Upcoming holidays:

Upcoming Holidays:
19 August 2024 - Cruising from Sydney to Fremantle via Northern Australia - 18 days on the Coral Princess.
2 April 2025 - Cruise to Moreton Island on the Carnival Splendor.
10 October 2025 - Paul's 70th birthday - 3 day "Cruise to Nowhere" on the Pacific Explorer.
1 December 2025 - Cruise from Singapore to Brisbane on the Voyager of the Seas.

Monday 25 December 2023

Christmas Day catch-up

 Kangaroo Island shore excursion was mostly good. The tour guide aka bus driver did a good job of giving us all sorts of information about KI although we struggled to hear the commentary sometimes - not at all helped by shouting children.  

Biggest annoyance was actually when leaving the ship before the excursion.  Because we had been bumped from the morning version of the excursion to the afternoon one, we had to find our own way ashore and meet there.  P&O gave very specific instructions about how to get a tender ticket, left up all the signs pointing to the spot where you were supposed to pick them up, all good you’d think.  But then they decided that you could just go to the tender area without a ticket but without announcing this or removing the signs, leaving heaps of people including us wandering around helplessly looking for tender tickets. 

Eventually got ashore though, and had time to wander around Penneshaw before we were due to meet for the excursion.  Since Adam and I had been there back in early 2020, I knew where the local IGA was, so we picked up some snacks to take back onboard.  I also wanted to show Paul the really nice restaurant where Adam and I had eaten - and I did, but all we could see was a burned out building; apparently there was a fire earlier in 2023.

We were on the last tender back to the ship - the tour guide insisted on taking us to one more place even though it was obviously going to make us late.  They waited for us, and then we sat there for a while because they said they were waiting for another tour - but no-one showed up, so I’ve no idea what actually happened.

After that, nothing really exciting before we got to Hobart.  We did a shore excursion there - quite an interesting tour of the Anglesea Barracks, followed by a couple of hours being taken to various sights around the city.  Mostly interesting stuff although again had trouble hearing - this time because the bus air conditioning was really loud.  After the tour we wandered into the city as Paul needed to find a chemist.  We then had dinner in a random Japanese restaurant - the ship didn’t sail until midnight - and then wandered back onboard.

Very disappointed to be greeted by a notification that our shore excursion transfer to the airport had been cancelled, and that it was too late to get a normal transfer.  We now apparently just have to wait in a queue for a taxi and hope for the best.  Lovely.

Christmas Day has been very exciting for the kids.  The ship was already very Christmassy but lots more decorations appeared overnight.  Then Santa arrived on the upper deck, followed by photo opportunities in the Blue Circus.  For us, a sad day as it’s our first Christmas without Adam, but it was easier to deal with here rather than at home where his absence would have been so much more obvious.

It’s now lunch-time on Christmas Day and we’re sailing in a holding position off the coast of Tasmania; I presume because it really doesn’t take that much time to get back to Melbourne (not due back there until the 27th) and sailing in circles around Bass Straight could be just a bit uncomfortable!


Thursday 21 December 2023

Christmas Cruise

 Currently at Kangaroo Island so I thought I’d post a catch-up while we have proper internet access.

We left home on Monday 18th, with an overnight stay planned in Melbourne before the cruise left on the 19th.

Nothing much to say about the trip to Melbourne, the traffic was okay, we checked in with no trouble, and the flight was on time.

While planning the trip I was quite concerned about the heat - it can be very hot in both Melbourne and Adelaide, and you can also be unlucky with poor cooling in cruise ship cabins too.  So, I brought along by little USB desktop fan that I usually use at work, and also a separate hand held fan that I use at the baseball (to carry on shore excursions).

First concern was that we could spend ages waiting in the heat for a taxi and then have one of those drivers who won’t use their air- conditioning.  Reality was that there were about 10 taxis waiting, and ours was as cool and quiet as you could want.

Got to the hotel way too early - Qantas rescheduled us to an earlier flight some time ago - but it’s alway worth going to the hotel because they’ll nearly always agree to hold your suitcases and sometimes will check you in early.  We got an early check-in, and a free upgrade - were meant to be in a studio apartment and ended up in a two bedroom, two bathroom apartment which I swear was almost as big as our house.  Very nice.  And, got a free bottle of wine because it was my birthday next day.

We had paid for a late checkout on the 19th as our time for checking into the cruise was from 2pm to 2:30.  Got to the port really quickly and made a rookie mistake - should have asked the driver to drop us off and let us walk onto the pier, but he drove us on.  It took more than half an hour to get from the end of the pier to the taxi drop-off point!

P&O checkin process was very quick, although security had a fail - in his backpack Paul had a bottle of water they gave him on the plane; he forgot about it and they didn’t notice.  Oops.

Cabin is nice but very small, even for a cruise ship cabin.

The seas haven’t been too bad, although I did knock myself out with sea-sickness tablets on the first night, as per usual.

We’re now just waiting to go ashore on Kangaroo Island, but my concerns about the heat have been set aside by concerns that we’re likely to be too cold - top temperature here today is going to be about 19 degrees,