earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
- earendel
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earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
Our original plan was to have a day in Vancouver doing some sightseeing, but that went out the window when the luggage snafu occurred. We got up and spent our day trying to find clothing and something to carry it in. After enjoyig the continental breakfast at the motel we headed out, armed with a map thoughtfully provided by the desk clerks (elwing asked about places to shop) and spent our morning engaged in a retail safari. Purchasing clothing has never been one of my favorite activities, and given my size I'm not an easy fit anyway, so it made it doubly difficult to find anything that I could wear. We tried at least a dozen different stores before finding pants that I could wear, but they were too long. elwing said that she could sew them up for me to wear, so I purchased them along with a couple of shirts. elwing needed both clothes and shoes, so that took a little extra time. And we had to use a debit card because our Canadian money was packed away for when we'd be in the interior - what little we had was only supposed to cover a meal before boarding the ship.
Lunch was at a restaurant called (IIRC) The White Spot, famous for a special mayonnaise-based sauce that they put on their burgers and other dishes. The food was good but the service was, shall we say leisurely? But we weren't worried because according to our documentation the ship left the dock at 5PM and we could catch a bus from the airport to the dock at 4PM. We finished dinner and headed to the airport to turn in the rental car, then make our way to the site where we would catch the bus.
Unfortunately our documentation was wrong - the last shuttle from the airport was at 3PM and the ship was to sail at 4. The Holland-America representative got us a cab (for which they paid), and we headed off to the docks. Surprisingly the traffic in downtown Vancouver on a Saturday was fairly heavy and the cab driver (from India or Pakistan) was in no hurry, assuring us that we'd make it in plenty of time. Wrong again - we pulled up to the terminal and had to rush through to check in, then rush to get onboard - the passengers were already involved in the mandatory lifeboat drill done just prior to boarding; we missed it but at least were onboard just before the ship left the dock.
Interestingly, even though the ship sailed, it didn't go anywhere for a while. It was in a queue to leave the harbor, so it actually went in circles for about an hour before being cleared for passage. We had an early dinner on the Lido deck (the regular dinner seating was at 7:00) then went to the cabin, which was very nice. Unlike our transatlantic cruise, this cabin actually had windows out of which we could see the sea, or more appropriately, the coastline. We were traveling through part of the "Inner Passage" so we had the Canadian coast on the starboard side of the ship and a string of islands on the port side.
Our dinner seating was problematic for me since we had to share a table with six other people, none of whom we knew. I've mentioned before that I have a problem eating in the presence of strangers if I'm seated with them - I'm painfully shy and not good at conversation, not to mention my fear that I'll have something stuck to my teeth or drop food on my clothing. But I survived the meal and elwing and I went to the Piano Bar for what was supposed to be a music trivia event starting at 8:30. It had already started by the time we arrived, so I didn't get a chance to participate. Just as well - it was more of a "song identification" game than anything else, and all the tunes were disco, meaning that it was hard to distinguish among them (all the host played was a snippet of the introduction).
After that it was time for bed - after two days of early rising and late bedtimes I was ready to enjoy a good night's rest, hoping that what had proved to be a rough start would get better.
Lunch was at a restaurant called (IIRC) The White Spot, famous for a special mayonnaise-based sauce that they put on their burgers and other dishes. The food was good but the service was, shall we say leisurely? But we weren't worried because according to our documentation the ship left the dock at 5PM and we could catch a bus from the airport to the dock at 4PM. We finished dinner and headed to the airport to turn in the rental car, then make our way to the site where we would catch the bus.
Unfortunately our documentation was wrong - the last shuttle from the airport was at 3PM and the ship was to sail at 4. The Holland-America representative got us a cab (for which they paid), and we headed off to the docks. Surprisingly the traffic in downtown Vancouver on a Saturday was fairly heavy and the cab driver (from India or Pakistan) was in no hurry, assuring us that we'd make it in plenty of time. Wrong again - we pulled up to the terminal and had to rush through to check in, then rush to get onboard - the passengers were already involved in the mandatory lifeboat drill done just prior to boarding; we missed it but at least were onboard just before the ship left the dock.
