Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Fox News F's up again

I understand being conservative, really I do. But this is just blowing EVERYTHING way out of proportion. Poor Rachael Ray!


http://www.boston.com/ae/celebrity/articles/2008/05/27/dunkin_donuts_yanks_rachael_ray_ad/

Finally!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Sniper Fire?

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Draft

Adam received Selective Service Information today (18 on 26). I hate the idea of him registering for any type of a possible draft, but what irks me more is that it is still only boys registering.

The Libbers that fought for women's rights to fight beside men didn't offer to register besides them did they? If you want what's good for the goose to be good for the gander, than "man up" and make it fair all around.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Home Home Home Home Home

Guess where I am? Well, not at home, technically speaking. I am at least in the right state and within a few miles from home. I am at work.

Our flight from Rome was great. We flew Delta and they gave us nifty little bags when we got on with a sleep mask, ear plugs, toothbrush, etc. But, even better than that, the flight was less than half full. I haven't had that happen in ten years. We were able to stretch out a little bit and not worry about reclining seats, etc. Woo hoo! Adrienne was still uncomfortable, but at least it was bearable. That flight took us to JFK and what a zoo that is. Our flight to Detroit was at the last possible gate and there were about 6 flights all leaving from our gate simultaneously. The announcers were all talking over each other so no one could understand anything. Our plane was small and packed and uncomfortable. The flight only took just over an hour but they planned on 2.5 hours to make up for all of the delays. We ended up landing exactly on time.

It was great to call home and talk to Lyle and to Jackson. Jackson promised me a "Blues Clues Hug" and I sure he will deliver when I pick him up from daycare this afternoon. Gretchen picked us up from the airport and after a quick stop at McDs we headed pretty much right to bed. I was sound asleep by midnight (exactly 24 hours from when we woke up in Rome). I woke up at around 5am thinking of all of the things I needed to get done today and wasn't able to go back to sleep. The three of us went out for breakfast and then I dropped Adrienne at the airport and headed home.

A should be on a plane home right now. I stopped briefly at home to hug Lyle and put in a load of laundry (in that order) and now I am at work. I have gone through all of my hard copy mail and sorted it into stacks. I am still going through my email, that could take a very long time.

Anyway, this will likely be my last post here. I have a new post up on the JKZ site but no pictures yet.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Amalfi

5/7/08 – 8:30pm

015Wow! What a day. We are just in from our drive up the Amalfi coast. I warned Adrienne what this tour entailed but she said it was fine (I think only because I sounded so excited about it). It was not fine for her. It was fantastic for me.

We pulled in Naples at around 7:00am and our tour left at 7:30am. We had a fantastic tour guide and driver both of whom would be put to the test by the end of our trip. We drove to Sorrento along the high, winding road and Adrienne was OK, not terribly happy but OK. We stopped in Sorrento to shop and found it to be a charming little town with great shopping. Lynn and Rob from our dinner table were with us on this trip and it was great sharing it with them. (You might notice that some of the pictures for this city are of a much better quality than usual, that is because I downloaded all of Rob’s pictures from his fancy, fancy camera.) 026We continued down the coast to our lunch stop at the Grand Hotel Triton. This hotel and restaurant started right at the road and went down about 12 stories down the hillside. Straight down the hillside. It was stunning! Adrienne made it down the stairs and our table was on a terrace away from the wall so she was fine.

After lunch we continued down the coast toward Amalfi where we stopped again for picture taking and shopping. It was just as crowded now as it was when I was here in 2003 but he had a great time anyway. I bought a dark chocolate gelato with our last two euros and it was yummy. Back on the bus we started down the coast. I will try to remember to link here to Lyle’s assessment of the drive down this coast. It is insane. It is just barely one lane wide and includes very tight blind curves hugging the cliff going straight down to the sea. Occasionally there are, what amount to, crossing guards using walkie talkies to stop traffic when a city bus is going to be coming through. This was especially important to us since it would be next to impossible for two busses to pass each other on one of the curves of this road. Keeping that in mind, shortly after we left 042Amalfi we came nose to nose with an armored military vehicle as big as a bus towing a trailer on one of these curves. Our quick tour guide quipped “you guys don’t have anything planned for tonight do you?” It took more than a half hour and some major reverse driving down this twisty, winding road. Adrienne was beyond not happy at this point. Adrienne was in tears. Adrienne was contemplating getting off of the bus. If “off the bus” were not scarier than “on the bus” at this point I think she might have done it. But she stuck it out and we made it through. This, of course, made us very late getting back to the boat but not as late as others. When we were boarding the captain was announcing to everyone already on board that they were still waiting for about 450 passengers to return.

