adventures


8
Jun 11

Horseshoe Bay

This is the nice man who drove us across part of the island from King’s Warf to Horseshoe, who talked to us like we were old family he hadn’t seen in a few years — interested, but not especially intent — who was surprised when we knew things about the place. My in-laws come to Bermuda every few years and have for a long time. They could recall things some of the locals have forgotten.

Cabbie

Horseshoe

We let the crowd come and go, arriving later in the afternoon, just as the tourists were leaving and the locals came onto the beach for the evening.

Horseshoe

We climbed a few rocks.

Horseshoe

And danced our toes in the cold, cold water. If you get in and you’re moving around it’d be fine, my mind says. My ankles disagree.

Cabbie

I like a few rocks on my beach. Something you don’t see on the Gulf Coast, where all of my beach impressions were made, and the beautiful area against which all beaches are measured.

Cabbie

The sand here is not pink. They say it is, but it is not. It is pink-flecked, bits of coral washing in to give the setting a bit of ambiance. They say, too, that the sand never gets hot. It is warm today, and the sun is serious, but the sand feels great.

This is a peaceful beach.

We’ll be back here tomorrow for more sun and snorkeling.


8
Jun 11

Dunking the wretched woman, St. George’s

Dunk

They do this regularly.

Dunk

Here’s the video:

Dunk


8
Jun 11

St. George’s, Bermuda

Summit

That’s my boat. We’re on the Celebrity Summit. Here it is docked at King’s Wharf, Bermuda. We got off of the ship and caught a ferry to St. George’s. Cruise ships used to go there directly, but modern ships, like the Summit, are too big for a narrow pass. And Summit isn’t even the largest vessel in the fleet.

Wharf

That’s the wharf itself, which is dominated today by two cruise ships, many smaller vessels, public transportation and the Clocktower Mall.

This is in St. George’s:

StGeorges

Everything here is incredibly well-manicured. No blade of grass seems out of place. Life is good.

StGeorges

But this is troubling. The Yankee’s parents have been here several times and they notice what the locals have seen lately, part of the economy here is drying up. One part of the problem, they believe, is that there are fewer cruise ships — because of that narrow pass — and the other being general economic woes. A man we spoke with later in the day, though, said those cruise ships would return. The local government is widening that inlet to St. George’s.

Need a brick?

Bricks

I’m guessing these bricks found there ways here like a lot of nautical towns: as ballast in ships from wherever. There are bricks stamped here from Massachusetts, New York, Australia and who knows where else.

Summit

St. Peter’s Church, in St. George’s Bermuda, is the self-proclaimed oldest Anglican church outside the British Isles and the oldest Protestant church in continuous use in the New World. Nice, cozy church. The walls are covered in monuments and memorials to dead church members.

In the back they store the historic silver.

Silver

Above is part of the famous St. George’s chalice set. Charles 1 silver is very rare, and dates to 1625. The engraving is the Bermuda Company’s coat-of-arms and the ship Sea Venture, striking a rock at full sail. This is functional art and history, really.

Silver

This is a piece from The King’s Set. It was a gift from King William III to the chapel and are engraved with William’s Royal Arms and Cypher. It dates to 1697 and is more pure and softer than sterling silver.

dropbox

They know how to do mailboxes, don’t they?

Flag

The flag unfurled. This is a flag of the Bermuda government. Blue is unusual for British commonwealths, but keeps with former Canadian and Union of South African ensigns. British flags are too complex for Americans which is, I’m sure, part of the plan.

What

Our unofficial, helpful, drunken, mumbling tour guide. You could catch about every five thing he said while we traveled on the ferry. Who knows if he was right. But two or three of things you could hear did sound close enough.

More to come from St. George’s.


7
Jun 11

Another Sea Day

Rainbow

You could never get tired of this (on a cruise ship at least).

Stirrer

We arrive in Bermuda tomorrow. We’ll have three days on the island, which will interrupt my lazy reading, gym time and food with big doses of sun and fun. Life is so tough.


6
Jun 11

Sea Day

Atlantic

We’re just taking our time out here in the Atlantic. We’re cruising at a pace that makes Bermuda on the third day of the cruise. I don’t mind. I love the sea days. If you don’t know how to relax a few sea days will teach you. We’re on the Celebrity line — which is the line of choice, my cruise veteran folks insist — and they do a great job with pretty much everything, including giving you entertainment and distractions on the ship. But to just sit back in the shade, read, watch the waves go by, that’s glorious.

So we left yesterday, turned off the phones after we crossed under the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in New York and started exploring the ship. We had the lifeboat drill, required by international law, but streamlined to 94 seconds by the efficient people of this vessel, the Summit. Essentially, go to your muster station, bring your life jacket. Put it on, velcro, snap, whistle and light.

I feel safer already.

As if anyone is going to be finding their way to the theater if the dreaded seven horn blasts are heard.

So we did that, saw a bit of the ship, got cleaned up for dinner and had a fine time.

This is my second cruise, our honeymoon last year and this week, both on Celebrity where you get top-notch service. And the food. My heavens, the food. Last night I had a lamb shank that could have fed an American family of six. Amazing. Tonight there was the barbecue glazed black salmon, which was nothing like you’ve pictured just now, but better in every conceivable way. In between there are restaurants, grills, cafes and all sorts of other places to embarrass you with their options.

Today, though we started in the gym. I rode 35 miles, had a piece of grilled and pressed chicken for lunch and then went to my massage. See? Celebrity. My masseuse was from Romania, where they train people with sharp elbows and brick-like knuckles in the finer arts of sublime muscle torture.

Then we hit the therapy pool, which is to say a warm salt water pool with random spouts swirling water at various angles splooshing you. After that I read the day away.

There is nothing in the world wrong with a sea day.

Folks

The Yankee and her parents, at dinner tonight.