Saturday, December 7, 2019

Wednesday 16 Jan 2019 - Manzanillo

Woke up at 430 and read a little bit and fell asleep agin. Woke up again at 6 and Margie was just getting up so I had a shower, got dressed and finished typing up the busy day at sea yesterday.
 Today we do not have a tour booked so we are just going to walk around Manzanillo and see what we see. Had a lazy morning, breakfast upstairs at the Garden, checked with guest services about Marige’s tag for the liquor she brought on board. If she has lost it it is OK she just has to bring her ID to pick it up.
This morning my ankle had a big bite on it. I figured it was from the jungle adventures in Guatemala and was worried that it might be something bad that bit me. So Margie and I went down to see the doctor. It seems that all cruise ship doctors are young, good looking and from South Africa. This one had his family with him on this cruise. He told me that it was not a bad bite, probably a mosquito and gave me some cream that made it stop itching almost immediately. What a relief. While we were there, he gave Margie some really good cough syrup as she had been coughing up a storm for the past few days and the syrup seemed to work very well also. 
 Watched some news. looked for dolphins ,watched the ship pulling into the port, went for a glass of juice upstairs and looked out the windows and got our free charm at 11. Read for a bit and then it was 12 and time to go outside into the hot world of Manzanillo.
 It was Hot-hot-hot. The tv said it was only 27.8 but if felt like 36. it was not so bad if there was a breeze but if the wind was blocked off it was hot. 
they have a dog in Mexico that is almost hairless and not a chihuahua. they have statues of this dog all over Manzanillo painted up in different colours. very nice.
We walked off the pier and into town along the seawall. There is a colourful Manzanillo letters which we did take our photos at.


The young girl at the information booth on the pier had told us to go to the swordfish and go into town one block and we would see the restaurant. 

There is a lovely park with a giant blue swordfish in the center of it right along the seawall. the park also has sculpted trees, fountains,  a lovely gazebo and lots of walkways and benches in the shade.  We did not linger there as we wanted to find a restaurant. 
We headed up a street which did not have a restaurant on it but some little shops. We came to the end of the street to some very steep stairs going up but luckily did not have to take them. at the base of their steep hill there was a wall decorated with mosaics in a  fish pattern and it was very pretty. the street turned to the right at thiss pointand we could stay in the shade on flat ground. 
Halfway down this little shaded street was a cafe and we looked at the menu but did not see guacamole, which we both wanted to have, so we continued to the corner. 

There was the Colonial Hotel  with a restaurant “Los Candiles”. We went in and it was lovely. It was almost empty but we figured we had just beat the crowd. 
We ordered our guacamole, quesadillas and refried bean tacos with a beer for me and a diet coke for Margie. She has been going through withdrawals as there is not a free pop station on the ship so we only have juice or water or coffee and tea on the ship. Sometimes maybe the occasional drink of wine which is always nice with dinner. 


It turned out we did beat the crowd as the restaurant filled up pretty quickly after we got our food. After our lovely lunch we wandered around town. we looked for the church that was on the list of things to see. We did find it but it was closed. we walked all around the church to see if maybe there was a door that was open , but no. it was closed. 

Manzanillo is built on a hill side that is very steep with lots of steps so we got a good workout trying to find a way into the church and it was hot out. the churches in the older section of town and in some places it showed it age. we were not sure if it was from the heat or the salt air for the combination of both that the walls deteriorated so much. Maybe they just hadn't been painted in a few years.
I figured that he church missed out on a number of donations from a number of people who were looking to find the church. they would have probably each left a few bucks to light a candle or two. Maybe it was a rich church or maybe there are not enough people to man the church on cruise ship days to keep it open as the town had lots of shops that would want to be open. We were a little disappointed but we got over it.


We wandered some more and there were three young men selling post cards of places other than Manzanillo. they were from the Ukraine and were travelling around mMexico. they would sell things as they need money so I bought a postcard of the Ukraine in Manzanillo Mexico. pretty funny. 
We picked up a few souvenirs and went for another drink. the town is actually pretty but we did not want to take a cab to the newer section so we just went back to the ship early and had a nice shower and a nice relax in our air conditioned room.