cetera02I hope you can tell from the pictures how amazing this tour was. I enjoyed it so much. We even drove right past the villa where Lyle and I stayed in Cetera with our friends back in 2003. I was able to show others where it was and promised to send them information on renting it.

We are all packed up and we said goodbye to all of our tablemates at this, our last dinner. We are very sad to be done, but I can’t wait to see my baby again. And my husband. It will be nice to see him too, but mostly my Jackson.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Athens

5/6/08 7:00am

Well, we aren’t in Athens anymore but we were yesterday. Well, Adrienne was. I was in the sick bay. That’s right folks, I am sick. I will spare you the gory details but when we called down for Imodium from the doctor’s office we were told that I would have to come down for some blood work. I, of course, decided I felt much better and after getting some Imodium from a fellow traveler (thanks Rose) I went to the theater with Adrienne to get our tour bus assignment for Athens. I was fine. Then, about two minutes before they called our bus number, I was not fine. I was heading to the doctor. I made Adrienne go on the tour anyway. She had never been to Athens and I needed her to get olive oil and t-shirts for the boys.

After the blood work was done the doctor told me that I had a “berry bad invection.” Once I translated that, those of you that know what we went through with mom back in December can imagine the effect it had on me. I turned into a blubbering idiot. But, I pulled myself together and let them pump a bag of Cipro into me by IV along with some anti-cramping and anti-nausea medication and then I went upstairs to bed. I had to go back in the afternoon for dose #2 of the Cipro and I will be doing it twice today also, but I feel much better. When Adrienne got back from Athens she asked me all kinds of questions: What kind of infection is it? Are you contagious? My sleepy answer was “I don’t know.” So she came down with me for my second dose and grilled the doctor. The doctor said that it was a bacterial infection that likely came from food in Egypt. We have our doubts about this since it had been more than 24 hours since I ate anything in Egypt, but we took her word for it. She assured us that I was not contagious and I should be fine to go into Naples tomorrow.

013Adrienne had a great time in Athens from what I understand. The tour we booked had a bus driving by all of the great monuments with a brief stop to take pictures. From her pictures it looks like the stadium has been completely re-done since mom and I were here in 2000. I remembered when we were discussing it at dinner last night that in 2000 they were talking about re-doing it for the 2004 Olympics. She enjoyed seeing the acropolis and the Parthenon and then shopping in the Plakka. She finished up my souvenir buying needs, so she is a good girl.

Today we have another lazy sea day and then we are in Naples tomorrow and then back to Rome to start heading home.

Whew! We finally got a connection. So you are as up to date as we are. See you soon!!

Egypt

5/4/08 – 8:00pm

Egypt was, in a word—Nancy, you are going to be so disappointed—DIRTY! Now, we can tolerate the normal dirt and grime of an average city, but this was so far beyond that it was depressing. The buildings were all half finished, but deciding whether that was halfway going up or halfway coming down was difficult. The buildings that are being built are being done one story at a time, sometimes years apart. So they will finish the first floor and someone will move in, they leave the rebar coming out of the corners for when they are ready to build a second floor. We saw some buildings like this already 5 stories high with rebar coming out of the top and laundry on all of the landings. Other buildings were falling apart. There was brick and rubble as if a bomb had gone off in the city recently, but there was still laundry off of the decks that were remaining. That all would have been bad enough, but I haven’t even gotten to the trash. There was trash everywhere. On the streets, on the sidewalks, in the river. We even saw a little boy on an overpass dumping a bucket of trash onto the highway as we were driving. It was unreal. We both grew up in Detroit before the whole “Keep America Beautiful” campaign went into full swing and this was worse than that.

