Showing posts with label bells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bells. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

40 Days of Thankfulness: Days Thirty-one through Thirty-five

Day 31, November 14: Dr. Roberto Salvatori and Johns Hopkins. I found Dr Salvatori to be wonderfully kind, interested and knowledgeable. He listened thoughtfully to my complaints and never suggested that I was simply "fat and depressed". In the first visit, I learned things about my diagnosis that my previous endo had completely skipped. I feel confident that he will take care of any future endocrine issues. It didn't hurt that he was showing my website and bio around to other staff when I went for an appointment!

Day 32, November 15: Facebook. What can I say? FB has brought me closer to people I might not have otherwise known.


Day 33, November 16: Bells. I love playing handbells. Nearly any bells but I really like the lower octave, the G3-B3 area.I'm not so good with 4-in-hand or shelley ringing. For more info about handbell techniques, there's a good article here.


Day 34, November 17: Computers. When the first computer came into this house I wasn't a happy camper. It cost far too much and I couldn't see any value in it at all. There was a tiny grey/yellow monitor, no hard drive. What good can come of this?

Things changed a bit over the years!


Day 35, November 18: Today is the first annversary of my one and only zipline experience. I’ve been thinking about since my kidney cancer surgery 3 years earlier. Since then, I figure I have “extra years” and I wanted to do something kinda scary, yet fun. So, somehow, I decided on ziplining.

What I wrote then:

Day Four, November 18, 2009: Belize City, Honduras

Today's Schedule!


From http://www.belizecruiseexcursions.com/BelizeCaveTubingZipLineExcursion.htm

Belize Enjoy two of the most exciting tours offered in Belize today, cave tubing and the canopy zip line excursions on your one day visit to Belize!

Your Zip Line adventure begins from the First Platform where you will "jump" from the first Platform to zip to the next Platform found 150ft away. Flying through the air surrounded by nature is the most exhilarating feeling ever encountered, the Ziiiiiiip birds and Howler Monkeys found onsite will be at eye level making you one with the prolific nature Belize is famous for.

The Zip Line Adventure consists of 8 Zip Line Platforms each strategically located within the Rainforest canopy. Double cables (each capable of withstanding 2,000 pounds of weight, the requirement for this tour truly has nothing to do with weight but with the size of the safety equipment) are used for the ultimate safety. All landing Platforms are equipped with safety gear, handrails and Guides to meet your next landing as well as to ensure your personal safety throughout the tour. The Platforms are as high as 85ft into the Canopy and as far apart as 250ft!

Extreme adventure with X-stream BelizeOn the second part of your exciting excursion you will then reach the Cave Branch System Welcome Area where you will be fitted with your life vest, (if you would like one) cave lamp and your tube.

The famous Cave WaveThe walk to the beginning of the first Cave Entrance is an easy gentle 30 to 40 minute stroll through the beautiful Belizean Rainforest. Your guide will take you through two dry caves where many stalagmites and stalactites can be admired along the way. Once we have reached our access point for your Cave Tubing adventure, you will be able to enter the crystal clear, refreshing river and enter the first cave. A picture of the first cave can be seen on our website but unfortunately the picture does not do the area justice as the cave entrance and color of the water is simply spectacular!

You will visit 1 full underground cave system (2 caves) within the Cave Branch System, you will also be guided to underground dry caves within the cave system, a treat only offered by our outfit, X-Stream Cave Tubing! As you approach the end of your cave tubing experience you will float through small fun rapids where you will pickup some speed and end the cave tubing ride in style, bringing you right back to the starting point of your Cave Tubing adventure. Tropical Fruits are offered following your excursion.

