Sunday, September 14, 2008

Hurricane Ike - THe Aftermath

So we ended up losing power around 3:30-4AM. It hasn't come back yet. We decided to head to Dallas this afternoon and did so. We took the one wya that wasn't obstructed - Highway 290 to Hempstead. It was actually a nice drive, not much traffic.

We got pounded around 4AM pretty bad as the worst part of hte storm passed through. Windows bowed outward, the house shaked, it was bad, but not nearly like what happened to those on the coast. Our only damage is some roof damage, fence damage. That was about it.

I wish I got more pictures on Saturday, especiallyu driving through the dark. But I was exhausted as I only slept maybe 30 minutes the night before nad we worked chopping branches and clearing drains for a few hours.

The most ironic moment - before our power went out we were watching one of the local news stations. They broke for a commercial break where an Oreck Vacuum commercial came on. The older guy who does the commercials, I think Oreck himself, said that his vacuum "packs the power of a category 2 hurricane." I thought it was a joke at first, but realized it was just bad timing.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Hurricane Ike - Rough and He hasn't started yet

So its been pretty bad and the hurricane hasn't even made landfall. In fact, my area of town is just at the outer bands. The eye will be passing either through where we live or just at hte edge. They are expecting upper winds downtown at 130mph when it hits downtown, about 3-4AM.

Wow, in the past 3 minutes the lights have flickered 5 times. I have a feeling we may be losing power soon. Hopefully not! News is saying 2-3 weeks for power resotration. So far, 700K are without power. Winds slowed down the past 10 minutes or so. But are picking up again. They say if you lose power, you'll be out of luck for 2-3 weeks. So I don't know if we'll get lucky or not. Its weird, the lights keep flickering, but the computer and TV don't seem to be affected. I"ll have to google that later to see why.

No new pictures yet. Nothing too interesting plus its been too rainy. I went outside a few minutes ago and was a bit spooked, afraid something would fly and hit me so i went back in. But so far, we have been very lucky. We'll see if that luck continues. Still have at least 4 hours of really bad stuff and probably more.

Hurricane Ike

Well, its 10:15 right now. 200K+ are without power in Houston. We are lucky thus far and have power. We've noticed power surges or tiny power interruptions - where the lights go really dim or almost out for a second. But TV stays on so its not a complete interuption.

Here are some new pics of our backyard.


Trying to get a decent shot, tried the flash. Knew this wouldn't look great
Above two are slow shutter speeds, resting on our small picket fence. I think they are 10 second exposures. I was lucky to even get this as I had to guess on focusing and shot on manual mode. Think they turned out okay. Notice how the trees are "ghosting" from the motion.

Hurricane Ike

So looks like Hurricane Ike took a turn right towards Galveston. We decided to stay put and ride it out, considering our last experience with Hurricane Rita and the evacuation, which was far more dangerous than the storm. Galveston will be decimated and there are still idiots out there who think they can outride the 20 foot storm surge!

Anyway, the last two days were spent just gathering a few supplies. We didn't need much. We got more bottled water and we had already filled up on gasoline, so we were good there. Grocery stores have been packed, but I went to Kroger's today and was in and out. I couldn't believe it.

At the moment, the winds are really picking up, but this is nothing. The storm will hit Galveston at 1AM and hit Houston around 6-7AM I believe, but that could have changed. Of course its a little eerie outside as there are very few cars and people out. Normally, the streets are packed on a Friday evening. Gas is gone from the 2 close gas stations. This should be interesting.

View of Westpark and the sunset. The west side was nice and bright while the storms were forming to the east.


View of Westpark towards the east. You can see the dark clouds forming.
Normally a very busy street on a Friday evening (and most every evening). Virtually empty.


Another view of Weslayan, facing north. Highway 59 is just beyond the Shell station


No more gas. No prices and tanks are covered. This place was jammed packed the past two days.

