My picture of the champagne waterfall long before they started. |
This is not my picture, but a good picture of the champagne waterfall. |
Prawn and Scallops on Polenta |
Baked Alaska Parade - it's not on every cruise and was a delight to see it again |
My picture of the champagne waterfall long before they started. |
This is not my picture, but a good picture of the champagne waterfall. |
Prawn and Scallops on Polenta |
Baked Alaska Parade - it's not on every cruise and was a delight to see it again |
No rain yesterday in Ketchikan, it was a gorgeous day! |
We woke up yesterday and it was so calm. The waves you see are the wake from the ship. The sun was shining and lots of people including Cheryl saw whales! I went onto Vessel Finder and at 8 AM we were at Alert Bay! In all my cruises to Alaska, I've never gone this slow. We don't have far to Ketchikan and he's saving fuel. About 1:00 PM, we passed the north end of Vancouver Island and the seas were rocky. It's about the same as we experienced with Celebrity Eclipse last month. Nothing for us but some people feel it. Our wrist bands are still in the package!
It was a very interesting Seminar this morning. Lots of travel agents with many years of experience. Some are less than a year and the longest serving person in the industry was 51 years! He was a lovely man from the US. He started working for an airline and then moved into the agency business. He too works from home.
After the seminar we had a galley tour, but it was a walk through the galley, not into the fridges and stock rooms like I had once before. Here are some pictures:
Before the tour, the staff introduced themselves to us and told us about the jobs. |
The pastry area |
This is where the main meals are made |
Dinner was a delicious steak and I started with garlic prawns. Service was very good. The show last night was a Matt Bergman a very funny comedian.
The ship is very calm so I just opened the curtains and we are in sheltered water! According to vessel finder we are not even passed the north end of Vancouver Island. It's calm and not raining.
Looking forward to another wonderful day at sea!
Yesterday BC Ferries cancelled ferries from Prince Rupert to Haida Gwaii. There are fierce storms out there.
In July, our friends Mike and Liz booked a 14 day cruise to Alaska on the Noordam. They left last week and we will cross paths in Ketchikan on Thursday. Liz was concerned about getting sea sick and asked me what I used. There has been motion on some of our cruises but it hasn't bothered me. I've been to Australia by ship, throughout the Mediterranean and sailed in the North Atlantic. I have never worn ear Band-Aids, wrist bands or taken Gravol.
I heard the Radiance of the Seas currently in Alaska has missed four ports. The weather in Alaska has been so bad, they just stayed in port and gave the customers a 50% future cruise credit. They are not required to compensate because of weather. Safety comes first and that was a good call. Offering compensation was very nice.
My friend Jean Gillespie is currently on the Sapphire Princess doing a 7 day Alaska cruise. Yesterday she should have been in Ketchikan. She just posted on Facebook, they skipped Ketchikan because of the storms. I just went onto Vessel Finder and they are sailing south of Prince Rupert and headed for sheltered water! Good for Princess.
I don't know what will happen with our cruise. Frankly, as long as I'm on a cruise, I don't care where it goes. Maybe we will sail around Georgia Strait for four days!Yesterday, I went to Going Places in Semiahmoo Mall and bought motion sickness wrist bands for Cheryl and I. They claim it puts acupressure on a your wrist and stops sea sickness. I guess we will have to see. I have also packed Gravol!
I will blog from the ship as long as I can find enough Wi-Fi bandwidth. They have Starlink but with the storms you can't be guaranteed a signal!
I know not everyone is a fan of Prince Harry, but you have to admire the Invictus Games he created. Next year they will be in London. I found this article quite moving about a Canadian soldier:
"Some of you may know what bagpipes mean to me, so I couldn't help but hope they'd be played!" he started.
The Price was visible emotional as he continued, looking at James in the crowd. "Yesterday I met with Master Corporal James Gendron from the Canadian team in the Invictus 2025 tent," he told the arena.
"While we were chatting, I noticed bagpipes lying on the floor in the far corner. Some of you may know what bagpipes mean to me, so I couldn’t help but hope they’d be played!
"Little did I know that thirty minutes later, it would be James picking them up and offering to play - yet I had NO idea what they meant to him. Nor did I know what memories they triggered for him. In Afghanistan, he played 63 ramp ceremonies. For 63 caskets. For 63 souls. For 63 families.
"For four years after that last ceremony, he couldn’t touch them. This week he wasn’t sure whether he could bring himself to play them. But he did. What had once haunted him – dare I say it – may now be what helps heal him. Thank you, James, for your service, for your courage, for sharing your gift."
I received this survey to fill out from my doctor's office. He had his own practise but sold out to a medical clinic corporation. This questionnaire had me scratching my head as I don't even know what some of this sexuality is:
Yesterday across Canada there were SOGI protests both for and against. In more than one community there was violence! This needs to stop! I hear people saying they are giving out information on sex change operations, telling children all kinds of sexual things they think they are too young to hear. I know there is a lot of misinformation out there so I did some reading.
