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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

I'm Not Done Yet!

I'm not even sure if anyone is still going to read this now that I'm home in chilly Michigan, but I've still got a couple things to say.

Tonight, however, I wanted to put out my real email, because I've been reading comments from past blog entries for the first time, and I noticed that there are a couple "anonymous" posts, especially ones from people sailing in the future, that mentioned they wanted to talk. Well... I'm all ears! For anyone really, so I thought this might be helpful if anyone is still reading.

Please please please feel free to contact me. I'd love to hear from you and talk to you and exchange/share stories.

kzabriskie2008@my.fit.edu

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Countdown

Things are winding down, and the ship is a mixture of summer vacation and sadness. After the last African dance session and our last sea meeting, complete with milk and cookies and ice cream cake, everyone ran around the ship, frantically waving flash drives and carrying dying computers, trying to exchange the last of the pictures from various countries.

Jenn and I just finished packing. It was a lot easier and less time consuming than I thought it would be, and there’s a surprising amount of space in my suitcase. Although, let it be known, I think the one with my toiletries will have to be repacked because it’s over 50 lbs. Bummer, but I was pretty efficient. Now it’s 3 am and people are still in the hallway trading pictures, stopping in people’s rooms, socializing, and reminiscing.

I made a video for Jenn today. My objective was to get her to cry by the end. Psh. It didn’t even get to the sad songs before the tears came. Winner.

Tomorrow will be weird and sad and overwhelming. Now that our room is bare, it’s a little harder to call it home, but it still feels good knowing that I haven’t had a “bad day” in at least 104 days.

I feel like I have so much to reflect on, and I think I’ll be writing at least a little while after I return home on Tuesday. Sometime when things have calmed down and I’ve had a chance to think. I can’t imagine looking outside of my window and seeing grass and a tree and a road. I can’t imagine walking to class and not falling into the wall or an innocent bystander. It will be different, or the same, or reality maybe. We’ll see when the time comes.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Aloha and Aloha

JUST FINISHED MY LAST EXAM! Another semester come and gone, but much quicker than usual, I must say.

I’m sure they weren’t joking around when they named Hilo the “rainiest state in America”, but God seemed to be on our side while we adventured Hawaii. Hilo came into view after a failed attempt at seeing the sunrise (they told us the wrong time!), through a thick, muggy cover of clouds. Everything on the island was green, and from the ship we could see tiny houses up the mountains and the spouts of humpback whales playing in the ship’s wake at the horizon line.

When we got off the ship, we walked about 40 minutes to downtown Hilo. After being so used to so many types of (cheap) public transportation, this was a little reminder of what it’s like in America. There isn’t much. Like all ports, we arrived on a Sunday to the quiet, abandoned streets of the city. This meant plans of renting bikes for the day were scratched, but we made up for it by following a “path” down to the river and jumping out of trees into the water below, watching a small hula dance session, and trucking over millions of lava rocks to a small, chilly lagoon perfect for snorkeling with fish and sea turtles.

If I would have been home, Sunday would have been what I considered a “bad” day. I left my tennis shoes at the small shop where we ate lunch, and didn’t realize it until we were 10 miles away, climbing over rocks. After we left the beach and started our walk back to the ship, I realized I forgot my snorkel and mask in our tiny paradise. With no tennis shoes to run back to get it in, I borrowed Rachel’s, and FINALLY got my country run in. Roads, trails, and then a nice sprint-swim across the lagoon, where my snorkel and mask sat waiting on the sandy edge for me. After another sprint back, Jenn told me she had called the lunch shop, and my shoes would be waiting for me in the morning. Everything always works out.

The town shuts down around 9 pm every night. Most, if not all, of our friends had rented a beach house for the night and were “celebrating” the last day in port with the usual college kid festivities. Jenn, Rachel, Eric and I made our way there, only to sit on the porch, talking and laughing away from the noise. We decided at one point to make our way down to the beach, which was an adventure in the dark, and found out we picked the opportune time when we got a phone call informing us that the cops had come. Nothing bad happened, but I can’t say I’ve ever been at a huge party, let alone one the cops show up to. We slept in the car for 3 hours so we wouldn’t have to pay to stay in the house, and got up at 5 am before the sun rose to see Kilauea Iki volcano and its neighboring lava tube. After a quick breakfast we made out way back into town and rented bikes ($10!) for the day, peddling uphill to Rainbow Waterfall, across town to Walmart, and over to Coconut Island, where we jumped off of a big stone wall into the water below with some fellow SASers and locals.

