Friday, August 23, 2019

Aug 22 Dublin Ireland

Our third visit to Dublin, so we just walked around, visited a shop or two that we had previously visited and ate lunch at the Quay restaurant in Temple Bar.  C big fan of Dublin.

A couple of pictures from the sailout from Belfast.  Everyone has an "eye" nowadays, with the tiny green Irish fields in the only sunlight of the day.
 Not just a channel marker, but a bird sanctuary.
 Walking around Dublin









Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Aug 21 Belfast, UK

After a lovely stay in Reykjavik we spent a day at sea traveling to Londonderry, Northern Ireland.  We chose to stay aboard because a) we visited here early in July on this cruise, b) it was a tender port, c) it was a 45-minute shuttle bus from the port to the city, each way, d) the ship didn't arrive until 1pm, and e) it was raining.  Most of the guests had tours booked so the ship was empty for the afternoon.  And it turned out that f) traffic was horrible, and most of the tours didn't make it back before 7:30pm.  One private group almost got left behind since they just barely beat the 10:30pm return time for an 11pm departure.  We felt good with our stay behind decision.

Today we skipped ahead to Belfast. We a) had visited in July, but not the city, b) docked, c) 10-minute shuttle, d) 8am arrival and e) it didn't start raining until 1pm and we were back aboard by then. And for completeness, f) traffic was bad, but the commute was short.

A sunny morning as we pull into Belfast harbor, best known as the place where the Titanic was built.  Everything is green in Ireland, from the containers to the heavy equipment to the grass growing on the warehouse roof.
 The shuttle dropped us off right at the center of town.  The Belfast City Hall is a work of art, both outside...
 ...and inside.

 Statue of Queen Victoria

 Titanic Memorial
 African War Monument (Boer War to us)
 Unfortunately the market is only open Fri-Sun.
 The River Lagan.  Nautica is just up the river beyond the bridge.
 Public art symbolizing unity.  To me it looks like an advertisement for Olympic Rythmic Gymnastics, or a hula hoop.
 The Big Fish, the Salmon of Knowledge.  Honest, that's their name for it.
 A close-up of the "scales" of the fish.
 Prince Albert Memorial Clock
 Oldest building in Belfast.  It's a bar.  Surprised?
 The clock from below.  Even though we walked a couple of miles in between, this clock is only about three blocks from the Queen Victoria statue.
 Street art
 UK version of the Dollar Store.   Here you pay 30% more.
 Posted without comment

 This store was in a shopping mall. Big window display of sugary breakfast cereals, and inside was all sorts of familiar candies, and some not so familiar.  One section is dedicated to Hostess Cupcakes and Twinkies.  I imagine they were relieved when someone bought the Hostess name and started again with Twinkies after the bankruptcy.  (I also find it interesting that the spell checker in blogger does NOT question the word Twinkies. It flags Londonderry, Nautica and Lagan, but not Twinkies.  I guess programmers were involved.)
 This is a grocery store!  Tesco.  Imagine Publix, Harris-Teeter or Kroger like this.

 Crown Liquor, a Victoria pub.


 This is a "meter maid" uniform, looking more like the Royal Irish Grenadiers.

Monday, August 19, 2019

Aug 18 Reykjavik Iceland

After taking organized tours the two previous days, we decided to take the shuttle bus into town and walk around.  This would be a short day, with the ship leaving at 3pm, so we got on the first shuttle bus at 8:30am.  We had been unable to get downtown yesterday because there was a big festival, including the gay pride parade. 

This is the house that Gorbachev and Reagan met in 1986.
 Sun Voyager -- street art
 The locals probably considered this a calm day, only 30 knot winds at 7C coming from the harbor.  We Floridians were freezing. (30 knots= ~305mph at 7C = 44F)
 The HARP concert hall
 Gate to block off the street for pedestrians
 They rainbow painted the street for yesterday's festival.  That's the big Lutheran Church at the end.


 Hallgrimskirkja, the parish Lutheran Church of Reykjavik
 Patterned brick outside the front door

 The pew backs are like train seats -- you can flip the backs to either side so you can face the front or the back of the church.



 Lief Ericsson statue, a gift of the United States
 Seen in a house window, this is a solar powered moving figure.  The queen "waves" her hand in the royal fashion by rotating it back and forth.




 Someone dumped a bag of bread crumbs on the lake shore and this happened.
 The crew was having a life raft drill when we returned.  Here they demonstrate the operation of a life raft.