Monday, September 20, 2010

Western Caribbean Cruise



Usually on the morning after I return from a trip I call some of my siblings, who all live thousands of miles away and whom I don't see for years at a time, to let them know I am back home. That may be a habit motivated by inherited remnants of our mother's anxiety about our whereabouts and safety whenever we were not at home, and especially when we were travelling.

I was about to instinctively reach for the phone when I realized that this time a call was not necessary. My siblings, with one exception, had accompanied me on this trip. We had finally been able to have an almost complete family reunion after more than ten years.

A cruise seemed to be the best venue for this. We sailed out of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, a port that was as equidistant as possible for all of us. A gettogether for our family, as for most, I am sure, involves a lot of cooking, cleaning up and other busy work that severely reduces the amount of time for bonding and catching up on news. A cruise would eliminate all of that. If tensions arose, as also happens with family reunions, the gigantic ship, three football fields long, fifteen decks high and with a maze of restaurants, shops, theaters, lounges and other nooks and crannies would provide lots of places to hide. As an absolute and drastic last resort one could also jump overboard, as a passenger did one night (more of that later).

The itinerary was the Western Caribbean, with calls at Georgetown, in the Cayman Islands, Cozumel and Costa Maya, Mexico, and new for me, Roatan, Honduras.

That two hurricanes were churning about or developping in the Gulf of Mexico which we had to transit was cause for some concern even though with modern weather mapping ships have a lot of time to alter course to avoid dangerous conditions and will do so since no cruise line wants its ships full of seasick passengers. The magnificent weather we had at each port and most of the cruise emphasized that such concern was unnecessary.

Let's take a look first at Roatan, a small island belonging to Honduras where the vegetation in typical Tropical fashion is lush and colorful, the sea, even at the dock, is crystal clear, there's not a highrise in sight, enough infrastructure to show that there is no evident deprivation

Roatan provided a friendly welcome with folk dancers in their elaborate dress dancing to lively traditional music. No intrusive security meant to make you feel like a potential terrorist. And immaculate duty free shops including one drugstore which offered generic versions of Viagra, among other medications, as well as genuine potato chips and sunscreen.


10 comments:

Pat said...

Lovely pix, Louis!

It must have been a good and restful holiday-reunion, since you're up and posting so soon after :)

And, from the last line of your post, I say: thank the lord the pototo chips were genuine!!!

Pak Idrus said...

Louis, I have been wondering where have you been. Did not expect that you went onto another cruise after that incident on your last cruise. Well it look like this one went well indeed. It tells from your narrative in this posting..Happy and not Angry eh!

Have a nice day.

louis said...

Pat,
Thanks for your compliment on the pictures. With a bright Tropical sun, Nature's most vivid colors on land and sea, and a smart point and shoot digital camera, the odds were in my favor. For some reason the formatting of my post isn't allowing the pictures to be enlarged when clicked. Sorry about that.

louis said...

Idrus,
My e-mail telling you my travel plans did not get to you. Sorry. But at least you didn't receive one of those spam mails claiming that I was stranded or detained in some foreign land and requesting you to urgently send money to bail me out :)

~CovertOperations78~ said...

Louis, you've been away! I have missed you! I wondered where you went this time!

What a splendid, magical holiday you had! I doubt that my brothers and I would be able to hold a family reunion, even on a cruise ship, without raising cain while we're at it!

I love the photos, especially of the folk dancers!

P/S: You mean there is such a thing as fake potato chips? Tsk! What is the world coming to these days?

Guanaguanare said...

Louis,
Excellent idea, for all the reasons you mentioned, to have a reunion cruise. Will suggest it to another group that is planning a reunion for next year.

Roatan looks beautiful and what a relief that there were no highrises in sight to spoil the natural beauty. Did the music sound familiar to you? Will you be posting more photos of the other ports? Which was your favourite stop? Did you disembark at every port? How did this line compare with the last?
Blessings

louis said...

Hi CO'78,

A cruise might be just the right place to hold a family reunion with your brothers: there are a lot of places to hide when the going gets challenging, and a lot of distractions if one has to resort to them to keep the peace. The pampering might also lull participants into a good frame of mind. Our group was large (13 members) and the reunion worked out to be pretty stress-free, other than for some logistics problems like misplaced luggage.

Non-genuine potato chips? Sure they exist: made of mush of uncertain pedigree.

louis said...

Guanaguanare,

A cruise would be worth considering. One strong caveat though: whatever you do do not book it through a travel agent in the Caribbean. It seems that cruises booked through travel agents in the Caribbean have to be funnelled through one or two middlemen to the cruise line. In my case, my immediate travel agent was in Trinidad and that agent handled the transaction fine. However, our bookings had to be passed through an agent in Puerto Rico, and that agency, probably because it enjoys a monopoly was totally inept, uncooperative, arrogant and I suspect not very honest. Use a travel agent in the US, Timbuktu.. anywhere that does not have to work through Puerto Rico.

The music was not familiar to me and I wonder how genuine it was, given the desultory performance.

I did not get off at the other ports and have few photos from this trip. However I will search and if I come up with some I will do another post. Roatan was far more naturally beautiful than the other ports.

This line, Celebrity, is far superior to any others I have sailed. I have done several cruises on Celebrity and they have been consistently very good.

Guanaguanare said...

Thanks for all the info, Louis, especially the tip about booking. "Desultory performance" made me laugh because it conjured up the image of a cobbled together troupe losing the battle against the hot sun overhead. In all your cruising experience, at which stop were you most impressed by the portside entertainment?
Blessings

louis said...

Guanaguanare,

Your image was absolutely accurate.

At a stop at Acapulco once the ship sailed at midnight and that allowed time for an amateur troupe of folkloric dancers to come aboard to present a wonderful show and for mariachi musicians to serenade passengers on board.

At Kasadusi we were also treated to a most enjoyable performance of Turkish folk music and dances by another amateur troupe that came onboard while we were tied up at the dock.

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