FOOD DISCLAIMER: I MISS AMERICAN FOOD!  We ate at a place called Ken’s Pancake House twice.

Dinner- I think our waiter was terrified by a) all the places we had been in the last 4 months and b) how we all absolutely inhaled our plates and massive portions in under 5 minutes without speaking to each other. Someone also accidentally asked if we could drink the water. Habit. The food was amazing. Burgers, fries, waffles with passion fruit, guava, and coconut syrup, and my favorite, the pulled pork BBQ sandwich. So good to be back in the states (except for the tip and tax added to the end of our bills!).

Breakfast- A massive, huge, ginormous, delicious omelet with banana pancakes and crispy hash browns. Enough said.

Ice cream and shaved ice- They told us we had to try it, and we did. The ice cream was homemade. It was delicious, of course, but I think I liked the people that worked there better. They were genuinely nice, just like all of the locals around. Ready to give us pointers on where to go and what to do, all of them laid back, on island time. Shaved ice was the bomb. It was huge and tasted like coconut, pineapple, and banana. I’ve decided to by a shaved ice machine when I get home.

As a last hoorah, on the way back to the ship, we stopped at a little place on the side of the road and I ordered another pulled pork sandwich. I guess you don’t realize how much you miss something until you don’t get to have it for 4 months (in this instance, BBQ sauce).

Overall Hawaii was fantastic, but in a different way than our other ports. All of the other countries we have visited I’ve always wanted to see, but never actually knew if I’d ever be able to go there. Hawaii, on the other hand, is just one of those places I’ve known I would visit at one time or another (and hopefully again and again), so it was a different kind of excitement. That, and being on U.S. soil for the first time in 4 months, the MV Explorer flying the American flag as we pulled in. I’m going to miss the complications of foreign travel, but this was a nice break.

Alumni Ball tonight, which is something along the lines of dressy clothes, great food, and an awesome time with your friends. It’ll be a nice break after studying.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Aloha Land!

Sorry I’ve been slacking. Life is a mixture of good, great, and awesome lately. It’s 11:35 am here. I’m sitting on deck 6 in the sun, staring out at the brilliant blue water, waiting to see Hawaii. All students on the ship took the Global Studies final exam this morning at 10, and the general consensus was that there is no general consensus. Some thought it was easy, but it seems most thought the study guide wasn’t much of a help. Deck 7 is now like college spring break on steroids. Nonetheless, it’s one exam down, two to go. Right on.

April 12th #2 was just another day. We’re now 6 hours behind home, 3 behind San Diego. There were a couple April 12th birthdays, which is cool. How many people can say they had two birthday days in a row? Then again, how many people get to say they’ve sailed all the way around the world? We truly are blessed to be doing this.

Two nights ago, we decided it would be a good idea to sleep on the deck. So at midnight, which turned quickly into 1 am with a time change, we “disguised” our pillows with t-shirts so they wouldn’t make us take them back to our cabins (we’re not allowed to take them out of our rooms) and made our way to the backside of the basketball court, which our LLC told us was the most prime spot for sleeping on deck. We brought with us a computer and speakers and watched Pirates of the Caribbean, pointing out the places in the movie where we had swum and explored in Dominica. People came and went, but the best part was around 3 am, right after the security guard came out and told us we had an hour before they started washing the decks. Four of our friends decided to relocate to deck 5, and as they walked back across the basketball court, one person smacked the other with their pillow, and 30 seconds later they had picked teams and were lined up on opposite sides of the court, counting to 3 and charging at each other with their pillows swinging wildly over their heads. It’s the simple things in life nowadays that bring us the most joy. This wasn’t a college frat party, where people had to be naked or wrestling in jello or drunk. It was just a couple college kids acting like 5 year olds and having the absolute time of their lives.

