.....hi again finally.......bronchitis and influenza A hit the ship and laid us low....
If you want to post to our Journal, one needs a google account; sending e-mails to us works great.
So I have a big post for you today (Dec 29th).....hope all of you are well!
Dec
24th,2014
Easter
Island
§
Easter
Island (Rapa Nui): We were 4 days at sea and arrived 0730 Dec 24th,
tenders delayed going ashore because of 6-8’ swell between ship and tenders and
tenders and pier, people still
wanting to go ashore in wheelchairs & walkers & canes.
§
Main
town is Hanga Roa, and beyond is National Park and UNESCO World Heritage
Site. Island is 117 sq.km. It was
settled by Polynesians and had a tragic history. Their glory was the quarrying and carving of the huge Moai
from volcanic rock but the centuries were marred by environmental degradation,
civil strife, and finally by the arrival of Europeans in 1722 with conflict,
disease and slave ships. The demise
of Easter Island can be seen as a smaller version of the rapacious
self-interest of inhabitants on planet Earth. Island was stripped of trees, rats ate palm nuts so no more grew, massive bird colonies were
eaten, vegetation wouldn’t grow because they had no more bird guano for
fertilization. Most of the impetus
was competition between tribes to keep building bigger and more impressive Moai
to “out-do” other Chiefs. Moai
built between 1250-1500 AD. 887 Moai on island but most in bad condition; with
397 still not cut completely out of the quarry. The biggest one called ‘El Gigante’ was unfinished and
probably up to 270 tons. Largest
Moai erected weighs 86 tons, 10 metres high. Only 1 Moai has legs – a kneeling Moai. 288 Moai were successfully transported
to platforms around the island (called Ahu’s). Ahu’s are incredibly engineered. Roads were constructed to
move the Moai. Debate still exists
as to how they were moved: legend
says they walked, and scientists have repeated the maneuver with several sets
of ropes to wobble the base back & forth (the front of the bases are
semi-circle. Others say that
wooden tripods were used to drag the horizontal Moai over lines of logs. However there are many toppled Moai
along all the roads which indicates that they fell over. Only a few Moai still
have red hats called Pau-Pau (pronounced poo-poo) made from red scoria rock.
Eyes were white rock with black obsidian rock for the pupils. Hats and eyes
were added after erection of the Moai, by building a ramp of rocks to climb to
the head. Most Moai face inland to watch over the villages; only a few face the
ocean.
§
4
of us hired a taxi (driver Goyman Gonzalez), and paid him $60 US each to tour 3
hours and visit Rana Raraku, Ahu Tongarika, Anakena Beach. Rana Raraku is the giant quarry on the
side of the volcanic mountain.
Unbelieveable!!! One has to
walk up a switch back lane cut out of the rock to see the Moai still lying in
the mountain at different stages of construction. The view shows many scattered Moai all around the dry
de-vegetated land. Many Moai were toppled by warring tribes who pushed the
statues over a rock to break their necks.
§
There
are many horses on the island – all reddish brown with a centre white patch on
their head. Apparently are
no pigs here.
§
Ahu
Tongarika has the most impressive set of Moai: 16 all facing inland on a huge high Ahu platform, one still
has a red hat, a few still have eyes. A tidal wave from the SE had swept them over 100 yards
inland but they were restored to the site. A goose-bump feeling at that place. WOW!
§
Anakena
Beach: the Moai stand high on a
platform at the edge of the sandy beach, they are the only Moai facing the
sea. This is the north side of the
island. This is the only
spectacular beach on the island.
§
Town
of Hanga Roa is thriving and busy, and located in a more lush area. Found some Escuador beer and a great
drink called Pisco Sour. We have
seen a few shipmates who consumed too many of those…….heheh.
We Loved Easter Island!
Dec
29,2014
………….some
miscellaneous stuff
·
The
onboard ~?60 foot pool is saltwater, changed fresh daily, 5’5” deep, with 5’
wide side decks ringed by 18” high edges. The ship motion gets replicated in
the waves / surf of the pool. At
one point I was surfed up onto the wide deck like a killer whale going after a
seal.
·
Large
pool deck seating area around the central pool on the 12th floor +
13th floor/veranda (called the 14th)overlooks with more
seating plus a rubberized track.
The 15th floor (back ½ of the ship) has a circular walking
track + shuffleboard + croquet + putting greens + golf swing tent + mini-golf +
fitness centre.
·
There
is every possible activity on board; no one should be bored but I met a woman
who only lived for the bingo and Trivia sessions.
·
4
pm High Teas with a string quartet playing – lovely
·
favorite
is breakfast room service every day – aaahhh coffee,etc while we watch the
ocean or the TV channels showing views from the bow & stern, plus trip
maps, weather, location, speed, conditions, and our cruise director Ray telling
us all…….News channels are U.S. and what a bunch of strident crap…….is there
really a Canada?
·
Many
lectures: eg. Dr. J. Kess (Prof from U of Vic) has
talked about South Pacific islands and history, culture, languages, and Pacific
Battles in WWII. Eg. A
session explaining the Tahitian and South Sea pearls and their differences from
others : Tahitian are black or
green or gold. We have booked a
visit to a pearl farm at Fanakarava Dec 31.
·
The
time keeps going back an hour every few days as we gobble up the longitude
meridians……yeah – extra sleep
·
You
can see the curvature of the earth very distinctly being so far from horizons –
wow
·
Special
birds: seeing frigate birds
and masked boobies
·
Switched
from original room 7024 Dec 23 to 8024 after fumes twice came through the floor
air return ducting. Fumes smelled
like varnish, causing headache and dizziness. Staff were very, very responsive.
·
Just
concluded a ship wide “ship building competition”; 8 teams had the final sail today (Dec 29th) in the pool. My team came 4th. I got nailed as the team
captain because I had to go for a pee.
Fantastic fun, and tremendous creativity among the groups. The team that
won had a 90 year old team member who had gone to D-Day in WWII. The rules primarily required that it
had to carry cargo (6 full pop cans), float over 20 feet, and not be made of
anything fastened to the ship……heheh
·
Crossed
Mariana Trench on Dec 26th – the deepest part of the planet ~7
miles, crescent shaped scar in the bottom.
·
Dec
27 wind & weather shift to N, 20 knots, disturbed skies – waterspouts?
·
Cold
symptoms during Christmas Eve night, rapid worsening until Dec 26, into clinic
p.m. Dec 27 with bronchitis & influenza A. then quarantined in my room till today. After paying 3 times
the cost of my deluxe Travel medical insurance I am better. Luckily I have it.
The ship has a top-notch medical clinic, however it is U.S.A style of user pay.
You should hear the coughing all around the ship. Unfortunately poor Pat A is now not feeling well (Dec 29)