If a picture is worth a thousand words the following pictures should give you a great description of both tours.


jungle walk to the caverns

Belize tubing Jungle walk through cave

Trekking in the Belizean Rain Forest, an easy 30 minute walk with your tube cave tubing entrance

Walking through a cave on the way to the river for the cave tubing


belize cave tubing

X-Stream Cave Tubing Excursion

In the Rain Forest, an easy 30 minute walk with your tube to the river tubing entrance

Off we go on our Xtreme Cave Tubing Adventure


belize cave tubing easy river tube entrance

Cave Tubing  in Belize into the caves we go

Regular Cave-Tubing entry and our guides assist you if you need help

Floating through the Belizean underworld


Belize tubing floating in the dark

Cave Tubing Excursions, Belize

Exploring the cave system and various formations by the glow of the cave lights (head lights?)

The famous cave wave


Walking to the begining of the zip line excursion

Guide explaining how to zip line, jumping and landing instructions

The short walk through the rainforest to reach the first platform.

The Guides instruct the Zip method and explain the cables, platforms and itinerary. You can see the double cables.


Guide and test pilot hooking up safety equipment before zipping

Ziiiiiiip

Getting ready for the first jump to the first platform 85ft in the air!

Zip lining away!!!!


One of the zip line platforms, they are wayyyy up there

Group on one of the zip line canopy platforms

One of the many platforms found high in the canopy

Wayyy up!


Getting ready to repel from the canopy platform

Back to Earth safe and sound.  LET'S DO IT AGAIN!!!

At the end of the Zip Line Excursion you will repel from the last platform back down to Earth.

Easy does it. This is the experience of a lifetime!

Up and at ‘em early this morning.

This is finally the zipline day I’ve been thinking about since my kidney cancer surgery 3 years ago. Since then, I figure I have “extra years” and I wanted to do something kinda scary, yet fun. So, somehow, I decided on ziplining. Tom wouldn’t go with me but Michael would so I set this up almost as soon as we booked this cruise.

Our tour left first so after breakfast, Michael and I got on the tender for Belize. Tom’s tender was about 45 minutes later. Even though the tender went zipping along, it was about 20 minutes to shore.

We got on our bus with about 30 other brave and not-so-brave folks and our guide, Eddie, told us a bit about Belize City, Belize in general and what to expect on our tour.

Belize City used to be the capital of British Honduras (as Belize was formerly named) but it’s 2 feet below sea level and prone to hurricanes so the capital was moved to the other city – Belmopan in 1970. It was almost entirely destroyed in 1961 when Hurricane Hattie swept ashore on October 31.

Because of the altitude, graves are all above ground.

The main languages are English (the official language), Spanish and Kriol. Eddie said the kids learned English in school but, as soon as they were out, it was back to the Kriol. They wear uniforms to school.

Bordering on Mexico, Guatemala and the Caribbean, Belize is the second smallest country in Central America (after El Salvador), with an area of approximately 9,000 square miles that includes numerous small islands off the coast known as cayes.

More than half of the mainland is covered with dense forests, and at its longest point Belize is 174 miles long while its greatest width is 68 miles. Long a strong advocate of environmental protection, the government has set aside approximately 20% of its land as nature reserves.

There are also several important Mayan sites situated on the mainland such as Altun Ha and Xunantunich that make for excellent day trips and are included on shore excursions by most cruise ships. As a matter of fact, Belize has the highest concentration of Mayan sites of all the countries in Central America.

Eddie tried to tell us that our tour would be scary – but FUN, it would be hard – but FUN. He himself had done the zipline only once, because he had to for this job. He said that the caves might have things brushing up against us but they would be leaves and twigs. The caves might have “log-gators” in them, too.

We travelled along the 37-mile drive along the Western Highway – the scenery changed from city to suburbs, to a settlement called Hattieville where hurricane survivors met to life after the country was destroyed, to the beginnings of the rain forest.

We turned down a road to a jaguar preserve – yes, they have them here! then, finally, to our destination, Caves Branch National Park.

Eddie handed out water (which we had to leave on the bus). A bathroom break, then off to the zipline area.

Each person had a harness around their legs with attached pulleys and carabiners. Women had them on their chests as well. In addition, we had leather construction gloves and hard hats.

We climbed to the top of the first platform and were given brief instructions and off we went. Because of the heavy gloves, I couldn’t get any pictures. I had thought that they would take some of us on the hardest line to sell to us later but they didn't. They also didn’t have cave pictures or T-Shirts. What a missed opportunity!