Interestingly, even though the ship sailed, it didn't go anywhere for a while. It was in a queue to leave the harbor, so it actually went in circles for about an hour before being cleared for passage. We had an early dinner on the Lido deck (the regular dinner seating was at 7:00) then went to the cabin, which was very nice. Unlike our transatlantic cruise, this cabin actually had windows out of which we could see the sea, or more appropriately, the coastline. We were traveling through part of the "Inner Passage" so we had the Canadian coast on the starboard side of the ship and a string of islands on the port side.
Our dinner seating was problematic for me since we had to share a table with six other people, none of whom we knew. I've mentioned before that I have a problem eating in the presence of strangers if I'm seated with them - I'm painfully shy and not good at conversation, not to mention my fear that I'll have something stuck to my teeth or drop food on my clothing. But I survived the meal and elwing and I went to the Piano Bar for what was supposed to be a music trivia event starting at 8:30. It had already started by the time we arrived, so I didn't get a chance to participate. Just as well - it was more of a "song identification" game than anything else, and all the tunes were disco, meaning that it was hard to distinguish among them (all the host played was a snippet of the introduction).
After that it was time for bed - after two days of early rising and late bedtimes I was ready to enjoy a good night's rest, hoping that what had proved to be a rough start would get better.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- nitrah55
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Oh, man, ear.
Re-scheduled flights, lost luggage, near miss of boat departure.
If you're not a drinking man, you may want to start.
I hope things go well from here on.
Please keep us posted. Since I'm doing a similar cruise in August, I hope to learn from your...experience.
Re-scheduled flights, lost luggage, near miss of boat departure.
If you're not a drinking man, you may want to start.
I hope things go well from here on.
Please keep us posted. Since I'm doing a similar cruise in August, I hope to learn from your...experience.
I am about 25% sure of this.
- Bob Juch
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So did you wind up like this?:


I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- ulysses5019
- Purveyor of Avatars
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Here's an addendum to Bob's post from a CNN iReport:Bob Juch wrote:So did you wind up like this?:
The small cruise ship "Spirit of Glacier Bay" ran aground in Glacier Bay NP this morning.
The ship is "High & Dry" in front of Grand Pacific Glacier. As far as I know there are no injuries, 55 persons onboard, USCG/Park Service on scene.
regards,
Captain Fred Eversen
Master ms Amsterdam
Holland America Line
I believe in the usefulness of useless information.
- MarleysGh0st
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- gsabc
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Oh goodie. Cruise West was the primary choice for our eventual Alaskan cruise. I hope GW doesn't hear about this.MarleysGh0st wrote:One of the Cruise West ships--I thought it looked familiar!ulysses5019 wrote: The small cruise ship "Spirit of Glacier Bay" ran aground in Glacier Bay NP this morning.
Not one of the ones I've been on, though.
I just ordered chicken and an egg from Amazon. I'll let you know.
- a1mamacat
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Re: earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
Ah...one of my favourite places to eat. White Spot, home of the Triple OhOhOh Sauce. In times gone by, when Big J was Wee Jamie, he much enjoyed the "Pirate Pack". A lovely cardboard ship, loaded with a hot dog and fries and a drink.earendel wrote: at a restaurant called (IIRC) The White Spot, famous for a special mayonnaise-based sauce that they put on their burgers and other dishes. The food was good but the service was, shall we say leisurely?
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Re: earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
We used to have a White Spot here about a billion years ago, but I didn't think it was a franchise. Or maybe White Spot is just a pretty common name. It was a drive-thru and the sign was a big white splotch, but with jagged edges. Kind of like if you stomped on a Chinese Star.a1mamacat wrote: Ah...one of my favourite places to eat. White Spot, home of the Triple OhOhOh Sauce. In times gone by, when Big J was Wee Jamie, he much enjoyed the "Pirate Pack". A lovely cardboard ship, loaded with a hot dog and fries and a drink.
