Bridgetown, Barbados

April 18, 2018

First thing this morning we called our son, Adam, for his 35th birthday!  We reached him just before he had to go into a meeting and before we were heading out for the day.  Happy Birthday, Adam.  He is the one who set up the blog for me and does troubleshooting when I need it.

Tom and Alice and Norm and I went out to get a driver to take us on a tour of the island. We have been here twice before – one quite a number of years ago and all we remembered was touring the Mount Gay rum factory!  And two years ago we chartered a catamaran with 8 other people for sailing and snorkeling. So this time we wanted to see more of Barbados.

We were in a van for 10 with our driver and guide, Rudolph. He was a great guy and told us a lot about his island as we traveled all through it.

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Barbados facts –

  • The main industry used to be sugar but now only 20,000 tons are produced here.
  • Bridgetown is the capital and largest city.
  • The present location was established by the British in 1628 and is a major tourist destination. There is still a strong British influence here.
  • There are lots of customer service centers located here.
  • It is the only city outside of North America that George Washington visited!
  • Rihianna was born here and still maintains a condo in a VERY upscale location which we passed in our tour.
  • Education and health care are free here in the public hospitals and schools.  All children in both public and private schools wear uniforms.
  • For university studies, the government pays 75% of the tuition.

We visited the house where Rihianna lived.  The street was recently named for her.

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Many of the homes are colorful like this one. And then there are mega mansions that sell for hundreds of millions of dollars.  At some of the resorts it costs $30,000 a night to stay there.

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Our next stop was the St. James Parish Church.  This is a charming place made from the coral limestone that is plentiful on this island.  There is a bell that predates the Liberty Bell by more than half a century. The pipe organ was also very interesting. And those candles on the rafters are electric now.

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Beautiful beach views from many of the sites we passed or visited.

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And gorgeous flowers.

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We visited the old windmill that still operates. It is 350 years old!

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Here are some of the other sites.  The island is quite beautiful once you get out of Bridgetown.

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And of course, there are always signs!

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And some of the historic monuments and buildings.

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At Sea

April 17, 2018

Well, what ELSE do you do on sea days?  For me the first thing after breakfast was a steam room visit followed by a seaweed wrap and fabulous massage in the spa!  I almost didn’t want to leave the massage table.  But, at 10:30 one of the fun things they do on these cruises took place.  The country fair.  Each department on the ship sets up a booth on the pool deck and has a different kind of activity for you to play and win raffle tickets. Here are a few of the activities and fun crew members.

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One of the activities was to put lipstick on your partner while blindfolded.  I have to say we both did a pretty good job.

I have a video but will load it later if I can!

I didn’t win anything in the raffle but had lots of fun.

Later in the day, three of our friends from previous cruises, Snezana and Alice and Tom – who have rooms just down the hall and next to each other, invited the other 11 who had been on the cruises with us to a party in their rooms.  Unfortunately it was too windy to remove the balcony separation.  We had a nice time and lots to eat and drink. We had just gotten another complimentary bottle of champagne and brought it but that one didn’t even get opened.  The butler did a nice job with the snacks and even those were hardly touched.

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Tom had a very cool camera from Kodak that prints pictures almost like the old Polaroids.

We then had the returning guest cocktail party where we were recognized as the most traveled guests on this cruise!! Here we are with some of our friends at the party. And Snezana got her platinum pin. The last picture is her with the GM, Thierry, and Captain Silvachynsky.

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After the party, we were again invited to dinner with Thierry and Peter Morris, the destination manager along with 4 other couples.  A fun night with great food and wine.

We will certainly miss this in just a few short days!

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Sailing and leaving the Amazon River

April 15, 2018

We were walking on the deck this morning when we felt and saw that the ship was turning around. At first we thought that we needed to make a turn so that the pilots could disembark, even though it would have been earlier than they told us it would be. Very soon Nolan, our cruise director, came on the speaker system to announce that there was a medical emergency on board and we turned back to allow the person to get ly the ship at a place that could provide medical treatment. This would take 3 hours back and another 3 hours to where we are now. ‘re on past experience We knew that it wouldn’t allow us to make the port at Devil’s Island, French Guiana. Around 1 PM the captain made that announcement. So that is a disappointment, we were looking forward to it. But as I always say, at least we aren’t the one on the stretcher.