Five minutes after we turned off the movie, it started to rain. And not just regular rain, but soak-everything-in-under-2-minutes rain. We grabbed all of our things and made our way back to our cabins. I think we’ll try again tonight, although when we pull into Hilo tomorrow morning, it’ll be a miracle if it’s not raining. Something about it being the rainiest city in the United States has me thinking we’ll be running for cover again. Or maybe dancing in it. We’ll see.

We pull into Honolulu in a couple hours (but it’s only a fuel stop, we won’t be getting off until Hilo the next day), and talk on the ship is all about getting to use our phones again. I charged mine last night, and am planning to knock out a couple phone calls before we pull out again later tonight. While in Hawaii, I’ll have my phone on me for texting locations to one another, or texting pictures to people back home, but it’s been so good to learn to be social again. No one texts at dinner, or has to call their boyfriend/girlfriend every night. I’ve noticed that when I get internet, I’ll log onto Facebook and then think “Hmm, now what do I do?” It seems my only use for the internet now is to do research, look up things to do in port, book plane tickets. I’m sure it’ll be a main procrastination tool as soon as school starts again, but this summer I’m sure I’ll be doing much more exploring and much less vegging out. I’ve caught the travel bug, and I can’t wait to see everything.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

April 12th Number 1

Shipboard life has changed since we started sailing again from Taiwan.  They’ve planned activities for every afternoon, every night. Film festivals, silent and live auctions, soccer tournaments (sore subject), euchure tournaments, and ice cream parties. The thing is, it’s technically, even though it doesn’t feel like we’re even at school, “exam time”. This means that people are participating in events and then pulling all-nighters to finish papers and projects.

I’ve been fighting a sore throat which has developed into a cold recently, and have been leaving the room periodically at odd hours of the night to keep from waking Jenn up. I walk down the hall and take a lap around deck 2 (affectionately known as the Favelas throughout the ship now), and, to my surprise, there are people up. It’s 3 am! Go to sleep! Some are sprawled out with papers surrounding them, hovered over their computer, which is plugged into the wall with a European adapter because it doesn’t have any battery left. Some are talking, procrastinating the project that sits in front of them. It’s convenient, really. I don’t have Tylenol PM or nighttime cold medicine, but out of the 10 people sitting in the hallway, someone always has something I can take. If people are up this late now, I can’t imagine what our last night on board is going to be like. I think I’ll sleep outside on the deck…

Tonight was the shipboard auction. It was like any other auction, and proceeds went to Semester at Sea and voyages to come. Everything from raising the flag in Hawaii to blowing the horn in San Diego to trips at people’s summer cottages to Backstreet Boys and Lakers tickets were up for grabs. The ones I remembered, however, were the outrageous ones. Five boxes of Girl Scout cookies were auctioned off, and the Samoas and Thin Mints in particular went for $75 and $104, respectively (“$104 for 104 days on the 104th voyage!”). Another person paid $155 for a signed box of Captain Crunch signed by the captain.

The best was at the end, when two people went at it to be the first person off the ship.

Market value: Priceless

Final bid: $1,600. Twice.

They ended up settling on $1,600 each to get off the ship first and second. I could’ve done the first 9 countries again for that price!

Today was April 12th. Tomorrow is also April 12th. Time warp! We’re 15 hours ahead now. Tonight we “gain” an hour, but repeat the day. I think that means we lose 23 hours. Maybe that means I’ll be 8 hours behind when I wake up tomorrow? We’ll see I guess.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Rule #1- WIN

Tonight we had a scavenger hunt. Three teams. 7 or 8 people per team. It was intense.

Each team received a paper with a list of things to take pictures of or with or activities to do. They were different difficulties and therefore worth different amounts of points. Everything from “dress your whole team in SAS gear” to “put your life jackets on and assemble your group at your muster stations” to “get a photobomb picture with Brittany the photographer” to “get Keith (head of security) to put on makeup” to “high five Dean Dan” to “get a picture in a restricted area holding an AGN sign”. We had one hour to rack up as many pictures and points as we could.

For the next 60 minutes, 40-some people sprinted around the ship, shouting, dressed in drag with painted on mustaches, trying to complete all of the tasks. We trash talked each other when we would run into another group, jumping in front of their photos and trying to throw them off.