This was so cool, so much fun. I thought I might be afraid at first but I wasn’t. I just followed instructions and went.

Sometimes they told us to break. We did that with the right hand, which was always on the upper cable.

After the second line, I must have braked too soon because I stopped before I got to the platform. Michael was headed toward me. The guide on the end of the platform wanted me to do some hand over hand maneuver but I couldn’t figure out what he was saying so he came and got me by wrapping his legs around me and pulling me to the platform.

After that, no more problems with braking!

The next platform was very high – over 70 feet in the air – and the climb up was difficult. It was very hot and the rocks were very uneven. I don’t know that I would have gotten to the next platform if Michael hadn’t cheered me on all the way.

We zipped down the next six lines up to 250-feet between platforms and 85-feet high in the trees, at canopy level. It seemed like it was all over too soon.

But, I did it! No fear, just fun.

Here we are, after getting our gear off. The people behind Michael are just starting out on their zipline adventure. I thought maybe we could go again…?

Next stop was lunch in the trees. It was a buffet similar to those in Barbados – a jerk chicken (Eddie had said it would taste like chicken – might be egret, road kill, log-gator or even…chicken!), peas and rice, a pasta salad, cake, fruit salad, the usual fare.

Next up, cave tubing! This is the event I got my new waterproof camera for. Thanks again, Alice! If you're interested in reading the cave tubing part, it's here: http://www.cushingsonline.com/cruise/cruise2009.htm

Posted via email from Cushings Help

40 Days of Thankfulness: Days Thirty-one through Thirty-five

[[posterous-content:pid___0]]

Day 31, November 14: Dr. Roberto Salvatori and Johns Hopkins.  I found Dr Salvatori to be wonderfully kind, interested and knowledgeable. He listened thoughtfully to my complaints and never suggested that I was simply "fat and depressed". In the first visit, I learned things about my diagnosis that my previous endo had completely skipped.  I feel confident that he will take care of any future endocrine issues.  [[posterous-content:pid___1]]It didn't hurt that he was showing my website and bio around to other staff when I went for an appointment!

 
Day 32, November 15: Facebook.  What can I say?  FB has brought me closer to people I might not have otherwise known.


Day 33, November 16:  Bells.  I love playing handbells.  Nearly any bells but I really like the lower octave, the G3-B3 area.I'm not so good with 4-in-hand or shelley ringing. For more info about handbell techniques, there's a good article here.


Day 34, November 17:  Computers.  When the first computer came into this house I wasn't a happy camper.  It cost far too much and I couldn't see any value in it at all.  There was a tiny grey/yellow monitor, no hard drive.  What good can come of this?

Things changed a bit over the years!


Day 35, November 18: Today is the first annversary of my one and only zipline experience  I’ve been thinking about since my kidney cancer surgery 3 years earlier. Since then, I figure I have “extra years” and I wanted to do something kinda scary, yet fun. So, somehow, I decided on ziplining.

What I wrote then:

Day Four, November 18, 2009: Belize City, Honduras

Today's Schedule!


From http://www.belizecruiseexcursions.com/BelizeCaveTubingZipLineExcursion.htm

Belize Enjoy two of the most exciting tours offered in Belize today, cave tubing and the canopy zip line excursions on your one day visit to Belize!

Your Zip Line adventure begins from the First Platform where you will "jump" from the first Platform to zip to the next Platform found 150ft away. Flying through the air surrounded by nature is the most exhilarating feeling ever encountered, the Ziiiiiiip birds and Howler Monkeys found onsite will be at eye level making you one with the prolific nature Belize is famous for.

The Zip Line Adventure consists of 8 Zip Line Platforms each strategically located within the Rainforest canopy. Double cables (each capable of withstanding 2,000 pounds of weight, the requirement for this tour truly has nothing to do with weight but with the size of the safety equipment) are used for the ultimate safety. All landing Platforms are equipped with safety gear, handrails and Guides to meet your next landing as well as to ensure your personal safety throughout the tour. The Platforms are as high as 85ft into the Canopy and as far apart as 250ft!