I assume they will still be showing the movie Papillon tonight, and of course, it is all about the popcorn! So now they will prepare activities for a sea day tomorrow.

Yesterday afternoon Norm took this beautiful cloud picture.

We had dinner in Red Ginger last night. As always, it was terrific. I took a video of the magic towel they give us after the edamame. Very cool.

And this morning at breakfast we did spot several moths out at the terrace cafe. None as big as a dinner plate nor do I think they could pick up a rabbit, but interesting anyway. These are the things that amuse us at sea!!

Just one week to go and now we are heading to the Caribbean where we will visit Barbados, Antigua and St. Beats.

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Alter do Chao, Brazil

April 14, 2018

Alter do Chao is one of the administrative districts of the city of Santarem – we visited there on our way into the Amazon River.  It was the site of several religious missions in the 17th and 18th century led by the Jesuits of the Franciscan order. Before that it was inhabited by indigenous communities Boraris. The area suffered great decline after the collapse of the rubber trade but is now the site for many day trips from Santarem and increasingly a location for people to buy vacation property.

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It is best known for the Ilha do Amor (Island of Love) which is a small island with a white sand beach directly in front of the town. The island recedes now in the rainy season as you can see.

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We went by tender to the floating dock and took a walk through town.  We wanted to visit the local craft store that our enrichment lecturer, Don Klein, told us about.  Luckily he was on our tender- he described the shop as one of the finest in the Amazon for the local products.

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We first visited the church. Very simple and charming.

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Then on to the shopping.  I have a currency converter on my phone and can see what the price is in US dollars.  In these two shops (Arariba), the number that looked like the price was actually a code that corresponded to the price. We assumed that the sheet that some people were carrying was a conversion sheet and I didn’t know until I went to pay that the price was different from what I was expecting!  I bought two nice pieces of pottery there.  Beautiful goods, Don was right.

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One of the shopkeepers had her daughter there with her. Maybe she was the bookkeeper!

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The town was very quiet and Don said they sleep till noon on weekends.  At least the wonderful shop was open – I guess when a cruise ship arrives some people do get up early!  There were also craft stands lining the area of the floating port, and here you could bargain.

When we got back to the ship, we saw lots of dolphins as we sat on our balcony after lunch.

After we leave this port at 2 PM we have a stop to let the pilots disembark tomorrow.  But the 25% Brazilian tax is finished when we leave here – so I expect robust sales in the shops!

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Parintins, Brazil

April 13, 2018

Parintins is a city of about 100,000 and is on the right bank of the Amazon River on Tupinambarana Island.  It can only be reached by boat or plane. It is known as the most hospitable cultural city in this region and we certainly found that to be true.  We took a tender to shore and were greeted by their “boy and girl scouts” who smiled with us and helped anyone who needed any kind of assistance. 

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It was raining pretty hard when we got to shore, but we were intrepid walkers in spite of the many pedicabs that are here and really wanted to take us around town! Everyone we encountered had a smile and friendly greeting for us. We visited a very open modern church and walked through many markets where people were eager to show us their wares, especially the teeth of the piranha!

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They have some unique planters – these are tires that have a variety of plants in them.  Very pretty.

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As we walked around, the rain stopped and we went to a craft market area where we bought a couple of things.  I like to support the local people!

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One of the unique features of this city is the Boi Bumba festival held in June – the biggest annual festival in Amazonas.  It enacts the kidnapping, death and resurrection of an ox (boi), a metaphor for agricultural cycles. The event is turned into a competition between two Boi teams, each with several thousand members – Caprichoso in blue and Garantido in red.  The rivalry apparently grew out of a “friendly” feud between two families over 90 years ago. Tens of thousands of people come here for the festival and virtually every citizen supports either red or blue. Even when it is not festival time, it is common to see the colors of red and blue and bull symbolism everywhere.  One of the pictures below is of bull phone booths!  It is even said that the Coke advertises  the typical red can and also one in blue, the only place that Coke does this!  We didn’t spot any blue signs or cans. But we did see the blue headquarters and some of the replica bulls on the street.