Dinner at the Magenta was good as usual. the staff route so sometimes we got to meet new people and sometimes we had staff that we already knew. we went to the show and it was good and then we hit the sack. more adventures tomorrow


Our Towel animal tonight was -Twila the turtle - although at first we did not know exactly what she was. Vignesh had to tell us but once you know what she is you cannot see anything else.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Tuesday the 15 Jan 2019 - A day at sea

I woke up at 430 to 26 foot waves  and lots of wind. I went back to bed and read trying to fall asleep again but did not. Margie got up at 530 and it was still pretty bad out, weather and wave wise. We staggered to O’Sheehan’s and had breakfast around 6 and by the time we had finished breakfast it had started to calm down considerably. When we got back t the room around 7 the wave height was only 14 feet.
 We read our books after breakfast and I fell asleep again . I love having naps in the morning. We went for tea at 10 up stairs and ended up eating a second breakfast and watching the sea. Back to our room and I typed up our story for the previous days trips. By 11 the waves were only about 4 feet
At 12 we started to talk about going for lunch and at 1230 we went down to the grand but the menu was the same as before so we went up stairs again to the cafe.
 After lunch we came down and we saw Dolphins and were so excited to get photos and video of them. Vignesh came to clean our room and we ended up talking with him about his travels, his wedding plans, his sisters wedding plans and where he worked before in Dubai.  
We went for a up of tea to O’Sheehan’s around 330 and then went to the customer service to find out where the gratuities payment went that was on our bill. It seems that the payment we make of 650 dollars is split between the kitchen staff and the housekeepers so we figured out how much more of a tip we wanted to give Vignesh as he has been so fun making us all kinds of towel animals and chatting with us about his life back in India.
 I Called Chris and we chatted about what was happening in Comox with the grandkids, with Coryn, with the cats, the dogs, and the weather. He  and the kids are enjoying going skiing on Mount Washington very much. Thy have now been three times. Margie called Bill her son and talked about what was happening in Edmonton.
Read for awhile and fell asleep again. Love vacations. We went upstairs to the garden cafe for the country and western night… grilled veggies , corn on the cob, beans.  There  was a lovely sunset. 
The show that night was a broadway singer who started out well but ended up just belting them out very loudly. At first we thought she sounded better than the last time we saw her because of where we were sitting. Last time we were closer to the stage on the floor and this time we were up in the balcony but in the end it did not change a thing. Well we knew the words to most of the songs she sang.

We read for awhile when we got back to our room. I fell asleep quickly and Margie told me that she took the book out of my hand and turned off my light. Thanks big sister. All in all I figure any day with 4 meals and two naps and rainbows  is a great day.

todays Towel animal - Tweety bird

Monday, December 2, 2019

Monday the 14th January - Antigua on our own - Guatemala

The morning was quiet and warm already. Entering the bay with the port was another beauty with small villages up the coast and brightly coloured fishing boats anchored in the coves or already out fishing.
There was a volcano in the distance again with a little puff of smoke coming out about every 8 minutes. Was it getting ready to erupt again? this one had just erupted about a month before and the highway that we were going to be travelling down came quite close to it. we wondered if we should be worried? we were kind of , but only a little bit really.
It was a nice port  with a few fishing boats and charters going out of the port as we were going in. They were very organized on the pier too directing us to our buses and loading each one till it was full. 
We should have known that things were going to awry today when, for the first time, we bought a bottle of water on the boat for the tour  and when we loaded onto the bus they gave us free water also. Oh well. It was a long tour and we would probably drink them both. Antonio and Pablo Escobar were our tour guide and driver. 


We drove through the country side past lovely flowering trees with views of volcanos all over the place. how many volcanos were there here in Guatemala or was it the same ones we were seeing as the road twisted and turned around the big rock formations scattered around the landscape?We drove  past large rock formations with fields of cows below them. It was very pretty and not what I was expecting. I am not sure what I was expecting. more jungly maybe or something. It was quite pastoral with really big rocks and volcanos in the distance.We drove on a nice highway past sugar cane fields. Then the scenery got a little bit rougher as that is where the volcano had erupted a month earlier we saw where several villages and the highway had been taken out by the volcano flows. I saw a sign that said beware of falling lava and hot rocks. My first ever beware of volcano sign. 
The villages were sad. Wiped out with no roofs and no streets left. When we got to the highway that had been wiped out they were working on repairing it with loads of equipment and tons of rocks and gravel. You could see the channel that the eruption had taken and the course that it left all washed away and burnt out. 
Our driver carefully maneuvered us onto the portion of the highway that was under repair and then back up onto the original highway but when the rear of the bus tried to go up onto the highway , the oil pan scrapped, broke, caught fire and started to fill the bus with smoke. 
It was not very scary but some of the passengers said that we all had to get off the bus immediately as it was filling with smoke. There was little bit of smoke but not so bad.  

We did all get off the bus and they driver and tour guide went to see if it could be fixed but it could not so they called for another bus. While we were waiting Margie and I crossed the highway and wandered up a cobbled rod past a sign that said golf resort. I was hoping for a washroom as I  did not really want to go into the jungle to use mother nature.