But did we have a good time? Yes, we did. Are we glad we came? Yes, we are. Would we come back again? Only if someone paid us a lot of money and promised us a 5-star hotel and a personal hovercraft to get around. As bad as the trash was the driving was worse. I have seen some crazy driving. The Arch de Triumph in Paris and the bus rides on the Amalfi coast come to mind, but nothing compares to Egyptian drivers. With no one else on the road they will drive for miles straddling the white line on the freeway. I think if you questioned 1000 drivers in Egypt 90% of them would have no idea what those white things on the freeway are; decorations perhaps. We saw, and were potentially part of, many, near collisions. Then on the way back from Cairo we saw a horrible accident. Our tour guide even told us that she owns a car but won’t drive it. She takes taxis.

Adrienne being amazedSo, on to the main attractions. We left Alexandria in a police escorted convoy of about 45 busses (the ship was deserted). It took about 2.5 hours to get to Cairo and our guide (an Egyptologist) kept us informed about everything along the way. When we arrived at the Pyramids of Giza we received the following warnings from our tour guide (we had heard these the night before from our head waiter). Don’t get on a camel (um, OK). They will tell you that it is $1 to ride the camel, then they will walk you away from your group and tell you they want $20 to let you get off of the camel. There was no chance we were getting on a camel anyway, so that point was moot. Our guide also warned us about the sellers asking too much for their stuff. She told us how to say “no, thank you” in Arabic. She told us that the crystal they were selling was really glass. She told us that they would put a hat on our heads and tell us it was a present—nothing is a present, just say “no, thank you” and walk away. Mark getting takenAs you can see in this picture, Mark, from the Holliday Park group got caught right away (but I don’t think he actually bought it). I was so determined to not get “taken” by these hucksters that I walked out of Egypt with nothing. I thought that our last stop was going to be a normal souvenir shop and I would get everything there. I was wrong. The last stop was an expensive souvenir shop and I got nothing but a magnet for Nancy (sorry, I ruined the surprise).

Pyramid with limestone casingThe pyramids were amazing and massive and beautiful, just as you would expect. I saw some other people climbing up on one of the pyramids so I looked for a spot to climb up too, but everything we saw said “no climbing.” Then we saw this little pile of rocks. Not quite a pyramid but I climbed it anyway. Erika ClimbingI think this picture is of me clamoring back down after the police officer yelled at me to get down. He was pretty far away and we were gone by the time he got there. Adrienne later saw someone get yelled at, hand the cop a few dollars, and then continue climbing. Sheesh! We ended up walking completely around the Great Pyramid and being offered some souvenirs by a police officer on the other side. We didn’t buy those either.

Erika holding a PyramidAfter being at the base of the pyramids we headed for the “picture” spot where you could see all three pyramids and get some great pictures. We were told to try some funny poses like this one, but we could not quite pull it off with so many people there and a limited amount of time. We did get the Holliday Park group together (I forgot to mention we actually coordinated getting the whole group—albeit smaller than Jan and Gene used to deal with—on the same bus for this tour) for a great picture.

group shot

SphinxThe next stop was the Sphinx. It was unbearably crowded but I muscled my way to the top and got a great picture.

After the Sphinx it was around 1:30pm and we were ready for lunch. We had reservations on a boat on the Nile for lunch. Adrienne and I had a pretty hard time with this part. Mom was so looking forward to being on the Nile. We brought some of her ashes with us (I almost forgot them in the room but grabbed them just before getting on the bus) so we could feel that she was with us. I have felt her with us this entire trip, but this particular spot really brought out the tears. Luckily, there was a spot on deck where we could do this in private.

Erika and Adrienne on the NileOK, so how was the Nile? It was a river. A dirty, stinky river running through a dirty, crumbling city. I sure hope our vision of the Nile still exists in Upper Egypt--that’s right, the upper part is at the bottom. Rebecca has a friend actually doing a cruise on the Nile and I am very anxious to hear all about it. I hope there were flamingos and crocodiles and all manner of beautiful things that we did not see.

OK, so how was lunch? Great. I had the beef with some delicious (but unidentified) red sauce, some noodles with an equally delicious (but unidentified) red sauce, and a roll with feta, we both decidedly passed on the “meetbools”. Most of the entertainment was fun—the belly dance and the whirling dervish—but then they put on an Egyptian guy singing American songs. Really, really loudly. With way, way too much reverb. Mixing that with the heavy exhaust fumes we were experiencing and we had headaches leaving that spot.