I'll be adding more pictures and blogging as long as I have power and internet. The exciting stuff won't come until the early morning hours.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Cruise Tips

Bring a Small Cooler

We brought a small, collapsible cooler along with us and this ended up to be an excellent idea. Some of the tours do not provide lunch, so it comes in handy. We brought a small, probably an 8"x6" cooler with us, the type made of fabric with a plastic lining inside. That way its portable and easy to carry. You fill it with ice on the ship, put a bottle or two of water in there along with food and you are good to go.

Don't Forget Lunch!

This is related to the cooler too. The first two tours, we didn't even think of lunch. Lunch was not provided and thus we were hungry when we got back to ship. I made the mistake of not eating breakfast too those mornings. My breakfast was black coffee and a cigarette. Needless to say, I was starving and moody when I got back to the ship. This is what you do for lunch: On our ship at least, they didn't really serve lunch in the morning. BUT, they will make you BLT sandwiches. So we ordered room service for the morning and ordered each of us a BLT sandwich, packed it in the cooler, and we were good to go. In St. Thomas, we could have stopped for lunch if we wanted, but time was short. In Dominica, it wasn't a choice, there wasn't food around at all. Land tours that don't provide lunch won't be stopping for it either. Of course, the more touristy islands do have restaurants on the beach and all, but the tours are often quick paced and you don't want to waste time eating or ordering food. Get the sandwiches and you can eat on the bus or van.

Carnival Destiny - Day 3 - Dominica

Rain forest: Notice the waterfall in center

Dominica was a great island and probably my favorite of the cruise. It was also the least inhabited, tourist-wise. Apparently the cruise we were on is the only one that goes to Dominica. As far as I know, there are no resorts, no Hiltons, no Sheratons, nothing like that. We did a land tour offered by Bumpiing Tours, which I highly recommend. The guide was extraordinary and probably the best tour guide on our whole trip. Our tour consisted of a drive up to the rain forest.

To get to the cold springs where we would do some cave swimming required a drive up the rain forest, then a short hike to the location. The drive was very scenic. Our driver stopped many times to get us some samples of the various foliage and plant life. Being a rain forest, the weather would turn quickly - from sunny and nice, to cloudy and rainy. Luckily, we were spared any bad rain and whenever we were out and about, it was fine. The hikes were easy and not too difficult at all. We had KK along on this tour and she did wonderful, although she was testy at times. The tour guide was excellent with her: patient and helpful, so she had a great experience. I'm glad she went along. After crossing the bridge, we were just about at the site. The bridge wasn't bad, but when you have a 6 year old with you, you do kind of worry. Its entirely possible for her to slip through or something terrible like that. But she was fine of course and we just made sure she held onto the rain and we held onto her.

The cold springs lived up to its name, it was very chilly and very cold. But well worth it. Again, I really regretted not bringing our waterproof camera along for the swim. We went "cave" swimming at this location. Its not quite a cave though. Basically the spring goes in between two mountains and the pathway is probably about 10 feet wide. There was a waterfall at the end of it. The only semi-hard part is that once you start the swim, you have nowhere to rest or stop. The water is too deep and its probably a good 30-50 foot swim, maybe more, I'm bad at judging distance, especially swimming distance. We strapped KK into a life vest and Melissa and I went without, which turned out to be kind of a mistake. Ironically, on the way up, which is against current, we had no problems. I'd swim behind KK and give her some pushes while we paddled towards the waterfall. At the end of the swim was a very small area for us to get on and rest. We all crunched in there. It was about 7-10 feet from the waterfall. After that, the tour guide swam up and got under the waterfall. I did the same thing and that was a tough swim, very strong current, but I made it. Now, I figured the swim back should be easy, going downstream and all. This is where the problems came in. We all started back, KK was floating down in her life vest and all was good. Unfortunately, for some reason KK got scared and grabbed onto Melissa and was pushing her underwater. Again, the area we are at, basically, you have to swim it, no choices. The sides are too smooth to grip onto. So I swam to help out. I was wearing Aqua Socks which I never swim that well in (for some reason they feel like I'm hauling parachutes on my feet, they have a lot of drag, at least for me). Well, KK didn't want to go with me and was kind of freaking out. I started getting really, really tired and nervous. Anyway, I luckily found a little notch on the side of the cave and held on to rest. I had probably 15 feet to go, not far at all, so I started to swim it and man, I barely made it! I was dead tired. I think I just got nervous though. ANyway, I looked like a terrible swimmer, although I'm not great at all, I can hold my own usually.

