Rare scubacruiserx2 Posted October 29, 2019 #551 Share Posted October 29, 2019 42 minutes ago, Bimmer09 said: Just a quick note to say that after coming home from work at 11pm last night and hitting the hay at 1 a.m after a midnight dinner I am up and packing for a 300 mile drive to a most scenic place in Michigan so will be away from the computer all day. Fall Foliage will be at peak on the Mission Peninsula, north of Traverse City. https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbm=isch&sxsrf=ACYBGNQDBXsPZSh-h-xr3RnxI7YpXDwMMg%3A1572348539820&source=hp&biw=1280&bih=639&ei=eyK4XdPuL4Wb5gLE3oDwDw&q=mission+peninsula+michigan&oq=Mission+Peninsula&gs_l=img.1.2.0l2j0i30j0i5i30l5j0i24l2.2744.6868..14054...0.0..0.199.2274.0j17......0....1..gws-wiz-img.p1w59y2cExg Carol will be taking notes and buying apples and cider from farm stands along the way. Road Trip! Back soon... Norris Have a nice trip . We stayed not far from there on Lake Michigan near the Sleeping Bear Dunes . 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Walt fan Posted October 29, 2019 #552 Share Posted October 29, 2019 Still following along and so enjoying. I have heard good things about Seabourn. And of course Azamara is on my radar. Still getting lots of booklets from Oceania, with their weird pricing. Cannot wait for the rest of your review and see your time back in London. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jasperdo Posted October 30, 2019 #553 Share Posted October 30, 2019 "Road Trip!" Two of my favorite words ... along with "Sail Away". We just got back from 4 days on the Oregon Coast. Enjoy your time in Michigan. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJ Gal Posted October 30, 2019 #554 Share Posted October 30, 2019 Norris, I just loved your review and pictures of Norway. We have a trip to Norway planned for next year. Were most of your excursions private or booked thru Celebrity? I also followed your review of Cuba. We were on Azamara Journey in March and Cuba was our first port. Both threads were just excellent and very informative. Maybe we will sail together in the future. Evelyn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JaniceB Posted October 31, 2019 #555 Share Posted October 31, 2019 (edited) Wonderful review and your pictures are fantastic. I have never seen such vivid shots of a show on a ship not to mention the outdoor rain variety. I am looking forward to the London part of your trip. Michigan looks awesome in the fall. I have never been to that part of our country other than an unplanned overnight at O'hare airport. One more thing, I believe my love of cruise ships originated at the age of 4 when my parents took us from Honolulu to LA on the SS Lurline. My DH, who really does not share my love of cruising since he is retired Navy and has seen many of the ports I would like to visit, is not happy about my obsession with cruising. He has agreed to Norway, the Panama Canal and another Alaskan cruise with an extensive land portion since these are not places he has cruised to or through. Edited October 31, 2019 by JaniceB Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted October 31, 2019 Author #556 Share Posted October 31, 2019 On 10/29/2019 at 3:07 AM, LisaNorthseadreamer said: Hi Norris! Just checking in to say it is always a joy to read your reviews. I am not able to travel for various reasons and the quality of your pictures and banter combined with Carol's notes always make me feel like I am on a mini vacation too. You are one of the very few reviewers I actively seek out every time I need my 'fix' and of that group definitely my favorite. So thank you so much for the work you do! Hope you & Carol have a great fall foliage road trip and a pic or two snuck into this review would not be a bad thing at all! 🙂 Hi, Lisa and thank you for all the kind things you say! We are just back from the Fall Foliage trip. I drove 960 miles and the last 350 of those today were in rain and snow but we stopped half a dozen times at rest stops and still managed a 50 mph average with speeds from zero to 100mph on smooth and potholed roads. I took some pics and will drop a couple in once I have looked at them. My camera is drying out as we speak. We ate in 2 favorite restaurants and had a picnic or two in scenic spots and in the car today as we had six hours of non stop rain and snow. Winter is here. I'll get back to the review in a minute or two. My computer has been turned off for over 2 days which is a first! Apologies therefore for the late response! Norris Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted October 31, 2019 Author #557 Share Posted October 31, 2019 Southampton and it is sunny. We are unexpectedly early in finishing our disembarkation and now have an hour to kill while waiting for Smith's Cars to take us to London. Carol waits indoors with our luggage and her Kindle and I am outdoors awaiting a driver holding aloft our names on an iPad or piece of paper. There's a smoking section with some cheery Brits to pass the time with. There's also this food stand selling bacon sandwiches (baps), coffee and I can see a listing for something that makes my British heart beat faster- Sausage Rolls! "We just sold the last one lovey" said the lady at the counter. I feigned weeping as I banged my forehead on her counter. I haven't eaten a real one in 16 years and was usually good for one a day way back when. The idea