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This costume on the back of the scooter is a typical Boi Bumba costume.

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Very little graffiti was seen here – different from many of the other cities we visited.  The sidewalks are often made of tile (slippery in the rain!) and there are some beautiful murals and buildings.

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There are many fishing boats and transportation boats, in fact our tender docked next to a boat that we had to walk through to get to the dock.  The docks and many houses are floating to accomodate the changes in height of the river in the rainy season.  Yesterday, Francisco said that it is a good thing if you don’t like your neighbor.  You can just attach your boat and pull your house to somewhere else!

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Tomorrow is our last port in the Amazon.  After that we head to Devil’s Island, French Guiana which is the site of the famous Papillion.  Rumor has it that they will show the movie in Horizons on Sunday evening before we arrive on Monday.

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Manaus, Brazil

April 12, 2018

Beautiful sunset last night!

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We arrived in Manaus at about 7 AM and our tour was scheduled to leave at 8:15.  After breakfast, we left the ship to board the Amazon Explorer, a large riverboat in which we would spend most of the tour.

We were greeted at the pier by some energetic dancers!  We heard and saw them from our balcony first.

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Our leaders on the riverboat were Francisco, Gabriel and Julio. All were very good English speakers and very informative.  The tour was called the Meeting of the Waters.

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First we heard something about Manaus.  It is a city of almost 3 million people, and like much of Brazil, they have a lot of people coming in from Venezuela and also from Haiti.  Manaus is on the left bank of the Rio Negro. There are many industries here, almost 800, and a lot of them are electronics companies.  Interestingly, Francisco says that if you want to buy a phone or a laptop, go to Sao Paolo – just because they are manufactured here it doesn’t make them less expensive – they are often twice as costly!

The wealth in Manaus originally came from the rubber trade in the late 1800s and at that time it was one of the richest cities on earth. It had streetcars, electricity and flush toilets before much of Europe.  The citizens were so wealthy that they would give vintage wine to their horses and send their shirts to be laundered in Lisbon and Paris!  By 1910 rubber seeds smuggled out by an Englishman called Henry Wickham and then planted in Malaysia destroyed Brazil’s monopoly.  Manaus was literally plunged into darkness with no money to import coal for generators.

On the way to our first exploration of Lake January, we saw many homes on stilts and others that are floating houses, both allow the residents to stay in their homes during some of the rainy season.

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We left the riverboat at a riverside restaurant and boarded 10 passenger motorized canoes that took us into narrow channels in the tropical forest to Lake January. We saw the giant water liles, Vicgtoria Regia, named after Queen Victoria.  These plants have huge leaves measuring as much as 6 feet across – and there are spikes on the bottoms.

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This is the beginning of the rainy season and the waters are high, but look at the dark part of these trees, by June, the height of this season, the water will rise 15-20 feet higher up to the top of the dark area! The animals here all live high in the trees for this reason.

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There are manatees in these waters that eat the vegetation – but we didn’t see any.  We did see some beautiful birds, flowers, etc.

We returned to the riverboat and had some time to wander through the local craft markets.  One vendor gave me a paracau scale which she showed me how to use as a nail file!

We took the riverboat to the meeting of the waters of the Rio Negro and the Solimoes River where it forms the Amazon River.  The Rio Negro is very acidic so no mosquitoes or birds live here.  The water looks black because of the trees and the organic material.  It is very clean even though it looks black and brown. The piranha here are only in groups of 3 or 4 so are not so dangerous as compared to the Amazon where they travel in groups of hundreds and could eat us in a matter of minutes!

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The meeting of the waters is really dramatic to see!

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Julio got water from each river to let us touch it to see the temperature difference – this is part of the reason the waters don’t mix, the other is the current.  The Amazon is colder!

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We again saw some dolphins but they are too quick for pictures and also don’t surface the way our Atlantic dolphins do.  The reason for the pink color of the pink dolphins is that the blood vessels that run beneath their skin, which is thinner than that of ocean dolphins, are close to the surface.  When they become happy or nervous, their color can change similar to when a human blushes.  These dolphins are highly intelligent with brain capacities said to be larger than that of humans.