After that, we made a drive, then a hike to Trafalgar Falls. That was a pretty cool water fall, nice photo stop. The hike wasn't long at all and it was pretty quick. After the falls we headed to some hot springs which was the perfect stop after the swimming and hiking. The water temp must have been near or a little above 100 degrees. It was really relaxing and nice. There was also a "natural rock slide" that you could take off the main pool to go lower. The pools go pretty low and end up cold of course as it gets further away. The water doesn't look that great in the pics, but it wasn't that bad at all. Melissa had a pretty nasty looking fall. She was walking along some of the rocks right by the spring and they were covered in moss. She flew in the air and landed on her hip/side. She was fine though, dunno how!

After this, we headed to the Botanical Gardens, that was set up years ago by the British to experiment growing different kinds of plants. Unfortunately we didn't stay and look around as everyone in our tour group wanted to go snorkeling, which wasn't originally planned. So we just drove through.

The snorkeling was pretty fun. Melissa didn't go though and I didn't go for long. I was pretty wiped out by the end of the day. The cool thing about it was the little bubbles coming up from the bottom, like champagne. In fact, I think it was called Champagne Bay or something like that. It was pretty cool. That wrapped up a pretty long day!

Some miscellaneous pictures:


The above picture was taken in the botanical gardens. The tree fell over on the bus during their last major hurricane. Luckily nobody was in the bus, so nobody was hurt. Shows the destructive force of that tree!

I jokingly refer to that as a "Dominican Guard Rail." But its not really a joke, as its real. Unfortunately the picture doesn't tell the real story. This is basically a guard rail along the narrow, windy, moutain road we were travelling. What the picture doesn't show is the 100 foot or so drop/cliff right beyond it. It is a trusty bamboo guard rail.

Now, if you plan on staying overnight in Dominica, the above is what you'd expect to be sleeping in. As far as I know, there are no major hotel chains or resorts on Dominica. All of the hotels and lodging were pretty much as above. With this blog, the "Cake Trail Lodge" now has an internet presence. So this is for those who really are rustic and don't need modern day luxuries.

In closing, this was my favorite island. I'm not sure I could do the overnight thing, but it was a very fun trip. If you go, definitely go with Bumpiing Tours, they are a non-Carnival touring company, BUT so much better (from what I heard) than Carnival. I have nothing but fantastic things to say about Bumpiing and our tour guide Gerry. The snorkeling was also cool too. If you are looking for sandy beaches, I'm not sure they exist here. I didn't see any at least, but I don't claim to be an expert. Also, the water wasn't as blue/turquoise as the otehr islands we visited. Now, this could be due to the overcast day, but the water is clear as you could snorkel. Its less touristy and gimmicky. You don't have aggressive vendors or people selling you stuff every 5 feet. The people are genuine and friendly. Overall, just a great place.

The Pros
  • Beautiful and majestic rain forests and scenary
  • People are ultra friendly
  • Much to do
The Cons
  • If you are looking to stay overnight and must have an upscale hotel or resort, you won't find it here
  • As far as I know, no traditional, sandy beaches to just chill on

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Carnival Destiny - Day 2 - St. Thomas

St. Thomas was our first port of call. To the left, you'll see a nice view from atop of a mountain of the port. Our ship is to the left of center. St. Thomas was a nice place, not my favorite, but I'm really comparing "very good" to "awesome" so its not necessarily downing the island at all. We arranged for a land tour that consisted of shopping in the morning and free time. We spent that free time walking up the "99 Steps" and to Blackbeard's castle. They offered a tour at Blackbeard's castle, but we didn't take it since we had to meet back up with the tour and didn't have time to do so. After that, we spent the rest of the afternoon swimming at Megan's Bay. Very beautiful water and sand and very calm. There are no waves, so its perfect for just swimming or relaxing in the water.

