lincslady Posted Tuesday at 04:29 AM #151 Share Posted Tuesday at 04:29 AM The sort of day that will stick in your memory. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kej1 Posted Tuesday at 06:46 AM #152 Share Posted Tuesday at 06:46 AM So we will be on the same cruise! Or most of it. Look forward to meeting you. A couple of the ports are repeats for us but we are really looking forward to seeing the ports in Indonesia as we have only been to Bali and Java in the last ( by land and air). 🤞will be another great trip! We look forward to meeting you. We met great people on our Papeete to Guam last spring on Pursuit. That was a highlight along with being in the South Pacific. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Fletcher Posted Tuesday at 06:55 AM #153 Share Posted Tuesday at 06:55 AM (edited) Still following this with interest and enjoyment but I wish Seabourn would be a little more ambitious with their South Pacific itineraries - the Marshall Islands, Tuvalu for example and Wallis & Futuna which has some simply mind-boggling churches (one of them straight out of Bavaria) and awesome beaches. And then across to places like Tokelau while it still exists. But they tend to stick to the more conventional routes and that's OK I guess but means I won't be aboard. I'm also beginning to suspect that these new ships, Pursuit and Venture, as brilliant as they are in most respects, might be a bit too big for some places. I went to most of these Pacific islands and atolls on ships with only about 50 cabins. Edited Tuesday at 06:57 AM by Fletcher 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BioInfoLib Posted Tuesday at 01:02 PM #154 Share Posted Tuesday at 01:02 PM 6 hours ago, kej1 said: So we will be on the same cruise! Or most of it. Look forward to meeting you. A couple of the ports are repeats for us but we are really looking forward to seeing the ports in Indonesia as we have only been to Bali and Java in the last ( by land and air). 🤞will be another great trip! We look forward to meeting you. We met great people on our Papeete to Guam last spring on Pursuit. That was a highlight along with being in the South Pacific. Great! I am very excited for the cruise too. We spent much of this last summer in Indonesia between the cruise and two snorkeling resorts and what I learned from those experiences is you can never have too much Indonesia! Can’t wait for next summer. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted Tuesday at 07:15 PM Author #155 Share Posted Tuesday at 07:15 PM @BioInfoLib & @kej1 You have me rethinking waiting till 2026 to come back.😂 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted Tuesday at 07:30 PM Author #156 Share Posted Tuesday at 07:30 PM On 9/24/2024 at 1:55 AM, Fletcher said: Still following this with interest and enjoyment but I wish Seabourn would be a little more ambitious with their South Pacific itineraries - the Marshall Islands, Tuvalu for example and Wallis & Futuna which has some simply mind-boggling churches (one of them straight out of Bavaria) and awesome beaches. And then across to places like Tokelau while it still exists. But they tend to stick to the more conventional routes and that's OK I guess but means I won't be aboard. I'm also beginning to suspect that these new ships, Pursuit and Venture, as brilliant as they are in most respects, might be a bit too big for some places. I went to most of these Pacific islands and atolls on ships with only about 50 cabins. We are so fortunate to explore and take these trips. However I am terribly jealous of of your travel history. We were just talking to some others about the lack of adventure on this trip. The Captian walked by the other day and was grumbling about needing to put the stabilizers out and how that would slow him down. How about speeding up so we can have more than a nano second at a small remote spectacular atoll like Vulanga, Fiji. I'm might disagree a bit about the size of Pursuit being a limiting factor for small island visits. Fulanga is only 18 square kilometers. The Dynamic Positioning System eliminates the need for anchoring. The number of people on board might be more of an issue. The biggest issue as you have mentioned is the Mother Ship! Oh to do a few laps around the islands you mention......... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted Tuesday at 07:55 PM Author #157 Share Posted Tuesday at 07:55 PM Tuesdays big excitement....Tonga and Indian Market. The first of four sea days with two Tuesdays. We dropped the Fijian Delegation off in Tonga around 6:30 am. Exciting, eh? The previous day I suggested that it would be nice if we could get a glimpse of the volcano that blew it's top. Turn on the fancy schmancy GSS and zero in. The ship is the blue arrow, red circle is the volcano. Hellooooooo Captian....take a left...... Go wild, throw caution to the wind. Leave the stabilizers in we won't mind a bumpy ride. Pretty please. You know the answer. 😟 We had to crack the Fijian Blue Turtle gin to drown our disappointment. It's made with Kava and we had our own special ceremony. Collinade Chef Rudolpho outdid himself with the Indian Market decorations. We overate. 20240923_194323.mp4 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BioInfoLib Posted Tuesday at 10:36 PM #158 Share Posted Tuesday at 10:36 PM 3 hours ago, highplanesdrifters said: @BioInfoLib & @kej1 You have me rethinking waiting till 2026 to come back.😂 We booked onboard for next year got 20% discount and $850 each OBC. Could not pass it up. Think I’m sorry we didn’t book all the way to Papeete. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted Tuesday at 10:50 PM Author #159 Share Posted Tuesday at 10:50 PM 12 minutes ago, BioInfoLib said: We booked onboard for next year got 20% discount and $850 each OBC. Could not pass it up. Think I’m sorry we didn’t book all the way to Papeete. A good TA should be able to extend it with the discount. Go for it! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted Wednesday at 07:30 PM Author #160 Share Posted Wednesday at 07:30 PM Two Tuesdays and no Tacos or Tutus. We crossed the international date line and got a fancy piece of paper noting our accomplishment. The cruising equivalent of a participation ribbon. Yesterday's activities included something called the Fun Fare. A first for me. There were numerous stations where one could earn points. I assume those points were tallied and prizes were awarded. Folks did seem to be enjoying themselves. Pillow stuffing. Knot tying. Towel animals Beer pong My sole accomplishment was 5 points for drinking a shot of Champagne. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lilly55 Posted Wednesday at 08:13 PM #161 Share Posted Wednesday at 08:13 PM 42 minutes ago, highplanesdrifters said: Two Tuesdays and no Tacos or Tutus. We crossed the international date line and got a fancy piece of paper noting our accomplishment. The cruising equivalent of a participation ribbon. Yesterday's activities included something called the Fun Fare. A first for me. There were numerous stations where one could earn points. I assume those points were tallied and prizes were awarded. Folks did seem to be enjoying themselves. Pillow stuffing. Knot tying. Towel animals Beer pong My sole accomplishment was 5 points for drinking a shot of Champagne. We had the fun fare on the Ovation transatlantic last year 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted 2 hours ago Author #162 Share Posted 2 hours ago On 9/25/2024 at 11:36 AM, BioInfoLib said: We booked onboard for next year got 20% discount and $850 each OBC. Could not pass it up. Think I’m sorry we didn’t book all the way to Papeete. It's never too late, go for it! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare highplanesdrifters Posted 49 minutes ago Author #163 Share Posted 49 minutes ago We are on our fourth glorious sea day. They are filled with coffee, reading, eating, swimming, eating, lecture, napping, swimming, napping at lecture (in room), reading, drinking, hot tub, eating, and drinking. Often in that order. Lather rinse repeat. Sorry, I've gotten to lazy to produce food porn. We have had days of sun, rain, sun with rain, sky so blue you think it might crack, big white billowy clouds, dark scary clouds, all within your field of vision. Tomorrow brings us to two days in Papeete. One day will be spent cleaning the hull, probably because no one at the mother ship thought to make an appointment in Ushuia. Change equals opportunity. Hopefully something good will come our way. Because, on a positive note we are getting a new Captian and EL. Yipeeeeeee! There are only 60ish people staying on for the next leg, 120 leaving. Word is we will only have 155 for next leg. A veritable ghost town. Sea days glorious sea days. 20240926_162010.mp4 A fun Expedition team this leg. Thime for the 5 o'clock drinking 🤣 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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