is similar to pigs in a blanket but the pastry is flaky and the sausage is more like a soft warm stiff mousse of sausagey goodness with a little herb help and they are 5 to 6 inches long. I'll have a coffee then said I ruling out the gigantic bacon bap. I told the lady I was on my way to London and she said "Greggs have the best sausage rolls there". I tipped my coffee stirrer to her and was on my way with a surprisingly good cup of Italian coffee. It is a well organized terminal without a taxi scrum and people are leaving the area swiftly taking taxis, reserved limos and transfer busses or having friends pick them up One last look at the Silhouette... Since last week I have been made aware that during the Edgeification of the X fleet, the grass by the Sunset Bar, which is where I live, will be going away and sofas and chairs will take its place. I will wait and see how that turns out but I am glad I didn't make a future booking when onboard. If they tamper with the Lawn Club Grill by removing it then no more Silhouette/Reflection for us. If they add a dozen toss pillows to the bed then that's really it! Dining room chairs that make you lean forward to reach the table to eat- more daftness. Upper decks with no shade from the Caribbean sun...ah, no, think again Einstein! At the appointed hour I see a guy in a black suit looking for people. Looks like a limo driver to me. He's holding a piece of paper with both our names on so he must be our guy! He is. He doesn't have a car with him so I ask him to go fetch one and he does. He jokingly asks if I want to drive and I thought about it for a minute as I (a) have driven many a Mercedes (b) know the way but (c) I haven't driven on the left in 16 years so I said No which was the answer he really wanted to hear. It was his own car and not a fleet car as that's how they operate. He had driven from his home in Portsmouth to pick us up and deliver us to the Royal Horseguards in Whitehall. He invited me to sit in the front seat. He was a very bright Romanian guy in his 30's and will be heading back there after 7 years in the U.K. A good talker and careful driver. The M3 is a motorway (Highway) without tolls and is dance floor-smooth and a salute to British road building. I have driven it many times but always in a company Ford and never in a classic German-engineered car. nice day for a drive silky smooth well-signposted highway lush rolling countryside I am familiar with all the places on the map-as well as having a day job that took me to them I also played in a band that visited them on weekends M3 to M4 to A4 and in an hour or so we were in the outskirts of London... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 1, 2019 Author #558 Share Posted November 1, 2019 The drive into London from the West is so familiar to me even though so many years have passed since it was a regular occurrence. In 1970 when I first moved to London with my mother's blessing I lived in Wembley Park, Golders Green and then Kensal Rise where I rode the number 6 bus to Selfridges where I worked, on Oxford Street. But in 1974 when I returned after brief stints in Germany (Nuremberg) and Northern Ireland I found myself in South Kensington which is where these photos begin. And yes they are car window shots, taken randomly. In 1974 I lived in the basement flat of a building that looked like this. Mine was on Warwick Road in Earl's Court, home to many Aussies. The traffic noise meant that playing drums in my flat was no problem. My next door neighbor who could hear the drums through the walls was Annette Peacock, a fabulous American jazz singer who invited me over and became a firm friend. We later shared a house together in leafy Chiswick, where I found my next door neighbor was a hero of mine-Mike Giles, the drummer from King Crimson. You never know who your next door neighbor is in London! Before I met Mike I had a long letter writing relationship with Robert Fripp the King Crimson guitarist. Halcyon days! a museum shot-maybe Victoria and Albert? Harrods, the sandstone edifice and a stunning store if ever there was one I worked for Texaco, across the street from Harrods and occasionally bought a bite to eat in the amazing Harrods food hall London is cranes Mandarin Oriental hotel, Hyde Park no idea Trafalgar Square says we are almost there...the Royal Horseguards Hotel more soon! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 1, 2019 Author #559 Share Posted November 1, 2019 On 10/29/2019 at 12:33 PM, Walt fan said: Still following along and so enjoying. I have heard good things about Seabourn. And of course Azamara is on my radar. Still getting lots of booklets from Oceania, with their weird pricing. Cannot wait for the rest of your review and see your time back in London. Thanks for sticking with it as it begins to wind down. I have spent less time on writing this due to techno difficulties and a heavy workload. Three days in Michigan-which we had to book a year ago due to the popularity of the winery we like to stay at, has also put me behind schedule. I too get Oceania offers almost daily but dislike their pricing where they will halve the "brochure price" which has nonsensical dollar numbers. We will continue to consider other lines-Viking Ocean is one that might fit us well. Carol likes smaller ships now having sailed Azamara. Norris, pressing on Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cinnamon Posted November 1, 2019 #560 Share Posted November 1, 2019 The ‘No idea’ building is St James’s Palace. We were once fortunate enough to have lunch there with Princess Anne at a Save the Children event. