Seattle

Strictly, this belongs in the Canada post but oh well. Before we caught the train south, we had most of the day in Vancouver, so Doug went to the Capilano Suspension Bridge (which I did so not want to go to), while I went to the Van Dusen Botanical Gardens to meet a delightful and very clever twitter friend from Vancouver. The gardens are lovely, though I was too tired from an early start and bad sleep to really enjoy it. Lots of gracious planting and sculptures: Continue reading “Seattle”

Alaska

The worst thing about the USA apart from its politics, is the way it treats people entering the country as tourists. It’s not actually necessary to regard us all as criminals, you know. But yet it forces people to wait for hours to be photographed, fingerprinted and interrogated, all so we can go and spend good money in the place.

We literally waited three hours to clear immigration at Vancouver’s cruise terminal to get onto the boat (considered American territory and we were eventually going to go to Alaska). That was after a very early start and long ferry ride. We didn’t get onto the cruise boat until after three pm, and had gobble some lunch before an obligatory lifeboat drill at four pm. To say I was pissed off and knackered after all this is an understatement. Grrrr.

However. Once we ate some more and had showers and calmed down, we suddenly realised that (a) the stateroom was bigger than some of the hotel rooms we’d stayed in and (b) we didn’t need to pack or meet a deadline again for a whole week. Yippee! And we could stay in our room for the entire trip if we wanted because room service was free. (We didn’t, but we could. We had some breakfasts in the room though.) Our verandah gave us a perfect view of the scenery and we could have as much or as little to do with other people as we wanted. Bliss πŸ˜‰

The first day was at sea, letting us explore the ship, food options and entertainment possibilities. Also, relax after the hectic day before. It was ‘formal dress’ night so we blinged up and went to the main ‘posh’ dining room – where we were jammed in like sardines. Oh well. Food was okay, but not worth the hassle (the food in the ‘casual’ parts was just as good without all the nonsense) but we saw orcas outside the window πŸ™‚ Oh and humpbacks from our verandah while eating breakfast the next morning! Continue reading “Alaska”

Canada

I really loved Canada. It was so much more in every way than I expected – the scenery, the people, the variety. We enjoyed the tour itinerary, and what we didn’t love, we were fascinated by anyway.

We started in Vancouver, and went to Grouse Mountain as our travel agent recommended. It was okay – the grizzly bears were wonderful. The scenery was obcured by smoke, a problem for much of the first week or so of the trip. Glad I went, wouldn’t bother going back, though I loved Vancouver.

The tour proper started on the second night with a dinner, where we met our awesome travel guide, but also met the fascist group who would be the bane of our existence for two weeks. Hard drinking, small thinking, white trash with money. Ugh. But we also had some great people and I prefer to remember them instead.

Our first excursion was a First Nations guided tour up Indian Arm. Of great historical and spiritual signficance for the Salish people, I have the pretty scenery got dull after a bit because I was so bloody tired. But after a bit of a nap, I woke up and engaged our fantastic guide, Cease Wyss, in convo, which proved to be rewarding in the extreme. Amazing lady – an ethnobiologist, musician and drummer, canoe teacher, and instructor to First Nations actors. She made the trip a real highlight of the tour, and a great start. (Pictures after the cut – click to see full sized version in a new window) Continue reading “Canada”

North America – wow!

We took 2600 photos on this trip, and still couldn’t capture the full magnificence of it all. I’ll do my best to convey a little of it for you, but honestly, if I could pay for you all to do this trip yourselves, I would. It’s magical.

I will break up the photos into several several posts –Β  Canada, Alaska, Seattle, California, Mad Hotels, and Critters. But in brief, we had a magnificent time, stayed in some damn nice hotels, saw amazing things, met wonderful people (and some shitheads, meh), and ate lots and lots of incredible meals. It was as different an experience from the New Zealand debacle as you could imagine. I would heartily recommend APT as a company to tour with as well. So professional.

As a direct result of this trip, we bought a DSLR camera, a Nikon D5300 with telephoto, and we also booked a cruise to Antartica for December 2015. We fell in love with cruising, and Holland America proved itself to be a wonderful, safe and clean cruise line. A friend who will remain nameless was scornful at the idea of only spending three days in Antartica, but since the boat can’t land, and even if it did, I’m not sure what I would *do* in Antartica given the weather and limitations on exploring etc. I’m perfectly content with my choice. We go to Chile and Argentina, as well as the Falkland Islands. It’s a trip I would never do by land. Can’t wait.

 

Surgery update

Well, I had the surgery on Friday. It all went surprisingly smoothly and was a million times less traumatic and painful than the wisdom tooth extraction last year.

Today I got the dressings off. To my relief and my surgeon’s surprise, all the incisions have healed nicely, and now it’s just a question of the scars all settling down, which he expects they will do quite well. It was a whopper of a tumour – 35mm by 24mm in area, 11mm deep, and a mere millimetre from muscle. Had he had to cut into that, I’d be looking at much worse deformity. And had I (a) not been fed up enough to finally do something about it; (b) not spoken to my beautician about it and got a recommendation which in a roundabout way led to an excellent surgeon; and (c) we hadn’t had that windfall from Doug’s mother’s estate, I would probably not have done anything about the ‘scar’ until it was damn close to either killing or maiming me. So I’m amazingly lucky, and grateful as hell for my good fortune.

Pictures under the cut. Warning, pretty gross (no open wounds though). Remember, if you can’t login on my WP site, I will authorise you and email you as soon as I get the failure notice, so don’t panic! Continue reading “Surgery update”

Well, that’s a bit of a shock

Those of you who’ve met me in meat space may or may not have noticed I have an unsightly scar on the side of my nose which originated years ago (through zit picking, I’m ashamed to say) and has only become worse through various inflammations, cold induced nose skin damage and so on. It’s not only unsightly but because it becomes inflamed, it’s frequently sore. Continue reading “Well, that’s a bit of a shock”

Our new car :)

Mazda Australia did everything they could to stop us, but we managed to put an order in for a new Mazda 3 to be delivered in April when we get back from New Zealand. I know at least two of you reading this are car nuts, so the full saga is below πŸ™‚ (Oh and the website is still farting around so you may get “page missing” errors on some of the links below. Continue reading “Our new car :)”

Coming to America!

So our original Canada/Alaska September tour departure was cancelled, and we have been shifted to August, which I am not happy about, but whatever. We’re going, and that’s that.

Tour finishes on 30 August, whereupon we catch the Amtrak Cascades from Vancouver to Seattle. We have booked this apartment for our stay. The actual address is 2133 5th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98121, if you want to stalk us πŸ™‚

We fly on 6 September (First Class, woo hoo – it was cheaper than premium economy, go figure!) to San Francisco, where we stay until 15 September here.Β  Address is 199 New Montgomery St, San Francisco, CA 94105. Hope it doesn’t suck.

We’re off to New Zealand on March 12 to do this tour (not staying for extra time.) We were thinking of going whale watching in Western Australia between these trips, but the earlier departure kind of fucks that up. But we will probably go somewhere, possibly back to the Blue Mountains. Buying a new, bigger car in April specifically to make it easier for us to do longer trips, so we have to make use of it, don’t we πŸ™‚