We saw some of the boats that take people from here to other cities – sometimes taking 4 – 6 days.  There are few roads here so transport is by boat or plane.  There are hammocks hanging all over in these boats for the people to sleep in during the journey. Talk about roughing it!

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After our return to the pier, we had lunch and then went out to explore the city.  Gabriel warned us that it would rain, which it does every day here in this season, so I don’t know if he is much of a weatherman!  We did make it to the Opera House before it rained and we are so glad we did.  We had a guided tour and it is spectacular.  It is called Teatro Amazonas and has 670 seats.  It was constructed beginning in 1882 at the height of the rubber boom.  No expense was spared to make it the grandest opera house in the new world. Everything was brought from Europe. The wood is Brazilian but was sent to Europe to be polished and carved.  There are 22 marble columns in the auditorium, each topped by Greek masks fo comedy and tragedy and inscribed with the grandest names of music and literature such as Shakespeare, Beethoven, Mozart and Goethe.

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The wood floor alternates colors to depict the meeting of the waters. After the rubber barons left Manaus, the theater sat wasting in the tropical heat until a restoration was completed in 1990.  Now all kinds of performances are held here.

This is a lego model of the opera house!

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We also saw the customs house, the palace of justice and the cathedral. And, there are places where the facades of buildings are intact but the rest has been destroyed – trees and vines are growing inside!

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After our visit to the Opera House, the rain came down like crazy and we took a cab back to the port where we boarded the shuttle through the pier area as you are not allowed to walk there.  All in all a fun day in Manaus!

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Boca De Valeria, Brazil

April 11, 2018

Boca da means “mouth of” and is an entrance to the Valeria River and overlooking the Amazon.

We boarded a tender to go to shore.  And here is Tom with the most unusual visor I have seen!

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There were no planned excursions here as the town is the equivalent of about a city block and a half long.  It contains a few wooden houses on stilts, a small one room school and a small church. There is a lot of wildlife.  The people are called Caboclos, decendents of the Portuguese settlers who intermarried with the local Indians.  They live off the land by fishing, keeping pigs and chickens and by planting vegetables in raised beds. The population is about 75-100 people.  When ships stop here, people from nearby villages also come to participate in the tourist trade. 

You can also observe the distinct line where the waters of the  Valeria River meet the Amazon.

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We brought lots of American dollars and gave them out to everyone we took a picture of. Here are some of the local people and their homes and school.

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Here’s Alice in a local house.

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And more shots of the house and the raised gardens.  And, the puppies!

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We did have a lot of interactions with the animals too!

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Here’s a shot of the school where some of the children were having lessons. We were going to bring wrapped chocolates from the ship for them but were told that they do not have dental care, so we didn’t bring the candy.

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Another hot Amazon day with a nice up close glimpse of Amazonian life.

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Santarem, Brazil

April 10, 2018

Last evening we were invited to dine with the general manager, Thierry, and the human resources manager, Ileana. We had an enjoyable dinner and as always, learned a lot about life on board for these professionals. Enjoyable but challenging as you can imagine. Ileana is the only HR person on board and doesn’t even have any clerical help.

We arrived in  Santarem  close to noon and the ship sailed out at 8 PM. This city is a river port with about 250,000 people so it is not a small village.  It is located at the junction of the Tapajos River and the Amazon.  It is an important trading center and serves as an export location for goods to the local population and transportation to longer distance locations like Manaus and Belem – which takes 2 days. There are many soy plantations and you see lots of barges being loaded with soybeans – mostly for export to China, we learned.

51% of the population is Catholic so you see some beautiful churches.

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Santarem used to be inhabited by the Tapajos Indians and local legend has it that they used to drown adulterous women and mummify their distinguished relations!

Our excursion today was a cruise to Maica Lake.  One of the things to see at many of the ports, and for sure today, is the meeting of the waters.  The Amazon’s water, as I have mentioned, is colder and earth colored and the other river here, the Tapajos, is warmer and has a deep blue tone.  What keeps these waters from mixing is the great difference between the water temperature and the currrent speeds.

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Our guide told us a lot about the city as well as the nature along the route to Maica Lake. There are 2 species of dolphins here, the pink dolphin and the black or grey batos.  We did see both but they disappear too quickly to get any pictures.  We may see more of the pink dolphin in Manaus.