It closed a long, long time ago, though. I think the chain drive-thrus killed it, a long with a lot of others, Griff's (their mascot looked kind of like the Pillsbury Doughboy carrying a platter), Howdy Pard (the sign looked like that neon Cowboy in Vegas, it was the home of the Howdy Burger!), Macaylis (I think McDonald's ripped off their M design from them). Btw, if Macaylis was a franchise and anybody still remembers it, can somebody tell me how it's spelled? It was pronounced Mc-Kay-liss and they had a Big M burger.
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- earendel
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Re: earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
Saucy, one of the regrets on the trip was that I didn't get a chance to meet you. I had thought about trying to arrange something (assuming you'd be available) but never got around to it. Perhaps it was fate intervening, considering the travel troubles we had - really no time in Vancouver to speak of.a1mamacat wrote:Ah...one of my favourite places to eat. White Spot, home of the Triple OhOhOh Sauce. In times gone by, when Big J was Wee Jamie, he much enjoyed the "Pirate Pack". A lovely cardboard ship, loaded with a hot dog and fries and a drink.earendel wrote: at a restaurant called (IIRC) The White Spot, famous for a special mayonnaise-based sauce that they put on their burgers and other dishes. The food was good but the service was, shall we say leisurely?
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- a1mamacat
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Re: earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
earendel wrote:Saucy, one of the regrets on the trip was that I didn't get a chance to meet you. I had thought about trying to arrange something (assuming you'd be available) but never got around to it. Perhaps it was fate intervening, considering the travel troubles we had - really no time in Vancouver to speak of.a1mamacat wrote:Ah...one of my favourite places to eat. White Spot, home of the Triple OhOhOh Sauce. In times gone by, when Big J was Wee Jamie, he much enjoyed the "Pirate Pack". A lovely cardboard ship, loaded with a hot dog and fries and a drink.earendel wrote: at a restaurant called (IIRC) The White Spot, famous for a special mayonnaise-based sauce that they put on their burgers and other dishes. The food was good but the service was, shall we say leisurely?
Given the itinerary you listed in the first post, I am not surprised at all. And as per the traffic, Vancouver is a tourist mecca, especially in the summer, and is hugely busy, with insane one-way streets etc.
Next time, add a couple of days to the trip. You can head over to Vancouver Island, which is awesomely beautiful. There we will have high tea, stroll the waterfront, and visit the most northernly rainforest on earth. (And I have needles and thread for Elwing should she need them LOL)
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- ulysses5019
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Re: earendel's "North to Alaska" trip - Day 2
Ok, high tea at the Empress and the a drive out to Ucluelet and Tofino.a1mamacat wrote:earendel wrote:Saucy, one of the regrets on the trip was that I didn't get a chance to meet you. I had thought about trying to arrange something (assuming you'd be available) but never got around to it. Perhaps it was fate intervening, considering the travel troubles we had - really no time in Vancouver to speak of.a1mamacat wrote: Ah...one of my favourite places to eat. White Spot, home of the Triple OhOhOh Sauce. In times gone by, when Big J was Wee Jamie, he much enjoyed the "Pirate Pack". A lovely cardboard ship, loaded with a hot dog and fries and a drink.
Given the itinerary you listed in the first post, I am not surprised at all. And as per the traffic, Vancouver is a tourist mecca, especially in the summer, and is hugely busy, with insane one-way streets etc.
Next time, add a couple of days to the trip. You can head over to Vancouver Island, which is awesomely beautiful. There we will have high tea, stroll the waterfront, and visit the most northernly rainforest on earth. (And I have needles and thread for Elwing should she need them LOL)
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