 

Extreme adventure with X-stream BelizeOn the second part of your exciting excursion you will then reach the Cave Branch System Welcome Area where you will be fitted with your life vest, (if you would like one) cave lamp and your tube.

 

The famous Cave WaveThe walk to the beginning of the first Cave Entrance is an easy gentle 30 to 40 minute stroll through the beautiful Belizean Rainforest. Your guide will take you through two dry caves where many stalagmites and stalactites can be admired along the way. Once we have reached our access point for your Cave Tubing adventure, you will be able to enter the crystal clear, refreshing river and enter the first cave. A picture of the first cave can be seen on our website but unfortunately the picture does not do the area justice as the cave entrance and color of the water is simply spectacular!

You will visit 1 full underground cave system (2 caves) within the Cave Branch System, you will also be guided to underground dry caves within the cave system, a treat only offered by our outfit, X-Stream Cave Tubing! As you approach the end of your cave tubing experience you will float through small fun rapids where you will pickup some speed and end the cave tubing ride in style, bringing you right back to the starting point of your Cave Tubing adventure. Tropical Fruits are offered following your excursion.

If a picture is worth a thousand words the following pictures should give you a great description of both tours.


jungle walk to the caverns

Belize tubing Jungle walk through cave

Trekking in the Belizean Rain Forest, an easy 30 minute walk with your tube cave tubing entrance

Walking through a cave on the way to the river for the cave tubing

 


belize cave tubing

X-Stream Cave Tubing Excursion

In the Rain Forest, an easy 30 minute walk with your tube to the river tubing entrance

Off we go on our Xtreme Cave Tubing Adventure

 


belize cave tubing easy river tube entrance

Cave Tubing  in Belize into the caves we go

Regular Cave-Tubing entry and our guides assist you if you need help

Floating through the Belizean underworld

 


Belize tubing floating in the dark

Cave Tubing Excursions, Belize

Exploring the cave system and various formations by the glow of the cave lights (head lights?)

The famous cave wave

 


Walking to the begining of the zip line excursion

Guide explaining how to zip line, jumping and landing instructions

The short walk through the rainforest to reach the first platform.

The Guides instruct the Zip method and explain the cables, platforms and itinerary. You can see the double cables.

 


Guide and test pilot hooking up safety equipment before zipping

Ziiiiiiip

Getting ready for the first jump to the first platform 85ft in the air!

Zip lining away!!!!

 


One of the zip line platforms, they are wayyyy up there

Group on one of the zip line canopy platforms

One of the many platforms found high in the canopy

Wayyy up!

 


Getting ready to repel from the canopy platform

Back to Earth safe and sound.  LET'S DO IT AGAIN!!!

At the end of the Zip Line Excursion you will repel from the last platform back down to Earth.

Easy does it. This is the experience of a lifetime!

 

Up and at ‘em early this morning.

This is finally the zipline day I’ve been thinking about since my kidney cancer surgery 3 years ago. Since then, I figure I have “extra years” and I wanted to do something kinda scary, yet fun. So, somehow, I decided on ziplining. Tom wouldn’t go with me but Michael would so I set this up almost as soon as we booked this cruise.

Our tour left first so after breakfast, Michael and I got on the tender for Belize. Tom’s tender was about 45 minutes later. Even though the tender went zipping along, it was about 20 minutes to shore.

 

We got on our bus with about 30 other brave and not-so-brave folks and our guide, Eddie, told us a bit about Belize City, Belize in general and what to expect on our tour.

 

Belize City used to be the capital of British Honduras (as Belize was formerly named) but it’s 2 feet below sea level and prone to hurricanes so the capital was moved to the other city – Belmopan in 1970. It was almost entirely destroyed in 1961 when Hurricane Hattie swept ashore on October 31.

 

Because of the altitude, graves are all above ground.

 

The main languages are English (the official language), Spanish and Kriol. Eddie said the kids learned English in school but, as soon as they were out, it was back to the Kriol. They wear uniforms to school.