Here along the river, as it is now rainy season, many people have to leave their homes and move to the city since the area gets flooded. We did see some people but not many. Here are some of the homes – I wouldn’t want it to be my vacation spot!

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Some of the wildlife we saw included many species of birds – the parrots and beautiful oriole blackbird, sloths (hard to see) and iguanas.  There were also water buffalo and horses in places along the shore.  We couldn’t get a close pic of the oriole blackbird, so our guide showed us one in a book…beautiful.

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Here’s what some of the boats looked like. And one of the small fishing boats was also passing by.  Notice that one of the boats has a satellite dish on top!

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We stopped for about an hour to do some piranha fishing.  Here’s the bait and the fishing line.  And someone trying to get hooked.

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I was one of the 2 passengers that caught one!

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They have these small sharp teeth!

This is a scale from the paracau fish which can get to be 250 pounds in weight.

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Here our guide, Nelson, holding a small catfish that someone caught.

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We enjoyed our trip on the river and in the lake and certainly felt the Amazon vibe and the heat!

Posted in Amazon River, April, Excursions, South America | 3 Comments

Amazon River

April 9, 2018

We have had a series of lectures from Don Klein, as I mentioned before. With several more to come.  Yesterday, Norm went to the lecture and I watched it on TV later and – wow – what a lot of facts we learned about the Amazon. We are really looking forward to the adventure.

Yesterday we crossed the equator. We have done it many times but we always go to the crossing ceremony where those who have never crossed are “initiated” and the ship is given permission from “King Neptune” to actually cross the equator.  Here are some shots of the procession and the ceremony.

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As you can see, there was a fish kissing involved and some pies in the face for 3 crew who had never crossed before.

We entered the Amazon this morning, and as I write this, we have dropped anchor and are awaiting the 2 pilots that will be on the ship for the entire week we are on the river, each taking 12 hour shifts on the bridge. We just watched two pilots board a cargo ship nearby. Ours have just arrived.

The first thing to say about the Amazon – it is BIG and the water is brown. Don Klein says that it may look dirty but it is not, you can drink it!  Not that we will try.

The Amazon is the longest river in the world and here are some other things we learned:

  • It varies between 1 and 35 miles wide. The peak height is in June, the most rainy month.  We are in the beginning of the rainy season now.
  • The Amazon basin is a huge rainforest and it is 80-85% still OK.  But every year a part the size of Connecticut is lost.
  • It provides 20% of all the earth’s flowing water and at the mouth of the river, it discharges 7,000,000 cubic feet of water PER SECOND. 4.5 trillion gallons.  That is enough water to supply all the homes in the US for more than 5 months.
  • The outflow would fill Lake Ontario in 3 months.
  • It is made up of volcanic soil and water.
  • The Amazon basin is mostly flat and is made up of 2.3 million square miles. The area covered by the Amazon river and its tributaries more than triples over the course of a year.  In dry season 110,000 square km of land is water covered but in the wet season the flooded area rises to 350,000 square km. The difference in height of the river between dry and wet seasons is 90 feet.
  • Marajo island at the mouth of the river is the largest fresh water island in the world and is the size of Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island combined.
  • There is little deviation in rain, sun, and length of the day because of the harmony of nature here.  There are no natural catastrophes, there is a uniform climate (average only 5 degrees F variation) and it is located on the equator.
  • 1/2 of the world’s species of birds are found here as well as the largest parrots, otters and fish – the 350 pound pirancu. There are 2500 species of fish and over 500 different species of catfish (who knew!) some weigh 200 pounds.
  • As a comparison, in every 2.5 acres there are 90 species of trees – over 500 trees.  In temperate zones like where we live, the same area would contain 5-6 species and 90 trees.
  • The river is 250-300 feet deep.
  • We saw some pictures of moths that look like small plates – we might make that mistake if we eat in the Terrace Cafe while on the river!
  • There is a pink dolphin species that is more fish than mammal – no dorsal fin. We hope to see them while here. The boto is another dolphin we hope to spot – it is the largest dolphin in the world.
  • The big 3 to watch for are the Harpy Eagle, the jaguar and the anaconda.  I don’t prefer the last 2!
  • The coati we saw at Iguazu are also plentiful here and they are apparently as smart as 10 house cats.  Many monkeys and 3 toes sloths live here too.