Our group learned the hard way about some rules on the ship. Because we couldn’t find a security guard to take a picture with, we decided to put on our life vests and find our muster station. On our way outside, however, we ran into the “new Savio”, a meaner version of the head of security that was with us the first half of the voyage. Like a robot, all he could say was “Go put those away. You’re not supposed to have those out. Go put those away.” He wouldn’t stop, he wouldn’t listen to our explanation, he wouldn’t even let us go put our life vests away because he was too busy telling us to put them away. In the process of the whole fiasco, Kelly (our RA) and I just stood next to our uncooperative obstacle, held up the thumbs up, and had a teammate snap the photo… while he was still yelling at us. Perfect.

We all reconvened after an hour, presenting our pictures by our group names Snap, Crackle, and Pop. The judges tallied our points while we stuffed our tummies full of ice cream and chocolate sauce.

And the winner was… TEAM POP! (that’s us!) By a slight 5 points, but victorious nonetheless.

Aegean Sea’s first rule since the beginning of sea olympics: WIN

Mission Accomplished.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Caution: Traveling May Cause Drowsiness... and Sore Muscles

We started our first day off in port on a determined search for mopeds. The renter we found who spoke English informed us we would need international licenses, and wouldn’t budge even after Travis offered to pay him off. Probably for the better.

Instead we hopped in a taxi and drove along the coast to Yeliou Geopark, a tiny tourist trap no SASers managed to find. It was raining and freezing, but it was Eric, Travis, and me, and we made the most of it. While other people hid on the ship from the chilly rain , we climbed stairs and stairs and stairs, up to the tippy tops of cliffs overlooking the waves brutally crashing into the jagged rocks below. Over millions of years, the ocean had managed to create a masterpiece with the shoreline. Mushroom-looking rocks sprung out of the tan sandstone boulders. We ran from one to the next, off the beaten path and away from the tourists who stayed close to the entrance, near the park’s main attraction, the “Queen’s Head”, a rock shaped like… well… a queen’s head. The wind pushed us along as we ran past fishermen and into caves, pulling out our flashlights to explore the algae-covered, mossy rocks that gave the caves a smell somewhere between saltwater and damp forest. We spent a couple hours there and then took a bus back to Keelung, where the ship was ported. After a nap and some dinner, we went out to the local night market. Similar to the ones we saw in China, it had some foods we recognized, and more that we didn’t. I stuck to the “iced” cream and took pictures of the rest, including what looked like the arm of the Kraken. I’m not sure where they get the idea to eat some of the things they eat. I haven’t seen a cheeseburger since South Africa.

The next day we hopped the train to another hidden gem that only got a small paragraph in the Lonely Planet guidebook.  Sandiaoling, the writer had said, was good for hiking and littered with huge waterfalls. Both of those were understatements. We climbed more stairs (I should’ve kept track of how many stairs I’ve climbed this trip- Table Mountain, the Him-ah-lias, Mount Huashan, The Great Wall of China, and now Taiwan) and hiked down icy cold rivers. It was still cloudy and cold, but at least it wasn’t raining today. We stood at the top of rushing waterfalls that fell over 100 feet and climbed cliff faces with the help of chains and ropes. After 6 or so miles of pure obstacle course, we stumbled upon the train station our train would have come to next if we had stayed on that morning. After six hours of hiking and wandering, we made our way back to Keelung again, tired and sore and covered in mud. I took my shoes in the shower with me that night, and the day was worth every drop of mud I managed to get on the shower walls.

We took the bus that night to Taipei, about a half hour away, and spent the night eating some of the best food we had tried on the trip. BBQ with eggs and noodles in secret sauce, sausage in secret sauce, grilled corn in secret sauce. Needless to say, we knew what made the food good. We met a man named James, who took us around and showed the boys places to try weird things, including a shot of snake’s blood, which they took in front of a crowd of onlookers.

We spent our last day in Taiwan in Taipei, riding the world’s fastest elevator up to the top of the world’s third tallest building, Taipei 101. We spent the rest of the day searching for a market, but to no avail, and took the bus back to Keelung to wander the streets and spend our last coins buying ice cream cones at the nearest fast food joint, a tradition in every port.

Yesterday we left our last foreign country. It’s weird to know that our trip is almost over, and weird to think that in 11 days I’ll be turning my phone back on and asking for directions without speaking slowly or repeating myself. I think I’ll miss it more than I know.