Archive for the ‘Mexico’ Category

Galveston 2

February 8, 2008

I’ve never seen so many miles of empty beach except along the coast of Baja.

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Maybe it’s empty because it’s a climb to get back to the road.

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I’m sure when the season starts, things will get busier. Spring Break brings thousands of kids here. Most go to the public beach at the end of town where you can drive on the sand and alcohol is permitted. As you leave that beach there is a sign that says, “Drive Safely”. Just underneath that sign is another that says, in bigger letters, “DRIVE SAFELY”. Now I figure if you’re drunk the size of the letters won’t make any difference. It should say “DDRRIIVVEE SSAAFFEELLYY”. That way the driver’s blurred vision could decode the message.

Galveston used to pretty wide open with the Balinese Room at the end of a long pier, the liquor and gambling place to be. Bob Hope, Tony Bennett, and Sinatra performed there, among others. Every night the slots and tables were busy. But, why that long hall to get to the happenings?

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Here’s the way it worked. When the troopers made a raid, the doorman would push a buzzer letting them in and notifying the band that visitors were on their way. The band would burst into “The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You”. When the music played, the slots disappeared into the walls, the tables became dining tables and all was cool. And that is the answer to the long hall. The troopers had to run down the hall and never made it it to the main room in time.

I’m sure The Balinese Room looked better back then.img_2998.JPG

I can’t imagine Sinatra in the place as it now stands. By the way, it’s for sale.

I am with a press group and we had a busy day. We were only in one place, but it’s a big place. It’s called the Moody Gardens and has three pyramids.img_3023.JPG

One housing an aquarium,img_3019.JPG

another a rain forest,img_3027.JPG

and the third, a 4D Imax experience featuring dinosaurs. I asked what the fourth dimension was, and apparently it’s smell. “How do dinosaurs smell?” I asked. “Rotten”, our guide sniffed.

a trainer opened a door to the penguin place, and the first penguin that felt like taking a walk could come with her .

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On the second floor is an exhibition of the sinking of the Titanic.

img_3024.JPGAs you can see, I can’t show you anything, but this is more impressive than the one in Ireland at the site of the doomed ship’s departure.

There also is a huge water park, and a 5 diamond hotel. Great place for kids. Imagine being able to go back to school and being able to tell everyone how dinosaurs smell.

My favorite spot was the flight museum.

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You can actually get flights in a B-25 ($375), a B-17 ($425) and my favorite, an open cockpit Stearman ($225).

And there, under it all, was a Ford from 1941

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As I remember, automobiles were not manufactured until after the war. The “A” on the windshield rationed the monthly amount of gas one could buy. Now the letters are replaced by the $ sign. Check it out at www.LSFM.org.

Also check out www.Galveston.com . Scroll towards the bottom of the page and you’ll see webcams. Take a look at who’s on the beach, which cruise ships are in port, and who’s doing what in the Galvez Hotel lobby.

Dinner was at Sky Steak and Sushi.

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Great sushi rolls and the hottest wasabi I’ve ever had to extinguish.

The group then went across the street to a performance in The Grand Old Opera House built in 1894. I’d like to see the theater, but “Menopause, The Musical” may not be my thing, as they say. I heard it really doesn’t get started until after intermission. (And if you get that obscure reference, I salute you.)

I opted for Jazz here at the hotel. These guys have been around a long time. The trio was piano, electric bass plus a guy who banged a tambourine on his knee, and played the tenor sax — ..badly. When he hit the right notes, which was seldom, he was way out of tune. I guess the difference was, I wear hearing aids and so could pick up the nuances. If he wore hearing aids he’d stick to the tambourine.

Tomorrow we’ll see some of the historical homes, view the great storm video, and then board Ecstasy.

Galveston, Texas

February 7, 2008

I’m going to be in Galveston for three days before boarding the Carnival Ecstasy, now sailing 4 and 5 day voyages year round.

The big problem with Galveston is that it’s 71 miles from the Houston airport. The good news is there is little traffic on the freeways. I was picked up by a limo so long that I almost had to use email to talk to the driver. When I got to the Hotel Galvez, I took three photos of the car and driver. None of them showed up on my flash card. I truly think my camera was just embarrassed by it all. Later, the Senior Concierge, Jackie, told me that the limo was the talk of the lobby, and everyone wanted to know who was stepping out of it. Well, be that as it may, when I got to the desk, I had to show photo ID. The size of the car will only get you so far.

This town is full of history. Jean Lafitte came across this perfect spot for spoils about 190 years ago, and named it Campeche. The little village contained huts for the pirates, a slave market, boarding houses for visiting buyers, saloons, pool halls, gambling houses and Lafitte’s own house, the “Maison Rouge”; the ruins of which still exist. At one point, Campeche was home to about 1,000 people.