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 2, 2019 Author #561 Share Posted November 2, 2019 On 10/30/2019 at 1:34 PM, NJ Gal said: Norris, I just loved your review and pictures of Norway. We have a trip to Norway planned for next year. Were most of your excursions private or booked thru Celebrity? I also followed your review of Cuba. We were on Azamara Journey in March and Cuba was our first port. Both threads were just excellent and very informative. Maybe we will sail together in the future. Evelyn Evelyn-give my love to Edison NJ which I once called home. Our excursions were all Celebrity on this cruise which was the opposite on the Cuba one. I always have our cruises planned well in advance so who knows we might pick the same ship and itinerary at some point . So far it has only happened once that I sailed with a CC friend- screen name needtocruisesoon (AKA Ron) on the Regal Princess. It was fun meeting him and we have since had lunch together in San Francisco. Thanks for following along! Norris Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 2, 2019 Author #562 Share Posted November 2, 2019 11 hours ago, cinnamon said: The ‘No idea’ building is St James’s Palace. We were once fortunate enough to have lunch there with Princess Anne at a Save the Children event. Thank you Cinnamon! What a class experience to have lunch with Princess Anne and for such a worthy cause! Norris 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 2, 2019 Author #563 Share Posted November 2, 2019 Big Bus Tour Our room wasn't ready when we arrived at the hotel but we were able to drop our luggage off. A selfie while I waited for Carol prior to our bus tour Good to be back in Whitehall Gardens Carol had bought the tickets back in Chicago, I think? So we just had to walk a few hundred yards along Victoria Embankment to a Big Bus stop. We would be taking one called the Red Route which would take us West to Green Park and then loop around through Piccadilly Circus, Trafalgar Square then over East to St Paul's and Tower Bridge before bringing us back to the start again. It would last a couple of hours No Bus Window shots! We sat upstairs in the open air part of the bus near the back we had disposable ear buds plugged into the seatback in front so we could hear the very witty and very informed guide. He should do stand-up comedy the streets are deserted on Westminster Bridge the black metal barriers prevent would-be terrorists driving trucks through the crowds. A sign of the times I am not going to pretend that I know the names of all the buildings we will pass today. I was focused on taking pictures from a moving bus and was twiddling dials and had one chance to get a decent photo or the moment was gone Maybe Lambeth Palace? Home to a Bishop? Nice digs! more Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 2, 2019 Author #564 Share Posted November 2, 2019 looking West This building was undergoing a facade renovation and had a trompe l'oeil scrim hanging down to cover the work taking place behind. Nice touch! nothing to see here. Return to your homes! London is scaffolding and cranes beautiful properties a sister bus the back of Buckingham Palace's grounds The Grosvenor Hotel it's a beautiful day! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 2, 2019 Author #565 Share Posted November 2, 2019 On Buckingham Palace Road a restaurant with Roast Grouse on their specials board for 35 Pounds Maybe the trash men were On Strike? Same thing in Whitehall gardens... Green Park underground station entrance Here, a surprise -we have to get off and change to another bus! Bah humbug! We get good seats so no harm done we now turn Eastward. Did I mention the cranes? to be continued.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 3, 2019 Author #566 Share Posted November 3, 2019 the bus tour continues a man taking a nap on a sheet of cardboard is this the Ritz Hotel or the Savoy? Burlington Arcade Piccadilly Circus up ahead entering Trafalgar Square 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare WrittenOnYourHeart Posted November 3, 2019 #567 Share Posted November 3, 2019 Yes - the picture you labeled Lambeth Palace is Lambeth. It is the home to the Archbishop of Canterbury - and therefore the center of the Anglican Communion. (It is basically like the Vatican to Roman Catholics.) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 3, 2019 Author #568 Share Posted November 3, 2019 A statue of Boadicea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boadicea_and_Her_Daughters I wish we had time to get off and take a look in this grand train station https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Waterloo_station our hotel peeking above the trees one of many pubs I will find along our route we were driving along Fleet Street now and this is a pub from 1667 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 3, 2019 Author #569 Share Posted November 3, 2019 1 hour ago, WrittenOnYourHeart said: Yes - the picture you labeled Lambeth Palace is Lambeth. It is the home to the Archbishop of Canterbury - and therefore the center of the Anglican Communion. (It is basically like the Vatican to Roman Catholics.) Thank you for the confirmation! If there are others I stumbled upon please feel free! Cheers, Norris 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare WrittenOnYourHeart Posted November 3, 2019 #570 Share Posted November 3, 2019 28 minutes ago, Bimmer09 said: Thank you for the confirmation! If there are others I stumbled upon please feel free! Cheers, Norris You’re welcome! I really only know it because a seminary friend did a year internship there so I saw lots of pictures. I’ve only been to London a couple of times and never to Lambeth. Really enjoying your review! