Showing posts with label landscape painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscape painting. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 April 2015

Wednesday 8/4/2015 Day 92 Sailing between Yemen and Somalia, latitude 12, temp 30C

It’s the second sea day to Jordan and now we are sailing along the Gulf of Aden towards Aqaba. It’s another hot one so we are enjoying some educational activities indoors.  I am watching a documentary about the design and build of the Bahrain world trade centre’s twin towers with their environmentally friendly wind turbines, between the towers and powering them to save the equivalent of 6,000,000 barrels of oil p.a.   

We have once again spent a very healthy hour in the gym today, increasing our times and walking distance on the treadmill, rower, static bike and arm cycle. These machines are all positioned so we can see out of the windows to the front of the ship, but also have sockets for headphones so we can watch the Arcadia’s channels while we work.  We are maintaining safe and healthy exercising heart rates, all calculated electronically using our weight and age.  I had a lovely yoga practice afterwards too.  Next up was art – today’s watercolour was an autumn leafy landscape (Alderley Woods, that’s the Alderley Edge near Manchester).  Partly happy with this, partly not!  Easa's is the first one.  You have to guess which belongs to Khachik and which to me.





Tomorrow, a King Charles Spaniel.
Another part of the on-board university consists of whetting our appetite with information from the ports we have still to come on Sector 5. There’s a port talk on every sea day. The person doing all the port talks is called Sam.  She doesn’t tire, and she remains very professional calm and pleasant. Sometimes she has had to deal with tours not going quite to plan too, and some fellow passengers can get a bit heated. Anyway, back to the talks. Yesterday’s was Aqaba and today Piraeus. We are all set for these two.    

We are right in the middle of a profoundly troubled middle east, sailing between Yemen and Somalia but apart from the security measures on board you wouldn’t know it.   We will be visiting Petra when we arrive in Aqaba. We tourists have booked a whole day tour (10 hours) to get there, walk the walk to the Lost City, take a rest, lunch and then set off back for the ship. The weather forecast is 7-17C.  The walk is 5 miles to “the Treasury” and back, but you can go further if you have the energy. 
There are times when my own personal experiences and the happenings on this cruise are totally eclipsed by the bigger picture. This is one of those times.  I am really mindful of those people who belong in Syria, especially so because we are going to be in one of Syria’s neighbouring countries, conscious of all our wealth and privilege, whilst thousands of refugees fight for their lives having lost everything. I have been watching the devastation in Yarmouk on TV.  It was unimaginable horror. Even before .  I will not blog about this any more for now even though the human suffering around us is dominating my thoughts, there are a few good reasons I don't want to discuss it here.  However, my thoughts are really not only about this journey.

After Aqaba we have another few days at sea, sailing through the Suez Canal, no longer stopping in Egypt instead heading straight for Piraeus for Athens, Greece.  On that day we have booked “Ancient Corinth and Canal Cruise”. That’s when our ship’s security measures will be lifted.
Once we have visited Athens we will only have two stops left – Valetta in Malta and Lisbon in Portugal.  How can that be? Honestly I cannot believe we have been away 3 months already.  I will when I read this 40,000 word blog back!

When we got back to our cabin we had a lunch invite for tomorrow under the door.  This is the second lunch for half of the world cruisers today and the other half the day after.  We loved the first one.  We were sitting on that occasion with an officer called Victoria Fletcher, who has remembered us ever since and even yesterday stopped for a chat, admiring our Thai silk!  I am looking forward to something just as good tomorrow.  

I forgot to say yesterday that we also had some P and O post to let us know that we have moved up a tier on the loyalty programme.  We are now on the “Mediterranean” tier entitling us to 8.5% discount on our on-board spends, giving us great satisfaction.  That has been applied to our tours for this sector, a coffee each in Costa and yesterday’s shopping spree in Piccadilly on deck 3. 
We like this.

We are just getting ready for dinner so will say bye for now.  Sea days make me focus a lot on food, as there is so much of it, and so many choices.  Perhaps the blog will reflect this tomorrow, as there are going to be two scrummy menu’s to report!  Bye for today.