The Port the Destiny Docked At

Upon arrival, it was gray and overcast. Luckily as the day wore on, the skies opened up and it was a nice, hot day. There was a short shower as we were shopping though. Luckily we happened to be under a veranda so the camera didn't get soaked. It was raining pretty hard for a good 10 minutes or so before it cleared up. We did a little shopping initially, then decided to make our way to the "99 Steps" where we'd climb that, and then head to Blackbeard's castle. Below you'll find some flowers captured on the walk up "99 Steps."















Which Way to Blackbeard's Castle?

Signage is pointing us in the right direction. We are heading to Blackbeard's castle. We really can't do much there as we aren't going on the tour, but we can go on the outskirts and take some photos. THey said there was a spring that you could swim in if you decided you wanted to take the tour. That's the one thing about cruising, you see a lot of different islands, but really only get a slice of all that you could be doing. But its fun nonetheless.



Unfortunately, I didn't get a much better picture of it than this. It was tough since we couldn't go inside and our access was restricted since we weren't taking the tour. Anyway, we make the trek back down to do a little more shopping and then its off for some swimming.

When Do We Swim??

I believe the picture is of Megan's Bay. If not, its close enough right? Megan's Bay was a very calm, peaceful bay. It was nice to swim in but obviously surfers won't like it too much. The water was a nice turquoise and crystal clear. The sand was nice as well. We really enjoyed our time here. We spent probably close to two hours swimming and relaxing. I made the mistake and didn't bring my flip flops or aqua socks, and instead brought my tennis shoes because of the walking before. That only sucked because it sucks to have tennis shoes at the beach, but it worked out alright. Below is another view of Megan's Bay, on the beach.
The picture looks a little grainy because I massively underexposed all the beach shots. It was bad. So I had to fix the photos but I was probably 2-3 stops underexposed at least. At least they were somewhat salvaged - thank God for shooting in R

The Good and The Bad

The Good:
  • Friendly People
  • No aggressive vendors on the beach
  • Scenic and pretty
The Bad
  • I wouldn't say there is anything necessarily bad about the island, except it was pretty touristy, it was a nice place, but didn't have the "umph" that some of the other islands had, at least from what I say.


Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Carnival Destiny - Day 1 - Embarkation

So the day finally arrived. We take a Turistico cab to the port. Its a mad house there. For one, the Democrat primaries are there and there are some protests. Nothing serious but it did create traffic problems. No worries as its early afternoon. We arrive at the port. If you are cruising use a porter to take your bags for you. I couldn't imagine taking our 5 bags plus 3 carry-on bags ourselves.

We first need to get into line to register and get our "Sail and Sign" cards. KK is being a mini-terror. Crying and whining. Luckily we got a "Special Assistance" boarding so we only had to wait a few minutes before we could board. We get on the boat, but our room isn't ready yet!

But all is good, we wait upon the Lido Deck, with a pool and bar. Luckily Melissa had packed KK's swimsuit in our carry-on bags so we had that and let KK jump into the pool. She was entertained for hours. It was a pretty non-eventful afternoon and evening. Boarding was farily easy. UNfortunately, I never got a lot of pictures of our ship. I always felt I'd get them later, but never did.

We had a balcony stateroom that slept 3 people. Not bad. I liked the room and the balcony was nice to relax on. The only issue was we were on the 8th floor, right below the Lido deck. This was at first nice as the food was just upstairs, no elevator ride needed. The bar was right upstairs. The downside was when they had party nights, you could hear all the walking around into the wee hours of the night.


Views from the Lido Deck, San Juan, Puerto Rico

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Cruise!

Cruise: Carnival
Ship: Destiny
Duration: 7 nights
Dates: June 1, 2008 - June 8, 2008

What makes this cruise unique is that it is at port every day! There is no day at sea. We travel at night and awake to find ourselves at a new port of call. This was both good and bad. You got a lot of stuff crammed into the time you were on the cruise. The only bad thing was about halfway through, it starts to catch up to you and you long for a day at sea where you can get up late, relax by the pool, chill, do whatever! But its all good. Its a great value.