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 4, 2019 Author #571 Share Posted November 4, 2019 Saint Paul's Cathedral I have to shamefully admit I have never been inside it, despite spending a total of 13 years of my life in London. I've been in most of the 1970s and 80's rock pubs and concert halls and famous clubs like the Marquee ( too many times to count) and Ronnie Scotts Jazz Club and I visited many of the museums multiple times, particularly the National History and the Imperial War Museum. I shopped in Petticoat Lane and Notting Hill Gate markets and ate out in Berni Inns, Wimpy Bars (I loved you!) and countless Indian Restaurants. My concert venue was Hammersmith Odeon. But I wasn't interested in Cathedrals as I am now. I went to pubs that had live bands or good lunches of bangers and mash or fish and chips. I left London very quickly when I got an offer to join Royal Caribbean playing drums on the Song of Norway and didn't look back once I got into cruising (a minute after I stepped on the ship in Miami) and have only been back to London for 5 months starting November 85 to March 86, then a week's visit to London and Belfast in 1994 and 3 days in 2019. I regretted having stayed away so long but I have enjoyed my time since in the USA and Western Europe. I would have loved to have called up some old friends in London and have visited them over 30 years later as I didn't see any of them since March 1986. No time! We might have only our senses of humor in common now but that's a great start. We are on a bus. I moved to a seat by myself so I had free access to swivel and contort my body for the shots of things above me. Like this and whatever this is an over the shoulder contortion shot the modern 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 4, 2019 Author #572 Share Posted November 4, 2019 classic architecture a pedaling bar on a bridge over the Thames pubs with flowers, so London! I had often driven across this bridge to get somewhere but this is the first time I wasn't behind the wheel and had a camera in my hands 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 4, 2019 Author #573 Share Posted November 4, 2019 The Shard and the Tower of London odd edifice a London ambulance in yellow there's some significance in the dragons seen along the Victoria embankment but I haven't the foggiest idea what the guide was saying https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_boundary_mark We got off the bus where we had got on, very happy with our 2 hour tour for 35 pounds each. We had killed time nicely and our room would be ready after our short walk to the hotel. Highly recommended! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Bimmer09 Posted November 4, 2019 Author #574 Share Posted November 4, 2019 Now we could get the keys and enter our room and unpack for one last time before our flight from Heathrow to Chicago on Monday morning. We were one floor higher and more to the center of the hotel than before More accessible closet than before which was a narrow room with a doorway. Here it was bigger and out in the open Having the safe etc in the center ate up space for long clothes to hang Nespresso on the desk and a complimentary mini-bar provided art reflecting our surroundings we had a small balcony but the doors were locked for safety view from our left window while Carol unpacked and Clorox-wiped all surfaces I visited the gardens and when coming back in noticed people having afternoon tea just off the lobby. Carol thought tea would be splendid and so we decided to splurge at 49 pounds each as we hadn't eaten since breakfast about 10 hours before. We asked for a window table. finger sandwiches including cucumber, prawn salad, chicken egg and salmon. Big fluffy scones with all the trimmings, and 4 kinds of delicious cakes all washed down with Lapsang Souchong tea for Carol and English Breakfast for me. Leaves steeped in a classic teapot. Sitting back refreshed in our comfy chairs Carol said I should pick the next adventure and I immediately proposed sitting outdoors at a pub overlooking the Thames and watching the world go by. So that's the plan. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rdt10 Posted November 5, 2019 #575 Share Posted November 5, 2019 Norris, I've been following your review with great interest. Fantastic pictures and commentary. We are doing the same cruise next year and finding your review very helpful in deciding what to do in each of the ports. I've been looking at the Royal Horseguards Hotel for our stay in London as it looks wonderful. Do you have any suggestions regarding the rooms there. I'm trying to decide between the River View and Garden View King Rooms. Do you think the River view was worth the extra cost? Thanks. Rick Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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