just an effort to stretch out things.  

Even though I was one of the early arrivals, the ship immediately appeared crowded. We weren’t allowed access to our staterooms until about 3PM, so everything became extremely crowded. And loud. Lots of Eagles and Chiefs shirts. Most of the venues had their planned events canceled to show the Super Bowl. The ship has escalators! And bowling alleys. 

I made my three specialty restaurant reservations without any trouble. Tonight’s was Cagney’s Steakhouse. Dinner was fine. Though I sat alone it wasn’t long before my neighbors began a conversation. Being single wasn’t a barrier to feeling like I had friends. Everyone is very talkative.

While most of the ship was watching the Super Bowl, I had a chance to sample the bars with some room to move. I’m not sure it’ll last in the following evenings. I used my printer to make friends with the bartenders. I wrapped up my first day at about 2AM.

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Saturday, Feb 11th. As adventures goes, this one began with two relatively short flights. American Airlines has nice interiors, for a bulimic. Arrived in San Juan at 11PM with an internal clock that said it was only 7PM. So, following the hotel clerk’s advice, wandered over to the nearby “hot spot”. A whole lot of Puerto Rican partying going on. Some bars were not only checking IDs, but also frisking the men. Pot in the air. Extremely loud. I found a quiet(ish) bar and tried the bartender’s choice of rums, plus some odd but delicious spring rolls. By 1:30 (9:30 my time) I’d had enough, while lots of people had not.

Hotel is adequate, but nothing to be proud of.

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Friday, Feb 10. Yoriko is still in Japan for 13 more days. I’ve had eye appointments for the last three weeks, preventing the booking of a normal adventure. Yoriko has never wanted to visit the Caribbean. Norwegian Cruise Line offers single cruiser bookings and had a killer offer. So . . .

Tomorrow I fly to San Juan, Puerto Rico. Sunday I’ll board the Norwegian Epic, a megaship of 4,600 passengers, for a seven night cruise that docks in four countries. My reasoning for taking this cruise has everything to do with the port visits. Just the thought of sharing a ship with 4,600 people makes me itch. Especially considering that vaccinations aren’t required. I had done research into island hopping without the ship, but the transportation costs are surprisingly high.

CruiseCritic contains reviews of ships. In the case of the Epic, the latest batch have been uniformly negative, all having to do with crowds. On the plus side, forewarned is forearmed. I’m going with low expectations. My stateroom is an Inside Berth, which might be a plus. I’ve been thinking of roaming the ship at night and sleeping during the day.

The ports I’ll visit are Aruba, Curaçao, St. Lucia, and St. Kitts. The main draw in each country is the scenery. Perhaps I’ll get good photos.

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Monday-Tuesday, Nov 14-15. Endless return home. Spend the day at the resort. The day began as a typical hot one. There was a tour of the local village on the schedule, but only one went. Later a cool front came by and I regretted not joining the tour. But the front moved on and in the afternoon it was again hot.

Departed at 4 for the airport and a short flight to Dar es Salaam. I felt we could have made this trip yesterday and spent time in the city, thus splitting up the trip home a little. Arrived at the international terminal at 7, only to learn that the counter won’t open until 8 (then 8:50). Found a lounge, took a shower. Waited for our 23:59 flight to Amsterdam. 9+ hours in the air. Nice flight.

Had snacks in the lounge in Amsterdam. Flight to Atlanta. 9+ hours. Awful neighbor.

Had a shower, plus food and drinks in the Atlanta lounge. 5 hour layover. Flight to San Diego. 4+ hours. Time seemed to stand still.

Lyft to the house in a very noisy, smelly car. Slept anyway. Total travel time: 40.5 hours.

[Today is the 19th. It’s taken this long for me to feel some semblance of health. I’m getting too old for this.]

The Trip Leader was wonderful. The drivers were incredible. The animals were all I could hope for. But the heat was worse than projected and I had a intestinal bug that is still with me. Those issues and a few others will have a negative impact on my memories of this adventure. Overall, the Ultimate Africa Adventure of 2020 (with Victoria Falls) was a better experience.

