Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Our Alaska Cruise



The Alaska Cruise


Our cruise to Alaska,  aboard the Amsterdam, was magnificent. We had great accommodations, excellent food and best of all calm seas.  Actually, "best of all" was going with our friends Sara and Doug Sheldon who we met in Amman Jordan where I worked for State and Doug worked for US AID. Our last trip together was in 1984 when we went to Egypt and traveled to the Pyramids.

We embarked on Sunday July 20 at 4 pm and disembarked Sunday July 27 at 8 AM. There were 1450 passengers and 650 staff and crew. It seemed like the right proportion.


Medi just arrived on board. She thinks the Holland American Line is the best.



A four course meal was served every night. The choices each night  sometimes made final selection difficult.


Doug and Sara Sheldon. Doug met Sara when he was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Colombia.





























As we reached the glacier area,it suddenly got very very cold. Don't we look it?


The snow covered mountains seen from the boat.




First sight of the glacier.





The passage inwards



At the Glacier


Waterfall by the glacier



Today the real gold mined is from selling artifacts and tours to the tourists.



Given the tourist season is 5 months, the dark winter days last six months , it is not hard to believe that bars and liquor stores are popular. One town was said to have 31 bars and 18 churches.




The funny thing is this group had not even entered the bar yet.



Like all the towns we went to, Juneau has seen better times.  Juneau,the state capital, has a population of 31,000. The other towns we went to Sitka and Ketchikan have populations of 8,000 each. The next largest town is Wasilla where Sarah Palin started her political career as mayor.



Downtown Juneau



Medi charms the bear.





The Japanese restaurant charms Medi




Sitka was the second place we visited. It was like Juneau but smaller. The tour there focused more on the native Indian culture, its dances and its totem poles.





The group wanted to adopt Medi into their tribe but she told them her ship was about to sail.






This Russian Orthodox church is a reminder of the Russian involvement in Alaska




 The cafe was started in 1925 by a Japanese couple who arrived from New York.






One way to get through the long, long dark winter months.



This statue called the Pioneer stands in front of the local government building. Most of the 70,000 gold miners who headed for the gold fields did not make it. Saddest of all was the fate of the 35,000 miners who hauled 1,000 pounds of supplies up a 35 degree mountain pass only to find upon arrival all the land been staked out by the very first miners.




This is totem pole park. We learned the totem pole was carved mainly to record tribal history or tribal values. They were never meant to be "worshipped"  There were two other purposes: one was to honor someone and the other was to shame someone. We saw one honoring Lincoln and the crew of the USS Lincoln which helped bring peace to the area. We saw another shaming Secretary of State Seward who was feasted by the local tribe for five days of non stop eating and drinking. Before he could reciprocate, as local custom demanded, Seward was called away.






The "Inside Passage" made our trip smooth as can be.



How beautiful ! Our last stop was in Victoria , British Colombia  in the beautiful Butchart  Gardens which sees a million visitors a year. . We did not get off the boat until 7 30PM so there was not much light. Medi had always wanted to visit the gardens  because her mother had visited the gardens many years before and said it was one of the prettiest places she had ever been to.


Here is a short précis on Alaska
Alaska is a U.S. state situated in the northwest extremity of the North American continent. Bordering the state to the east is Yukon, a Canadian territory, and the Canadian province of British Columbia, the Arctic Ocean to the north, and thePacific Ocean to the west and south, with Russia  further west across the Bering Strait. Alaska is the largest state in the United States by area, the 4th least populous and the least densely populated of the 50 United States. Approximately half of Alaska's 731,449 residents live within the Anchorage metropolitan area. Alaska's economy is dominated by the oilnatural gas, and fishing industries, resources which it has in abundance.Tourism is also a significant part of the economy.
Although it had been occupied for thousands of years by indigenous peoples, from the 18th century onward, European powers considered the territory of Alaska ripe for exploitation. The United States purchased Alaska from Russia on March 30, 1867, for $7.2 million ($121 million adjusted for inflation) at approximately two cents per acre . The area went through several administrative changes before becoming organized as a territory on May 11, 1912. It was admitted as the 49th state of the U.S. on January 3, 1959.[6]
The name "Alaska" (Аляска) had been introduced in the Russian colonial period, when it was used to refer to the peninsula. It was derived from an Aleut idiom, which figuratively refers to the mainland of Alaska. Literally, it means object to which the action of the sea is directed. It is also known as Alyeska, the "great land", an Aleut word derived from the same root.