 There was a gate manned by two guards at the top of the hill and as I approached lI asked Bano? One of the guards repeated bano. I asked again kind of looking around for a washroom and saying bano??  Again the guards said bano? I was getting closer to the gate as I was talking and so seeing that there was not an actual fence , went around the gate , looked at their little guard shack and said Bano? Pointing at the shack. 
The guards looked at each other and then realization came into their eyes and they said yes by way of nodding their heads. I used the washroom. Then Margie did. 
The guards were very nice little Mayans with big guns. Some of the other ladies were now making their way up the hill also looking for a washroom and so we told them about the Bano in the guard shack. We asked the guards if we could get our photo taken with the guards and they agreed. They were very nice. 
I thought it would be nice to go up to the resort but the guards were there to make sure that no one went up the road as the resort had also been taken out by the eruption of the volcano. We made our way back down the hill taking photos of the flowers and butterflies along the way. There were more than several of the ladies and gentlemen from the bus who also came up the road to use the washroom once we had told them that there was one. The guards probably had not seen that much activity in weeks.
Our replacement bus came in 29 minutes which was pretty darn quick. once we were all back from the washrooms break we continued on our way in the new bus which did not encounter anymore difficulties on the way to Antigua. 
We passed lots more coffee plantations with the coffee planted in the shade of the bigger trees. the terrain was very hilly but very pretty too.
Antigua is a very old city that has been through many earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. A lot of the buildings and walls looked as if they had been repaired or were in need of repair.
The earthquakes had certainly taken a toll on the roads . The cobblestones were the deadliest I had ever seen anywhere with big stones and little stones and not even at all in a lot of places. had to keep your eyes down for sure anytime you had to cross a road.
It was a charming town though in so many ways and the Mayan's were lovely little people. we got off at the jade exchange and when we left there to look around Antigua we were swamped by the little ladies selling their wares. Beaded hummingbirds, woven tapestries, shawls, and runners, hats and carvings. So many things. We had not idea how much to pay so we each bought some shawls and hummingbirds and went on our way. 
We had been given maps to find our way around and we checked it pretty often. At one point we just said well lets find a restaurant and get a drink and maybe a bite to eat and get our bearings. We found Roots a lovely little cafe with soup and sandwiches at just the right price and sat for a bit of a rest from the cobblestones. 
We were aiming for the town centre and a little park that was on the map. after our little lunch that was very tasty we wandered off and did in fact find the Central Park pretty handily.

 It was a very nice park with the little Mayan ladies and men coming up and asking us to buy things. Now for the purposes of information only, do not buy your souvenirs outside the Jade museum in Antigua, go the Central Park and busy them there. the closer you get to the centre too town the cheaper the souvenirs get. 

If we had of waited and bought our things at the park we could have paid half price for the same things. well you live and learn. all we could say that they understood was "Broke" already spent our money and they would say credit card go to the ATM to get more money. they were so cute.
We wandered around town and saw some interesting things. two little nuns coming down one street headed for some church we guessed. There were several churches in Antigua. of which we did not go into any of them. odd as we always went into th churches but we did not see any to go into that were open.

We came across a Hotel named Aurora which looked lovely with a very pretty little courtyard. My granddaughters name is Aurora and so I took some photos of that to show her . if I were to ever come to stay in Antigua I think I would try to stay there. One can never tell by the plain outside walls on the street what it looks like inside. 
We found what I thought was a post office but it turned out to e a police station. boy was I wrong. not going to get any stamps from them. but they were very nice and told us that the mail box outside their little building was 100 years old.

We continued to wander and found the chocolate museum and factory in Antigua. it is off the Main Street and it was not very busy. It was interesting with some very cool old chocolate related things and we bought a few souvenirs but not the chocolate covered condoms. We then thought we should probably be headed back toward the jade museum and to the bus.
We found our way back to the jade museum and we only had to tell twenty or so more little Mayans "Broke, Broke" and then we were there. We picked up a few more things, got some phots and used the washrooms. The bus driver rounded us all up with a bit of difficulty and we walked over to where the pickup point was.






The ride back was not eventful and we were glad to get back to the ship with tales of how the volcano ate our bus, our washroom adventures in the jungle with gun carrying guards and the little mayans who were so cute.
Of course the first thing we did when we got back to our room was shower as it was the first time on the cruise that our excursion left us feeling very dusty and dirty along with sweaty. What with all the outside actives next to the reconstruction of the destroyed highway ia am surprised that we did not have streaks of mud running down our faces. that I what it felt like anyway. 
The cobble stones really had been pretty hard on Margies and my joints and we were pretty sore for the rest of the evening. 
Margie did her payroll and I did my pictures for facebook.
we Read our books and went to dinner but came back to our room early and called it a day. It had been a fun and exciting day but very tiring.
Towel animal - Mighty mouse