 

Bordering on Mexico, Guatemala and the Caribbean, Belize is the second smallest country in Central America (after El Salvador), with an area of approximately 9,000 square miles that includes numerous small islands off the coast known as cayes.

 

More than half of the mainland is covered with dense forests, and at its longest point Belize is 174 miles long while its greatest width is 68 miles. Long a strong advocate of environmental protection, the government has set aside approximately 20% of its land as nature reserves.

 

There are also several important Mayan sites situated on the mainland such as Altun Ha and Xunantunich that make for excellent day trips and are included on shore excursions by most cruise ships. As a matter of fact, Belize has the highest concentration of Mayan sites of all the countries in Central America.

 

Eddie tried to tell us that our tour would be scary – but FUN, it would be hard – but FUN. He himself had done the zipline only once, because he had to for this job. He said that the caves might have things brushing up against us but they would be leaves and twigs. The caves might have “log-gators” in them, too.

 

We travelled along the 37-mile drive along the Western Highway – the scenery changed from city to suburbs, to a settlement called Hattieville where hurricane survivors met to life after the country was destroyed, to the beginnings of the rain forest.

 

We turned down a road to a jaguar preserve – yes, they have them here! then, finally, to our destination, Caves Branch National Park.

 

Eddie handed out water (which we had to leave on the bus). A bathroom break, then off to the zipline area.

 

Each person had a harness around their legs with attached pulleys and carabiners. Women had them on their chests as well. In addition, we had leather construction gloves and hard hats.

 

We climbed to the top of the first platform and were given brief instructions and off we went. Because of the heavy gloves, I couldn’t get any pictures. I had thought that they would take some of us on the hardest line to sell to us later but they didn't. They also didn’t have cave pictures or T-Shirts. What a missed opportunity!

 

This was so cool, so much fun. I thought I might be afraid at first but I wasn’t. I just followed instructions and went.

 

Sometimes they told us to break. We did that with the right hand, which was always on the upper cable.

 

After the second line, I must have braked too soon because I stopped before I got to the platform. Michael was headed toward me. The guide on the end of the platform wanted me to do some hand over hand maneuver but I couldn’t figure out what he was saying so he came and got me by wrapping his legs around me and pulling me to the platform.

 

After that, no more problems with breaking!

 

The next platform was very high – over 70 feet in the air – and the climb up was difficult. It was very hot and the rocks were very uneven. I don’t know that I would have gotten to the next platform if Michael hadn’t cheered me on all the way.

 

We zipped down the next six lines up to 250-feet between platforms and 85-feet high in the trees, at canopy level. It seemed like it was all over too soon.

 

But, I did it! No fear, just fun.

 

Here we are, after getting our gear off. The people behind Michael are just starting out on their zipline adventure. I thought maybe we could go again…?[[posterous-content:pid___2]]

[[posterous-content:pid___3]]Next stop was lunch in the trees. It was a buffet similar to those in Barbados – a jerk chicken (Eddie had said it would taste like chicken – might be egret, road kill, log-gator or even…chicken!), peas and rice, a pasta salad, cake, fruit salad, the usual fare.

[[posterous-content:pid___4]]Next up, cave tubing! This is the event I got my new waterproof camera for. Thanks again, Alice!  If you're interested in reading the cave tubing part, it's here: http://www.cushingsonline.com/cruise/cruise2009.htm

[[posterous-content:pid___5]]

Posted via email from Cushings Help

Friday, February 5, 2010

Oh, What a…Trip!

As I mentioned in an earlier post, our son had gotten me tickets to Jersey Boys as a Christmas gift.

I made all the arrangements, including taking our dog, Mimi, to her sister’s house.  The plan was fairly complicated. Mimi and her brother were both going to stay at the sisters, where another dog and a couple cats – not to mention humans! – also lived.

I took Mimi on Thursday night.  Her brother was already there.  On Saturday, the brother’s people were going to pick him up as well as the non-related dog.  I would call from the train station and let Mimi’s sister’s folks know that we were on their way and they would pack up the 2 remaining dogs to stay with us for a few days.  I have no idea what happened to the cats!

