Thursday March 29th 2012 - at sea
Laps:6 Steps:85
The sea has been very calm so far this cruise... but we are promised a change in the weather soon.
Su is a bit crook - a cold coming on?? I dine alone with our other four dinner companions.
Have I mentioned the Bose Soundlink wireless portable speaker? I had bought some Bose sound cancelling earphones (SC3's) from Meyers in the city, and when picking them up, I had asked idly if Bose had a portable speaker through which I could play music from the iPod built into my iPhone.
I was amazed at the quality of this little stereo speaker. Not that little - 10"x5"x2" (250mm x 125mm x 50mm) and weighing a couple of pounds (1.5kgs)
It hooks up to the iPhone wirelessly via bluetooth, and with a rechargeable battery that last from 3-8 hours between charges, (depending on volume), there are no trailing wires. And excellent build quality.
It uses some of the typical Bose acoustic tricks - you set it up a short distance from a wall and it back projects the bass frequencies from a speaker in the rear of the unit. The treble comes from stereo speakers in the front. An amazing sound.
So I bought one. At dusk, over a G&T or two, we have been listening to Earl Klugh's jazz/fusion album called "Cool" with Bob James on piano. Top stuff. This is one of the best musical bits of kit I own.
Friday March 30th 2012 - at sea
Laps:6 Steps:85x2
Another formal night. We have an alcohol free day and a dining-room free day. Clocks go back one hour.
Saturday March 31st 2012 - at sea
Laps:6 Steps:85
A pre-dinner drinks party this evening in the cabin of one of our dinner table couples. We take some gin and the Bose portable speaker. Good fun. We resolve to hold another soon.
Sunday April 1st 2012 - at sea
Laps:6 Steps:85
Clocks go back one hour.
Monday April 2st 2012 - Mauritius Isle
Laps:6 Steps:85
We rarely take up the ship's organised tours, because they (a) cost a lot, (b) take one to shopping centres, and (c) flood the area your visiting, with lots of old, slow moving pensioners (us!)
The previous night, our dinner party members suggested we collectively hire a local taxi and do the sights independently. This is the strategy Su and I nomally employ, so we gladly went along with the idea.
One of our intrepid members duly went ashore this morning and negotiated the hire of a local taxi for 4 hours. We headed off towards the south of the island.
(L-R) Su, Rod, Elaine, Jack, Barbara, Robin
First port of call was a small extinct volcano calderra, with a lookout over the island. Next was a diamond showroom. Groan! None of was really interested in buying stuff, so we then banned any more shops. This raise his eyebrows a bit, but he went along with it.
We then stopped at a hand made glass factory - very interesting. The workers were wearing almost no personal protective equipment (PPE) at all!! They will all go blind and deaf without PPE.
We then stopped at a model ship factory/showroom. Despite some initial doubts, this turned out to be a real winner.
A personalised tour of the workshop, foundry, lathe room, assembly area, and finally the show room, was fascinating. Check it out!! www.mauritiusshipmodels.com Then a drive down to the south to see the "coloured sands" - a nature park featuring different coloured clays. Yes....
Finally, a quick stop at a supermarket to stock up on tonic water, then the race back to catch the ship, fighting through peak hour traffic to get back in time.
Tuesday April 3st 2012 - Reunion Isle
Laps:0 Steps:0
Su's got this lurgi this morning, so I head off alone to catch the shuttle bus, which takes us to St Gilles area, where I get some badly needed currency out of an ATM. This island is a French protectorate, so it uses the Euro currency, which will suit my purposes when I get to Europe. One minor problem with visiting many different countries, is the clutch of small notes and coins that one ends up with at the end of the visit. I've been avoiding changing my diminishing pile of Australian/US dollars to the point where I had to borrow $USD10 from the taxi driver yesterday!
Anyway, in the little seaside village, I struggle to make my intentions clear in my almost non-existent French; conversations which ends up being part English, part schoolboy French but mostly Italian. Asking one shop owner the whereabouts of an internet cafe, I am misunderstood, and am served a very good espresso coffee. With a Gallic shrug of acceptance, I drink the coffee, and we talk about the different ways to "correct" coffee. He then points me in the (correct) direction of a cybercafe - "a droit!" It was a nice, gentle, little adventure.
Finally back in digital land, where I speak the language fluently, I sit down at the computer screen, to download the latest economist!
Sacre bleu! The keyboard is French! The QWERTY keyboard is missing! The keys are all in different places!
I have to single-finger hunt-and-peck to find the right keys to press to log on. And all the system messages, (and all the menus), are all in French.
Lucky the Proprietor speaks excellent English, and he teaches me where the "@" sign is. You have to press a combination of three keys to get it. I think the French have reassigned the keyboard to fit in all those funny umlauts, graves, ecute's etc. So much for digital fluency.
I buy some postcards, some cheap French wine, and head back to the ship. Good fun. Clocks go back tonight. We are now eight hours behind Melbourne time. Su is still feeling less than 100%, so we skip dinner and have an early night.
Wednesday April 4th 2012 - at sea
Laps:6 Steps:85
Bad weather - rain, wind, a swell, the ship is displaying a lot of movement. Not many people on the Promenade deck this morning. I sit in the cafe and write this nonsense up….

Happy Easter Rod and Su. Had a txt from Su two days ago saying that you were berthing in Durban at just that moment. My impression from neighbours I lived next door to in Kew, who were natives of Natal, and I think of Durban, is that Durban is a vibrant place. Hope South Africa is treating you well. I'm back to work tomorrow after an astonishingly quick 4 day Easter break. What am I doing with my life, what will I accomplish at this rate?
ReplyDeleteI agree about the initial frustrations of the AZERTY keyboard, although it doesn't take long to get used to.