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Sunday, Nov 13. Visited a spice farm. It certainly wasn’t what I expected. Woods with trees and plants seemingly randomly located, containing spices and fruits. It was mildly interesting, but I was expecting a facility for collecting, packaging, labeling and shipping spices. Much of the time was spend while various fruits were skillfully sliced up and shared. Carving up a coconut was done in a way certainly not recommended by the Boy Scouts!

The rest of the day was free. I again went for a swim in the ocean, but I learned that when the tide isn’t all the way in, the water is only waist deep for a hundred yards out. Icky bottom.

Farewell dinner.

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Saturday Nov 12. Motored out to a reef and snorkeled. Nice, not great. Picnicked on a mostly deserted island. Sailed back.

In the afternoon the vacant outdoor bar was occupied by monkeys. Great fun watching them jump around. Swam again in the ocean. Group from South Africa had tried to swim from here to the mainland yesterday (23 miles). One succeeded, the others were picked up along the way.

The night was interrupted until 2:30 by live music in the nearby town. Hot, humid, noisy. Not a good night.

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Friday, Nov 11. Drive to Fumba Beach Resort. Stopped at the Zanzibar National Park to see the very rare Zanzibar Red Colobus monkey. I expected to only see them at a distance, but they were very human-friendly. Three feet away, calmly snacking. One person got within hugging distance until ranger told her they scratch. Ranger said the males fight for the Alpha position, often to the death. Long claws.

Mangrove Forest. Dense. Similar to Everglades, but not as dense.

Butterfly Reserve. Great fun trying to capture nice photos. A photo-rich environment. A small area for chameleons. Appropriately, they were hard to find. The guide pointed them out for us.

The resort faces west, so the sunset was very nice. Not sure why, but I got the only bungalow with a beachfront view. Wonderful. Lunch and dinner were slow affairs. “Zanzibar time”, we’re told. We didn’t have a set menu. Options are good.

Another hot day. But I used their infinity pool and also swam in the Indian Ocean for the first time. A bit of sunburn. Sleep was difficult in the heat, but it was better than I feared.

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Thursday, Nov 10. Tour of the city began with the food market. Nothing new here, except that the city is building a fancy new marketplace, so their existing stalls are pretty temporary and poor. The fish market portion is surprisingly small. Guy on scooter tried to sell fish (photo), left disappointed.

Slave Museum was well laid out, but incredibly sad. The last panel pointed out the number of “slaves” that still exist today. Arranged marriages, for example. David Livingstone had a significant hand in ending slavery auctions on the island. The auction site was overbuilt by a non-denomination church.

Extremely hot. Gift shop had AC. Freddie Mercury Museum ($8, skipped), old fort hot without shade, “House of Wonders” (sultan’s old home) closed for repairs. An underwhelming walking tour. Had lunch and dinner at Mercury’s. Why mess with success.

Boat ride on a Dhow with the ubiquitous lateen rig. Very old and poorly handled. Incredible leeway. Almost like sailing sideways. But an interesting cruise.

The heat and humidity was stunning. Guide confirmed that it was unusual, even in Zanzibar.

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Wednesday, Nov 9. Before our departure, we visited a cultural center that doubled as a souvenir shop. Lots of metal statues. Bought some chopsticks with animal heads.

Tour and lunch at a resort that doubles as a workshop for disabled people. Took, printed and gave away lots of photos. Skipped lunch.

Small airport. Bought a hat. Small plane (Dash 8).

Quick flight to Zanzibar. A local guide (who talks in a slow, repetitive cadence that I found difficult to follow) greeted us. Hotel in Stone Town, which has no cars, but many motorcycles. 5 minute walk to the hotel. Messy, disorganized streets. Nice hotel, sort of. At least the room has some semblance of AC. Hot and humid, as expected. Good rooftop bar. Excellent margarita. Found a restaurant called Mercury’s, thought they didn’t play Queen music. Wonderful spaghetti.

The city (mostly Islamic) reminds me strongly of Morocco. But unlike there here virtually all women are covered. Salesmen everywhere.

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