Anyway, Thursday night I got Mimi off to play with the other dogs and terrorize the cats. 

For some unknown reason, maybe excitement, I couldn’t sleep well that night.  Our train was at 9:30 so we planned to leave home at 7:30 am.  I was sure I could sleep on the train.

This was rush hour and we weren’t even sure if 2 hours would be enough time but we headed to the Amtrak station anyway.  About halfway there, DH realized he’d forgotten his cellphone.  He couldn’t use mine because no one would know what number to call.

So we headed back home.  Since we were going to miss the 9:30 (and the 10:30) we decided to go to IHOP for breakfast. While there, I tried to book us on a bus, instead.  No luck.  Everything sold out.

Finally, we left.  We couldn’t go too late – our show was that night.  We got to Amtrak and the ticket machine no longer recognized our reservations.  Luckily, I had the number so we got an agent to help us.  Our original tickets were voided and new ones purchased.  We lost our “early reservation discount” and my AAA discount.

acela  In addition, the best time for us to leave would be to take the Acela train.  It would get us to NY a little faster than the conventional but it cost us 200 more than our original.

I’m not sure how it is faster since it still makes all the stops of the conventional train but the train itself is a little nicer – more leg room and ours had wi-fi.  I still don’t think it was worth the extra cost but we needed it at the time. 

We got onboard and I started taking pictures of all the stations on the way to NYC. 

If you click on the full album, these will turn out sideways.  I’m not sure how/why that happens or how to fix it, but train stations aren’t all that interesting anyway, especially from inside the train!  The other full album below has images the correct angle – ah, the joys of the internet!

We got to NYC in a timely fashion – I slept a little but not nearly enough!  Off the train, into the bitter cold.  We waited in a queue for a taxi.

Off to our hotel to warm up a bit and take a nap.  We stayed at the Murray Hill Suites again.  We liked it when we stayed there before.  These are like older apartments converted into a hotel so you get a bedroom, living room, little dining room and a kitchen.  And, no wi-fi.  Yea – no chance for DH to “have to send just one more email”.  I do admit, I checked mine on my phone quite a bit.  No work, though!

We debated going out for something to eat.  Not much, though.  I took a nap and DH went out to do a bit of grocery shopping.  He found a place around the corner and came back with water, fruit, chips, mostly junk food but enough to tide us over and then some.

I went back to sleep and soon DS was ringing our bell.  We all chatted a bit, and snacked a bit, then it was time to leave for the show.  We weren’t all that far away and figured we could get there by taxi in only about 6 minutes.  Unfortunately, the cabs were all taken. So we started walking.  When we got to Grand Central Station, we decided to take the Times Square Express.  That took time, getting tickets, getting to the right track, waiting for the train.

I assumed when we got to Times Square that was it, we’d get off but we had to catch a second train.  Stairs, tunnels, walking faster than I’m used to.

jersey-boys We got in our seats at the August Wilson theater just a minute or so before the show started.

And what a show it was.  I wasn’t sure if my family would like it or not.  My son wasn’t yet born when Frankie Valli was popular and my husband was out of the country in the army so he missed most of this great music.

But, it was a compelling story, too, and everyone loved it.  The number closing the first act was so fantastic.  I don’t want to give it away but it was the coolest thing.

Opening night:

There are other great videos here: http://www.broadway.com/shows/jersey-boys/videos/

This show  features over 30 fantastic Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons’ songs, including “Sherry,” Walk Like a Man”, “Big Girls Don’t Cry” and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You.”

I cannot recommend this show enough but take note of this disclaimer from http://www.broadway.com/shows/jersey-boys/story/

Is Jersey Boys Good for Kids?
Although Jersey Boys snaps along at a pace easy for younger audiences to follow, it is not really a show for young children: they won’t get the heavy nostalgia factor, and parents may find themselves cringing at sexual innuendo (“Oh, What a Night!” indeed), infidelity, the (offstage) death of a child, enough swearing to make a truck driver on the Jersey Turnpike blush and other behavior you might expect from four tough guys touring from sold-out concert to sold-out concert.