I went to the School District of Surrey and this is what I found:
SOGI-inclusive education is a kind of road map of a diverse landscape. The term "SOGI" has been adopted to identity two prohibited areas of discrimination within the Human Rights Code: "Discrimination based on sexual orientation" and "Discrimination based on gender identity or expression." In 2016, Education Minister, Mike Bernier, required all British Columbia school districts and independent schools to bring their anti-bullying policies into alignment with the Human Rights Code by adding explicit protections for LGBTQ+ students. The Surrey School District's Safe and Caring Schools Regulation 9410.2, created in 2012, honours the idea that students' physical and emotional safety is foundational to their learning and that it can be realized through a long-term commitment to ensuring schools have prevention and intervention strategies in place.
SOGI is not a curriculum. SOGI-inclusive educators work to embed an honouring of diversity among people of all genders, with any sexual orientation or family structure, as they do with their inclusion in class content of the voices, images, and experiences of people belonging to other social groups based on race, religion, ethnicity, dis/ability, and many, many others. The Surrey School District believes in the right of all students to see themselves represented in what and how they learn.
We are actively committed to maintaining a working and learning environment that supports and protects all of our human rights. Please read Regulation 9410.2 and our SD36 SOGI Brochure.
I downloaded the brochure and if you are interested on what they are SAYING they are teaching, check it out. If anyone reading this blog knows a teacher or is the parent of a child receiving more information than what the article below states, please contact me. I would like to know what the real truth is.
I never knew how this came to be, so I researched it:
International Talk Like a Pirate Day is a parodic holiday created in 1995 by John Baur and Mark Summers of Albany, Oregon, who proclaimed September 19 each year as the day when everyone in the world should talk like a pirate. It has since been adopted by the Pastafarianism movement as an official holiday.
The holiday resulted from a sports injury. During a racquetball game between Summers and Baur, one of them, in pain, said, "Aaarrr!" and the idea was born. The game took place on June 6, 1995, but out of respect for the observance of the Normandy landings, they chose Summers' ex-wife's birthday, as it would be easy for him to remember.
So, now we know!
Yesterday, we went to Canada Place to wave good-bye to our friends Liz and Mike. They boarded the Noordam for a 14 day cruise to Alaska. It was a fabulous itinerary with some interesting ports: Kodiak; Anchorage; Valdez; Glacier Bay; Skagway; Sitka; Ketchikan; and Prince Rupert! They asked us to go with them but I was already booked on the Crown Princess. We will cross paths in Ketchikan in a week and a bit.
The Port of Vancouver had four ships in town, but the cruise port only has berths for three ships. The Viking Orion had to anchor off North Vancouver. I didn't see how they were boarding them but it must have been a tender shuttle! The Celebrity Eclipse, Royal Caribbean's Brilliance of the Seas and Holland America's Nordam were all berthed at Canada Place. You can see the Viking Orion on the left of this picture below, a long way from Canada Place!
She suffered with dementia in the latter years. She was loved by everyone and will be missed by all.
She is on the right of this picture and was my mom's bridesmaid. Her husband Dal is between my mom and Peggy. They were my mom and dad's best friends! Peggy is now at peace and they are all celebrating once again. Rest in peace.
October 7, 1939 |
The best thing I saw on the news was the fellow who won the PNE prize home! He's a night watchman. He called his boss to tell him he would be late because they were taking him to his new $2.3 million dollar home! He was living in a one bedroom New Westminster apartment that leaks!
and then this happened right after that wonderful announcement:
On December 31, 2022 Surrey had a population of 603,907. They used a poll of 337 citizens! What about the two groups of signatures, the second one used the electoral list so the 43,000 people who live and vote in Surrey asking for a democratic referendum were ignored? Do we not live in a democracy?
Mayor Locke sent the Province six letters for information to move forward and they have NEVER answered them. This mess has been going on since July and it's costing taxpayers $8 million dollars a month!
Last night at the city council meeting Chief Lipinski was asked how many officers he needs. This has been going on for five years and this is what he said:
Lipinski said about 45 per cent of the frontline right now are SPS people. Asked how many officers he thinks he actually needs, Lipinski replied he hasn’t “determined that specifically.”
CTV News release:
When contacted, the SPS referred CTV News to the police board – which said it could not comment at this time.
Meanwhile, Locke also took aim at Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth for failing to respond to multiple requests for information since the provincial government made its decision on Surrey policing in July.
“The roadblock is for the minister to respond … to the six letters now I’ve sent,” Locke said.
“We still don’t know the reason why he didn’t accept the Surrey plan (to keep the RCMP). We still don’t understand why he chose to go with the SPS and we do not know the path forward,” the mayor said, adding that the city is also waiting for provincial funding that was promised.
One of six letters:
My best friend growing up was Carol Smith. She was a member of Junior Achievement. She really enjoyed it and it made a huge impact on he...