With its access to ships, and since Congress had not approved chartered banks, financial transactions were handled by mercantile firms. The Strand, named after a street in London was filled with wholesalers, cotton agents, paint, drug, grocery, hardware, dry goods stores and insurance companies. The Strand became known as the “Wall Street of the Southwest”.

Galveston‘s prosperity suddenly came to a halt on September 8, 1900; the problem was a lot of street and not enough wall. The deadliest natural disaster in United States history hit Galveston Island. A storm with winds exceeding 120 miles per hour plus a tidal surge devastated the island and killed more than 6,000 people. At the time of the 1900 Storm, Galveston had a population of 37,000 and was the fourth largest and the most sophisticated city in Texas. One-third of the city, more than 3,600 buildings, was completely destroyed, Too numerous for conventional burials the dead were weighted and buried at sea; later they washed ashore. From that point, they were burned in funeral pyres all over the city. The dead were uncovered at a rate of 70 per day for at least a month after the storm.

Enough being too much, in 1902 Galveston built a 17 foot high, 10 mile long seawall. The wall was built in sections over the years; meanwhile the city was raised 17 feet and sloped downward at a pitch of one foot for every 1,500 feet to the bay.

Today, the Strand is one of the largest and best-preserved concentrations of Victorian, iron-front commercial architecture in the country.img_2994.JPG

It’s a shopper’s paradise with more than 100 shops, including coffee houses,

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chocolate vendors,

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and a store that sells something or other.

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Mostly other.

This being off season, all the stores are having sales with 70% off the rule of thumb. The Strand and the streets around are almost empty.strand.JPG

Hotel Galvez was built in 1911 and by 1918 it was thriving.

img_2974.JPGThey were averaging 400 guests a day. No wonder, rooms went for $2.00. There is one room, 501 that is not always available. It is the favorite room of a female who checked out, before she checked in; as a ghost. Whenever she’s in residence, the door locks itself and the hotel cannot get it open until she leaves. Hey, I just report what I’m told. A contributor to Tripadvisor.com said that she felt a hand on her shoulder when she was taking a shower. Should that happen to me, I’m making sure there’s no extra fee added to my bill.

Today costs a bit more, but it is worth it. this is the view from my window.

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Galveston is still growing and there’s a lot of building going on. Beach condos and semi mansions are sprouting on the peninsula.

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The beach property goes for about $350,000; building costs are $235 per square foot. It’s a short hike

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to the empty beach.

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This house faces Offats Bayou. The name came from the old rail stop and the saying, “Let me ‘off at’ the Bayou”.

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Tomorrow we’ll visit the Pyramids. Huh?

Cabo San Lucas

January 7, 2008

The entry to Cabo is always lovely. First we passed the long strand of empty beach slowly being turned into resort playgroundsp1010717.JPG with Flipper and friends as guides.p1010713.JPG Next the left hand turn past Los Arcos,p1010735.JPG

 Lovers Beach, p1010737.JPG

 

and then to anchor off the port area

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filled with boats, ranging from not much more than a row boat to huge yachts.

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There was no wait for the tender, and we headed in. 

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Years ago, when we first came here there were dirt streets. Now multi million dollar condos provide a backdrop as you walk from the tender dock to town, and upscale shops are developing in the port area itself.

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 Soon there will be no need, unless you are short a serape, to go to town at all.

 

It’s a lovely walk, made more interesting as we watched two mimes standing completely motionless.img_2806.JPG

 We watched for a bit, saw not a palpitation and I dropped a dollar in their coffee can. They immediately broke pose and shook my hand.img_2804.JPG

 

 It took a while to get the silver off.

 

Our first stop, as always, was Senor Greenberg’s Mexicatessen. It was gone! It is now Cabo Coffee.img_2811.JPG

Swallowing that disappointment, I had another quest. We always bring Listerine with us, and somewhere at home on the floor of the closet, just outside the “this is what we’re packing” circle, are three bottles of green. So my job was to find a Pharmacy.

 

Michael’s job, if she accepted it was to look for earrings. She accepted it.

 

Being Sunday, and with only one ship in port, the town was almost empty. I tried a few Farmacias and learned that the sign “Abierto” meant open — or closed. Just beyond a flea market with no fleas,img_2813.JPG

 I saw a Pharmacy with the door open. No tricky signs here.

 

I went in and found four small bottles of Listerine, $4.40 each. The solitary clerk in his late twenties asked if I had cash. I did, but to get to my pocket, I had to untie my camera from my wrist. Putting the camera down, we finished the transaction and I was off to find Michael.

 

Since I am never sure where she told me she’d be, and so many of the jewelry stores, the sun reflecting off the cheap silver in the windows, look alike, I called her on my cell. 13 numbers dialed, hums and buzzes as the signal went from the cobblestone street up Baja to Santa Clarita, California and back again to Michael’s phone….eight feet away. She had just come out of the store next to me.