They use the “f-word” quite a bit so, if that bothers you, don’t.  Even if it does, this is a great show.

After the show, we were hungry and a steakhouse called Gallagher’s was right across the street.  I should have paid better attention the the steak again room we saw when we went in.

IMG_0220

IMG_0218 Being completely clueless that those were whole servings, I ordered prime rib and my way-too-big portion arrived. 

It was wonderful but no way could I finish this.  I don’t think that the 3 of us could have eaten all this.  The family had gotten salmon but I figured – steak house, get beef.

 

IMG_0219 The waiter saw me taking a picture of the prime rib and, I guess, thought I was taking a picture of us so he took a picture of us eating.

It was a really nice restaurant.  They started out as a speakeasy during prohibition and kept going.  In another room, we could hear a jazz quartet playing, too.

Sometime, I’d like to go back when I was really hungry and get a smaller portion.  I wouldn’t get the soup, either.  It was wonderful, but too filling.

Taxi back to the hotel and sleep!  Not enough, of course.  DS arrived about 10am and we started planning the day.  Food, of course.  We started in on the fruit and left over prime-rib.  Couldn’t finish it all, still.

Packing up, I found I’d left one of my gloves somewhere, taxi, theater, subway.  Wherever, it was going to be a COLD day.

southstreet We checked out of the hotel, leaving our bags with the concierge, and took a taxi to South Street Seaport (I “won” the earlier planning session!).  I’d seen it before on a tour bus and thought it looked interesting.

 

 

 

First stop was the South Street Seaport Museum.  It was a good place to warm up a little and we learned a lot about the history of sailing in New York. The Museum houses exhibition galleries, a working 19th-century print shop, an archeology museum, a maritime library, a craft center, a marine life conservation lab, and the largest privately owned fleet of historic ships in the country.  We saw quite a bit of these exhibits, although some were not open when we were there.  There will be a student training ship, the Lettie G. Howard (schooner), which we could see but not go on during refurbishment.

museum3 museum1 museum2
The main gallery, where we started off, had a lot of information about FDR.  President Roosevelt was apparently quite the sailor.  From the American Merchant Marine at War:

President Roosevelt was a man of the sea and understood the importance of a strong merchant marine during war and peace. During World War I, he was Assistant Secretary of the Navy, in charge of arming of merchant ships and convoys. One of his first acts as President was to proclaim Maritime Day to commemorate the first steam-assisted trans-Atlantic crossing by the SS Savannah. His proposed legislation to modernize and professionalize the merchant marine, passed as the historic Merchant Marine Act of 1936. During World War II, he resisted attempts to incorporate the merchant marine into the Army or Navy because of potential problems with inter-service rivalry, increased costs, and greater need for manpower. Instead, he oversaw the operation of the War Shipping Administration out of the Oval Office.

 IMG_0222 

After the main gallery, we went onto the Peking, a 1911, four-masted barque

I am always amazed at how sailors live and work in such confined spaces for years at a time.  Even the officers cabins were small.  I have been on other ships where I’ve seen regular sailors sleeping arrangements – a huge room with hammocks hanging from the ceiling.  Here they used this room as a photo/info gallery.

 

 

peking

  (somehow, these turn out right-side up.  Go figure!)

IMG_0223 We were going to go on the next ship, The Ambrose, a 1908 lightship, but decided to go buy new gloves and hats first.  I am not the proud owner of fur-lined ear muffs.  Super-warm!

 

 

 

 

 

Then, a wonderful lunch at Uno’s.  Rather, it would have been wonderful had they not listed all the calorie counts with each food.  I had a 530-calorie bowl of soup followed by a shared fajita pizza I don’t even want to think about.

I checked my email and found out that Mimi’s sister’s family had cancelled their trip due to snow.  Uh Oh!

IMG_0225 IMG_0224
IMG_0227 

IMG_0226 From the restaurant, we could see DS’ office.  It’s the last, tall building on the left.