The ship is an older one in the Carnival fleet, but I couldn't tell. However, this was our first cruise, so more experienced cruisers may notice a difference. Word was that the stabilizers were not working so it was going to be a bit rougher at sea than normal. I don't know if they were working or not, but I didn't get the least bit sick. I am prone to sea sickness and motion sickness. I didn't get sick at all. There were times you could feel the ship moving, some nights were a little bad when the water got a bit choppy. I took Dramamine the first night, just in case. After that, didn't need it.

We stayed in a balcony room that sleeps three. The room was alright, small which was expected. It had a king bed, a love seat/sofa, and the 3rd bed dropped from the ceiling, above the sofa, to make kind of like a bunk bed, without the lower bunk. The room was functional and the 3 of us were fairly comfortable in it. The only times we noticed it being really small was packing and unpacking. There wasn't a whole lot of floor space so we had to be judicious in our packing/unpacking and also where we put our swim suits and clothes. There was plenty of closet space and the bathroom was fine, big enough.

Ports of Call

Day 1 - San Juan
We embark in San Juan, Puerto Rico. There'll be another post on embarkation and how much "fun" that was. We set sail at 10PM.

Day 2 - St. Thomas
Our first day at port in St Thomas. We took a land tour that consisted of a half day shopping in their outdoor shopping center and the rest was spent swimming at Magens Bay.

Day 3 - Dominica
When I think of my favorite port, this one is the top one for me. I don't know about an extended stay as I'm not sure if there are any real resorts on the island, but this place is incredible! Rain forests, snorkeling, hiking, WOW. Its not very touristy at all. If I remember correctly, our cruise is currently the only one that goes to this port. If you like roughing it, seeing things off the beaten path, this is your island. We took a tour to the rain forest, which included cave swimming, some hiking, relaxing in hot springs, a quick jaunt to the botanical garden, and finally, some snorkeling at a place that ranked as the top 10 in the world.

Day 4 - Barbados
This island is pretty touristy, the vendors more aggressive than on the first two islands. A beautiful place though. The beaches were awesome. White sand, turquoise waters. We created our own tour. We rented a cab for the day. Our first stop was Mount Gay Rum where we got a tour of their operations and bought many bottles of their fine rum. We then made a journey to see some monkeys, and finally, to the Boatyard for some swimming on a beautiful beach.


Day 5 - St Lucie
On this day, we left KK on the ship at Camp Carnival and went on a tour of the island. The tour included visits to some botanical gardens, rain forest, many points of interest, snorkeling, and one nasty, interesting visit to the sulfur volcanoes. The roads in St. Lucie are crazy, I don't think there is any single stretch of STRAIGHT road anywhere. One member of our tour got sick and threw up on the way back.


Day 6 - Antigua
Again, we left KK on the shop for this island. She would have liked it I think, but she opted to stay behind. This was an easy day. We did take their public transportation to a beach, Nelson's Beach. BEAUTIFUL! This was my favorite beach I think. Barbados comes closer. The only reason it may go above is because this beach was less crowded. The vendors on the beach are a little annoying - selling anything and everything it seems. But we just chilled and relaxed on the beach all day. At the port, there is a big market place and we went shopping there. Talk about crazy! Man, you get pulled in so many directions, so many vendors in such a little space.


Day 7 - St. Kitts
KK joined us on this tour, mainly because we prepaid for this one. We took a catamaran all day. Very easy to get to, a very short walk from the ship. We went snorkeling, to Nevis for a beach lunch, and then swimming. Finally headed back. The catamaran was pretty fun - more of a party boat. The island was nice, but I'd say this was my least favorite. Although to say that is really comparing "very good" to "awesome", so its not like I had a terrible time at all, s till had a good time.

Our Arrival in Puerto Rico

We arrived in San Juan on May 31st. It was a gloomy day. As we flew in, it was completely gray, very nasty. I was immediately disappointed in coming to San Juan. THankfully, I was completely wrong!