Outside Mohamed Ali MosqueI thought we were done with attractions at that point, but then we stop at the Mohamed Ali Mosque (no, not that Mohamed Ali a different one). Adrienne and a number of others stayed on the bus for this one, but I hiked up with the group and it was beautiful. I am glad I did.

When we were first on our way to Cairo in the morning, after giving us a lecture for about an hour, our tour guide offered to pre-order t-shirts and jewelry with our names in hieroglyphs. Adrienne and I skipped the jewelry, but we each ordered a t-shirt. It was a great idea. At one checkpoint she just handed off the sheets to a young boy who took it to the factory and then had the items waiting for us at the last stop—the Papyrus Institute. This is the stop where I discovered I would be going home with no Egyptian souvenirs, except my t-shirt, and then they didn’t have my t-shirt. Luckily they made one quickly and I at least had that. Adrienne ordered XXXL and I order XXL. When we looked at them this morning in our room her third X looked like it had been penned in and, sure enough, it was exactly the same size as mine. Oh well.

Anyway, after sitting in traffic due to the accident I mentioned above it was after 9pm when we got back on the boat. We headed right up to dinner where we had to take any tablemates that came along. We did a little happy dance on our way out of the room, saying how lucky we have gotten with our regular tablemates. We saw our dutch family and the Vancouver couple a few times throughout Egypt and it was always fun to exchange a few words and promise to catch up at dinner.

We slept, slept, slept and here we are at 9:30am relaxing by the pool and writing to you.

At Sea Again

5/2/08 4:40pm
At Sea
What a great day at sea. The weather is perfect (around 80 degrees and sunny, but with a cool breeze) and the pools are packed. We did some trivia (we suck) and we even entered and almost won a slot tournament. I even finished a book (I thing Adrienne has finished 3 on this trip already) so the day was a success.

This is for Rebecca:

This is a tortellini with a light bleu cheese sauce. Believe me, if they had not added the qualifier “light” I would not have tried it, but I am glad that I did, it was delicious.
dinner

This is the Coq au Vin from last night. It was OK, but not great (about like all of the meals on board so far).

Coq a Vin

There has not yet been a dessert worthy of a picture.

This is for Sue:
We were playing 9 lines on this and Adrienne hit for $20 (2cent machine) and it was just too pretty not to take a picture of.

slots

The next night we went back to the same machines and we were holding our own for a long time. We made a comment that the seat behind us had a high turn-over rate, one person after another fed in a few coins and walked away. No sooner had we said that than someone sat down and hit for $200. Again, it was too pretty not to take a picture of, even if you are the only one that will appreciate it.
slots02


Update: 10:45pm - I could not get a connection before dinner tonight so I am adding these pictures of our table mates. Our waitress is really great with the kids (she has four at home in the Phillipines) and the little boy asked his parents to coach him in how to tell her “you are the nicest girl on the boat.” He ended up being too shy to try it in English but he did tell her in Dutch and then Case (the father) translated for her.

jensens

lynn and rob

Jensen kids having fun

Tomorrow is a very busy day. We dock in Egypt at 7am and out tour leaves at 8:30am. The tour is scheduled for 12 hours so we won’t be logging in again until Sunday.

Cyprus

5/1/08 2:10pm

Adrienne in the MediterraneanWell, Cyprus, we hardly knew ya’. Apparently, it is May Day here in Europe and they take that pretty seriously. Everything is closed. We were on a beach tour so we were OK, but the people on shopping tours were pretty much screwed. The beach was lovely, a little windy and cold, but lovely. A few people tried to venture into the water but no one made it past their waists. Adrienne and I got our feet wet but then we were done. Our tour included a beach chair and umbrella so we were very happy to just sit and read and nap and look out at the beautiful sea.

We thought about taking the shuttle into the city when we got back to the boat but others just coming in confirmed that, truly, nothing was open. So we came back up to our room to shower off the salt and sand that was blown onto us with the force of a power washer at the beach.

Tomorrow we are at sea! A much needed rest from the four ports in four day. I know you all feel really sorry for us.

More pictures here.
 
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