After lunch it was Ambrose time. I learned that a lightship, is a ship which acts as a lighthouse. They are used in waters that are too deep or otherwise unsuitable for lighthouse construction.

ambrose

ambrose The wheelhouse.

IMG_0228 DH coming our of the wheelhouse

IMG_0229 DS checking out the galley (aka kitchen).  How could they produce so many meals in such a small area?  There was a rope hanging from the ceiling so that the cook would have something to hang onto in rough seas.

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The windlass room:

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From here, we went to another building for an exhibit of model ships.

IMG_0233 This is DH (just about to take a phone call) standing by a model of the Queen Mary.  The QM is now a hotel in California and he has stayed in it, although he isn’t depicted in the model.

 

 

 

 

 

print-shopAfter the call, we headed to Bowne & Company Stationers.  We saw a bit of a printing demo and learned about upper case and lower case letters (The individual type blocks used in hand typesetting are stored in shallow wooden or metal drawers, known as cases, with subdivisions into compartments known as boxes to store each individual letter. For typesetting, the two cases are taken out of the storage rack and placed on a rack on the desk. By convention, the case containing the capitals (and small capitals) stands at a steeper angle at the back of the desk, with the case for the small letters, punctuation and spaces, at a shallower angle below it to the front of the desk, hence upper and lower case.)

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lighthouse It was getting late and we had to pick up our bags before heading to the train.  This lighthouse monument to the Titanic sits just outside South Street Seaport at its entrance.

The plaque on it reads:

    Titanic Memorial Lighthouse

This lighthouse is a memorial to the passengers, officers and crew who died as heroes when the steamship Titanic sank after collision with an iceberg.


    LATITUDE 41°46' NORTH
    LONGITUDE 50°14' WEST
    APRIL 15, 1912

    This lighthouse was originally erected by public subscription. In 1913 it stood above the East River on the corner of the old Seaman's' Church Institute at the corner of South Street and Coenties Slip. From 1913 to 1967 the time ball at the top of the lighthouse would drop down the pole to signal twelve noon to the ships in the harbor. This time ball mechanism was activated by a telegraphic signal from the National Observatory in Washington, D.C.

    In July 1968 the Seaman's' Church Institute moved to its present quarters at 15 State Street. That year the Titanic Memorial Lighthouse was donated by the Kaiser-Nelson Steel & Salvage Corporation to the South Street Seaport Museum. It was erected on this corner at the entrance to the museum complex in May 1976 with funds provided by the Exxon Corporation.

IMG_0235 Taxi back to the hotel, then we stopped for hot chocolate and carrot cake. All 3 of us shared this.  Is all NY food this big?  I couldn’t find any dates on this homey restaurant but it seemed like it must have been a fixture for many years.

 

 

 

 

 

Then another taxi to Penn Station for the 6:05 train.  We got there just as they were calling the 5:05.  Quickly, we got out tickets changed and made the earlier train.  This was a good idea because we had no idea what the weather might be like when we got home.  We’d heard from various reports that it might be up to a foot of snow.

The trip back was uneventful but slower than normal.  As we headed south, the snow got more and more evident.  DH came back from the restroom and reported that it was snowing between the cars of the train.

When we got back to DC and exited the train, it was like a scene from Dr. Zhivago.  Snow IN the train.  People lugging rollarounds had a tough time exiting.  Luckily, I just had my backpack.

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IMG_0238 My car was in the parking garage, away from the walls, yet it managed to get snow, too.

After clearing that off, we headed home.  The roads weren’t too bad but we decided to pick up Mimi the next day.

I was scheduled to ring handbells at the 8:15 but luckily our director said we didn’t have to play for that service, just the 11:00 so I got up at 7, called my Mom to let her know, then back to sleep for me.

While I was sleeping, DH picked up Mimi, then off to church for me.

Catch-up nap lasted from 12:30 to 9:00, then fast dinner and back to bed for another 11 hours.  These trips are fun but they sure wear me out!