You can learn more about Alaska on www.Wikipedia.com 



















































Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso

Ouagadougou is the capital of Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta) and the administrative, communications, cultural and economic centre of the nation. It has a population of about 1,400,000 . The city's nick name is Ouaga It does not have much in the way of sightseeing . It actually does not have much of anything except warm, kind people, but those aspects are hard to photograph.

I landed  there on a Friday evening and spent a very long, very boring weekend in a very drab two star hotel, the most disappointing of the hotels I stayed at in the 57 countries visited over the last four years.


The embassy driver pointed out this  "zero center" monument  - marking the  geographic center of the city.  It was the only thing of distinction I saw in the city.




This was my view when i got to the center of the city.





This was a fruit and vegetable stand outside the largest supermarket in town.






The mosque  off to the left of the photo was a familiar site that I saw everywhere I went in West Africa. Islam is the dominant religion in the region.






So many of the buildings in the new part of the city  - Ouaga 2000 - were still under construction.



When will contraction be complete?  Have the builders run out of money?




Sunday, December 15, 2013

Phnom Penh, Cambodia



On a quiet Sunday afternoon , I was able to visit the Royal Palace which is actually a series of seven structures.
Below is the main structure




Another building on the royal grounds



The Silver Pagoda is also within the Royal Palace grounds




This was my driver, Janta, who spoke little English but communicated well and shared his expert knowledge of the city.



Janta showed me the market place



Along the way,  we passed a food stand or two.


We visited pagodas and saw a family watching a girl having her fortune told by a monk.


She kept this holy book on her head while the monk chanted and when he was finished he opened the book to a certain page which predicted her fortune.





A very representative photo of the Buddha .






These temple guardians ensured evil spirits would not enter the pagoda grounds.






These same guardians ensured that foreigners would pay before entering.




The Prince Sihanouk Monument in the foreground and the Freedom Monument in the background.


Sunday, December 1, 2013

Bangkok, Thailand

We were in Bangkok for my work when we heard our daughter Ally and granddaughter Bella would join us for the weekend .  It was great news and a great weekend.


We did most of our travel around Bangkok by the BST or the Bangkok Sky Train




The Sky trains are colorfully painted and contain ads for movies and soft drinks. One ad for Coca Cola was so realistic and so deliciously cold,  I had to buy a coke after getting down from the platform.





To get to the river where our tour of the canals and a famous temple was we took a van instead of the train.





There is little crime in this area because Super Girl patrols the streets.




Besides,  people are too busy eating at sidewalk stands to even think of trouble.





There are stands flanking both sides of the lane. How can they eat so much and stay so thin?





Monks walk with their "begging bowl" into which people put either food or money.




Our destination was Wat Arun.  "Wat" stands for temple and "Arun" stands for dawn. This is the Temple of the Dawn.  Buddhists believe that when a person dies his / her soul goes to this temple to await rebirth.  Perhaps you were  here once.






At the entrance to every temple, there are guardians both sculptured and human.







Wat Arun is a series of structures. The picture to the right is one of the Thai king.





Symbols and statue of the Buddha are everywhere.





Inside the temple.




A beautiful princess.




We started our "klong" or canal tour from a dock at the temple.




Smaller temples dotted the route .







We really enjoyed the klong tour.





It was late in the afternoon so there was only one floating vendor. Earlier in the day, there were vendors selling drinks, flowers and fruit.





The canals in Bangkok are extensive .



These buildings mark the end of the canal as it feeds into the river.