Here are some shots as we entered the river. It was a bit rainy as we went for our morning deck walk but soon stopped.  You can see how big the river is and how brown but not much else at this point.

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Tomorrow is our first stop, Santarem, from noon to 8 PM. Two of the stops have no organized tours, Boca Da Valeria and Alter Do Chao.  We also have a stop in Manaus.  Much more to say after each, I am sure.

Posted in Amazon River, April, South America | 2 Comments

Fortaleza, Brazil

April 7, 2018

We had three sea days to travel from Rio to Fortaleza. Our original itinerary was to stop in Recife, but that got changed to Fortaleza.  We did find out that the reason had to do with a problem the cruise line had with refueling several months ago, and now they won’t stop in Recife any more. 

On the sea days, we relaxed, read, went to the spa, went to lectures and movies, did needlepoint, played in the casino, saw shows and of course shopped.  We didn’t buy anything though because the 25% Brazilian tax is imposed on all goods until about April 16 when we leave Brazilian waters.  You can choose items and have them put aside until then and charged at that time.

We had only 3 people for blackjack the other day and they usually won’t run the tournament for less than 4.  We talked them into it and actually did three tournaments.  My friend Tom won all three.  I guess we should have stopped at one, but it was fun. 

The enrichment lecturer, Dr. Don Klein, has been giving a lecture every day to provide context on Brazil.

Here are some of the things Norm has learned (He goes to all the lectures, I am often doing something else but they do replay them on the TV).

  • Brazil was the closest place to sail to receive African slaves.  60% of the slaves came here, while only 3% went to the US.  We were surprised by this.
  • In the US, there were often 10 slaves for every white landowner and in the American south, people were afraid that if they let the slaves keep their customs, including the drumming and their costumes, that they would rise up against their owners.  In Brazil, they didn’t have this fear and the dress, original dancing, drumming, etc, is very much a part of the culture here to this day.
  • There is economic diversity here, lots of poor people, but not racism as we know it.  You often cannot tell who is white, black or mixed as they all spend lots of time in the sun and look pretty much alike and are treated as such.
  • Brazil’s relationship with China is getting much stronger and the relationship with the US is getting weaker.
  • Brazil is bigger than the US without Alaska.  If you count Alaska, the US is bigger.

Much more we could share, I am sure, but that gives you an idea of the education we get in addition to the fun we have!

Yesterday there was a storm off our side of the ship – I could see it in the distance but we didn’t sail into it.  I stayed and watched from our balcony.  Here’s a picture of a small rainbow that appeared.

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Now to Fortaleza.  It is the third largest city in Brazil.  And we heard it was 12th in the world for crime, but we saw no evidence of that. We don’t wear any jewelry here anyway, and are careful with belongings. We only had a short time here because of the tides – we arrived at 8 but the shuttles didn’t start till 9:30 and you have to depend on a shuttle – people cannot walk in the port here because it is a busy shipping port.  We sailed out at 2.  We didn’t have the time to do much as the city center wasn’t so close, so we took the shuttle to the shopping mall and had a nice comfortable walk in air conditioning.  Of course I have a picture of an adorable little girl. And one of the sculptures they had on display.

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And here are some of the beaches.  There is diversity here – lots of poor areas but many beautiful new high rises too.

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This is an old lighthouse.

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The mall was new and modern with many of the same shops as we have in the US.  Many things are much more expensive here – for example, most people do not have iphones since they cost twice as much as in the US.  Some different things we saw – there was a perfume place that would make a custom scent for you. 

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And there was a coaching store!  Lots of books but all in Portuguese, but the hats were in English (maybe the word for coach is the same in both languages??)  I told the woman there that I was a coach in the US and she was delighted to hear it.

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We came back to the ship for lunch and then saw the movie I Tonya while we sailed back into the Atlantic Ocean.  Here is what this port looks like from the ship.

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Tomorrow we are at sea, and on Monday we enter the Amazon River.  Looking forward to that and the adventures that await us there.  We will see if the moths really are big enough to lift a rabbit. 

Posted in April, South America | 2 Comments