 

Suddenly, as she handed me the bag with a pair of new Crocs she had bought, I realized my camera was still at the pharmacy, about 50 yards away. I dashed back, did not see my camera on the counter and asked the clerk if he had it.

 

“What camera?” he said. “I didn’t see a camera.”

 

“Yes, you did’” I said. “It was right next to your register.”

 

“Oh,” he said, “a man came in and got it.”

 

“I don’t believe that”, I said.

 

“He said his wife left it.”

 

“She didn’t.” I said. “How long ago was that?”

 

“About 30 minutes ago.”

 

“I was here less than 10 minutes ago.” I said. “What you are telling me did not happen,”

 

“I don’t know.” he shrugged, and actually pulled his laptop out of my reach.

 

I went out and reported this to Michael who drifted into the jewelry store adjacent to the pharmacy.

 

In front of the pharmacy was a bench. When I get really angry, my face can become kind of scary. My friends used to call it “the ray”. I sat and stared furiously at the clerk. He soon came out.

 

“Is it really your camera,” he said.

 

“Yes!” I growled.

 

He led me inside and handed me the camera. But first, he made me identify at least one of the images on the screen. I showed him this one.

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So he, in his mind had proved that he was not a thief, but just protecting the camera until the “real” owner showed up. I thought he came really close to being a thief.

 

A word about buying drugs in Mexico. It is illegal to buy drugs in Mexico without a prescription from a Mexican Dr. Most pharmacies pay no attention to this, even though there is always a Doctor’s office nearby. This law is only enforced if the Federales get bored, and would rather have you use your Vicodin money to bail yourself out. By the way, Vicodin is $20 a pill.

 

Heading back to the ship we passed a stand set up with a lion cub in a small cage. For some pesos (to be donated to an animal charity), they would take your picture holding the cub against an African backdrop. Michael thought about getting a photo for the grandkids, but I was not pausing. Even though I had my camera, my rage was slow in subsiding.

 

We rounded the last turn in the walk to the tender, and there it was, Senor Greenberg’s.img_2815.JPG

 It was a lot different inside, but the Christmas tree with the bagels was still there.img_2818.JPG

 It’s one of the few places in town that you can get milkshakes, smoothies and FREE Internet. Nachos and a Pacifica took care of the lingering anger.

 

As we left, Michael spotted a Crystal Cruises ID card, without which you can’t get on the ship, on the ground, All ID cards have the owner’s photo and name. This belonged to a woman from Miami. Picked up, we kept the card out and Michael scanned faces. When we got to the first Security gate, a woman and two men were being escorted to the tender dock by a Security Officer. It was her. (ok,ok,”she”)

One of the men she was with had a great photo holding the lion cub. And a claw gash in his arm.

 

We were tired!img_2810.JPG

 

It was nice to see the ship waiting, and knowing a nap was only ten floors away.

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Such a Deal

July 7, 2007

I usually only blog when I am on a ship, but as I was doing my weekly half hour report to NewsTalk KION’s morning show, it occurred to me that a lot of what I find might interest you. For instance here is an extraordinary deal on the Island Princess.

island1.jpgIsland Princess®

Imagine 19 days from Los Angeles down the coast of Mexico, into and out of the Panama Canal, experiencing the locks, and stopping at all of these interesting ports.

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And here’s the great part, you can do this for less than $90 a day. Of course, that’s an inside cabin, but upgrades start at only $99. Island Princess leaves on September 20th and to get in on this amazing voyage go to Princess.com quickly before the ship fills up.

A word about Island Princess. Some say a ship is a ship, and many times that’s true, but Island Princess has a personality all its own. Michael and I sailed on her last January to Hawaii, and were captivated by her individuality. We sailed with friends who always sail Crystal, and they were impressed enough to say they would be back. There is something indefinable about this boat, I hope it hits you the same way. p1000837.JPG

And while we’re talking about bargains, very seldom do you see 50% off on luxury line cruises, but Regent’s Seven Seas Navigator wants you onboard in Europe, but you only have eight days from right now to catch the deal.

You’ll be aboard SEVEN SEAS NAVIGATOR

NICE TO PIRAEUS (FOR ATHENS) on
Fares from $3,198 – Represents
50% savings compared to the standard rate of $6,395
7 nights – Departing October 13, 2007

PIRAEUS (FOR ATHENS) TO MONTE CARLO
Fares from $3,198 – Represents
50% savings compared to the standard rate of $6,395
7 nights – Departing September 1, 2007 and October 20, 2007

Michael and I have sailed on three of Seven Seas ships and it’s hard to find a more luxurious experience, and at this price; impossible. To take advantage of this limited time offer, book your luxury suite today! Offer ends Sunday, July 15, 2007. Reference C5AEA012M .

Coming up July 25th, we’ll be on a brand new cruise line, Azamara. we’ll be on Journey, a 700 passenger luxury addition to the RCCL brand. a butler for every suite……off to Bermuda in about a week. Be sure to check in.



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