So a little before arriving in San Juan, I see these beautiful beaches and islands from the air. Blue and turquoise waters. Completely stunning! I'm getting pumped. We are away from the Mississippi mud that makes the Galveston waters nasty and brown. I haven't seen water like this since Hawaii. I'm getting pumped. Here is a sample shot taken from the plane:


Geographically speaking, I'm not sure where we are when the pic was snapped above. It was close to Florida. Regardless, it was gorgeous! I'm getting excited at this point. I can't believe how spectacular the water looks from 25K feet. My excitement turned to dismay on final approach to San Juan:

And no, that is not a black and white photo. That is full color! I'm becoming a bit pissed. I've heard such good things about San Juan: the beautiful city (especially Old San Juan), the beautiful beaches. I see none of that. It looks like damn Galveston! Thankfully, in the end, my initial impressions were wrong. We arrived on a gloomy, rainy day.

So we arrived in the late afternoon in San Juan. We weren't staying anywhere interesting, we were close to the airport, a typical airport area hotel. We stayed at the Embassy Suites. Our plan was to explore the city a little, sample some local cuisine and get ready for the real show, our cruise! IT didn't quite work out that way.

Kaitlynn had a meltdown on the plane the last 30-45 minutes of the flight. Ever been on a flight with an unruly child? Well, we were "THOSE parents" on this flight. We hoped when we arrived, she would be fine. She had a big meltdown in the airport. Terrible! We had visions of police coming by wondering why a 6 year old was screaming at the top of her lungs. Well, we finally made it out.

One thing was certain though: We found a place that was MORE humid than Houston! It was awful! I guess the afternoon showers spiked the humidity. We catch a cab. If you ever go to San Juan, use the Turistico cabs that are found throughout the city. They offer flat rates to different zones. There is usually a stand at the airport, hotels, etc. You see a person at the stand, tell them where you are going, how many pieces of luggage you ahve (they charge per piece of luggage too!) and they'll give you a paper to give the cabbie and he'll abide by that rate. Its nice because you know what it'll cost to get somewhere ahead of time.

We catch a cab to the Embassy Suites. Pretty nice hotel, nice tropical feel, but not in the best location. That's alright, we are here to sleep and maybe get a bite to eat. We decide to head to Walgreens to pick up some last minute supplies: Cokes, sunscreen, etc. We were drenched in sweat from the 3/4 mile walk. Kaitlynn seemed to be not doing so well. We were afraid that in her tantrum, she may have hit her head. She was being very quiet and languid, so we picked up soem Children's Tylenol since she said she had a headache. We make the walk back to the hotel, get into the elevator, and Kaitlynn throws up in the elevator. Poor thing! We get back to the room and are a bit worried. Does she have a concussion? Does she have food poisoning? We call the doctor on call at the hotel and they said not to worry, that she probably vomited the medicine since she had nothign to eat before. We let her rest and sample the Outback Steakhouse, which is the only restaurant in the hotel. Unfortunately, we didn't get to get any real Puerto Rican food that night. We were all exhausted, nobody delivered, and I didn't feel like walking back up to pick up food.

So our first night in San Juan was a disaster. I was afraid we may have to bail on the trip if KK wasn't doing any better. Fortunately, about an hour of napping that evening, KK awoke, was her usual, cheerful self, and she ate 6 fried shrimp and wanted more.

The Caribbean Chronicles

Okay, we have returned back from our Caribbean voyage. Unfortunately, it was way too short, although I'm completely wiped out. I'm only on the internet at this ungodly hour because I haven't seen a webpage in 10 days. Yeah sad. Here are the details of our itinerary:

May 31, 2008: Arrive in San Juan, Puerto Rico. For some reason, they asked for our passports to come here, hmmm, I thought this was still considered America.

June 1 - June 8, 2008: The Cruise!

June 8 - June 10, 2008: San Juan, Puerto Rico: Sightseeing and more!

I'll break up the posts, one post per day for the most part. We spent a few days in San Juan after the cruise, so I'll probably combine those into one post since we only really spent one full day sight seeing there: the rest was spent relaxing on the beach! I'll also be posting copious amounts of photos.