Tonight is the first night of a waxing moon off to the NW, a roughly northern NE wind, and about three foot swells. Here at 2215, the swells are starting to rock the boat some. I’ll enjoy it if it gets a bit worse as the night progresses. Early this morning, we did some definite rockin’ and rollin’ and the captain put out a stablizer of some sort. Even so, waves were spraying over the rail and I got drenched while doing laps at 0715. At the pier later in the day I looked up and it seems like about 25 feet to the rail from the waterline. Looking down it only seems like about ten feet, very deceptive. It was pretty cool to hang at the rail and watch the waves break. The boat was mostly crossing the waves at about a 75 degree angle, and there was lots of spray and displacement in both dimensions. In the midst of all this, I briefly saw a whale, and a few minutes later, a school of dolphins. Very cool! The other fun thing was watching people walking. A lot of people like to do morning laps, but today people seemed to mysteriously disappear indoors when they got to the wet side of the deck. If they weren’t being sprayed directly, they were being dripped on from the lifeboats or the deck above, and I have to admit that my walk wasn’t nearly as much fun after I got soaked.
We put in today to Hualtico, a pretty white sand beach in a small bay ringed with cliffs where the scrub is being rapidly replaced by condos with Century 21 signs. Such a shame.
But we took a cab into Santa Cruz, a few miles inland, and it sort of changes my overall dislike of Mexico. It’s a pretty little town with a central plaza with lovely flowers and nice shade trees. Concrete and plaster buildings with the usual hotels, cafes, craft shops and a Catholic Church. It’s a bit rundown like many Mexican towns, but clean and peaceful. There are the usual assortment of very aggressive shills (we got hit up by a cab driver as we were exiting a cab, fer cryin’ out loud!), but “gracias, no” seems to take care of it most of the time. The most persistent ones were selling silver, or something similar to it that they called silver.
We walked out of the tourista area into a neighborhood, and people were actually quite friendly. Karen bought some Mexican toothpaste at a Farmacia, and I wonder if she doesn’t now have to rinse with Mexican water. At a taqueria on another block, a chimney was putting out a LOT of white smoke, enough to announce a new Pope actually, and it filled the air with a wonderful smell of chicken, but it must be annoying to the people living in the area. It looked like it filled up their apartments as well. Lots of small cars, but even more small motorcycles, often with three people riding by. Seems crazy to me, but what do I know?
It was in the mid 80s today, pretty warm, but even this short distance inland it was less humid and the air actually felt pretty nice. Sitting under the shade trees in the plaza was really pleasant. There was a crippled pigeon, though, hobbling around on one normal foot, one leg without a foot. He or she seemed to mostly be doing all right.
The Catholic Church surprised me. It was only built and consecrated in 2000, and there’s no indication of whatever prior Church was there. On the other hand, it was next door to the Hotel Flamboyant (insert whatever joke you want here.)
In the Hualtico Crafts Museum were two men working looms to create wall hangings. One of them spoke pretty good English, and when I mentioned I was from California, he told me that he had worked as a farm laborer near Stockton (peaches, cherries) and Fresno (grapes.) He had also worked for a Japanese manufacturing company in Chicago, of all places, but much preferred life here. It was fun to watch him at the loom. Whatever pattern he was working on must have been something he’s done before, because he was building a diamond shape mostly by feel while he talked with me. The other man was studying a pattern and counting strands of wool, but both were very quick with the loom and bobbins, and it was interesting to watch them work. I’ve seen people weaving in several house museums, and they are obviously amateurs because these people were a lot faster and more confident than the other weavers I’ve seen. It was almost, but not quite enough to make me want to buy something, but I just cant come up with any good reason to have this material. I would like a hammock, but I’ve no place to hang one.
Last night I had dinner in the Pinnacle, which is the upscale eating establishment on the ship. It was quite good, with broiled vegetables and a pear gaspacho that was just right, but Keith (the most uninteresting man in the world) and his mentor, Joe, were across the room, so I had yet another chance to listen to Keith’s B.S. with a new wait staff. Keith, of course, likes to tell wait staff that he worked his way through college as a chef in a four star restaurant, and he badgers the wine steward to show his in-depth knowledge of wine. The new quip at this dinner was when he told the waiter that his wife knows that, if there’s a problem that he [Keith] can’t handle, then it can’t be handled. Sheesh!
After he and Joe left, I got a chance to chat with my waiter, who comes from Istanbul on a seven month contract. He’s the first person I’ve ever talked to about Turkey who has ever gotten me interested in visiting there. According to him, it’s very green and verdant and quite a lovely place.
I chatted with another waiter from Indonesia this morning. He’s always wanted to work in a fine restaurant, and is seven weeks in to this job, and having the time of his life. I never know how much to believe these guys. They are under strict orders never to complain or really provide much detail about their jobs. I’m always impressed by the discipline they seem to have in keeping their game face on.
Speaking of staff, I stumbled on a another midnight basketball game the other night, between Filipino hotel staff and Indonesian restaurant staff. It was all apparently in good fun, but very passionate. Everyone I see being very professional during the day has a different off-duty face and body language, and it must be quite a treat to be able to let loose like this.
In the morning, we put in at Acapulco, which I heartily dislike, but I’m going on a bus excursion to some ruins tomorrow for something that is promised to be archaeological in nature. Hopefully it will keep me away from the most aggressive shills for crap, and it’s an hour from port, so it’ll get me away from Acapulco, which is filthy, shabby and ugly. Most of the old farts will either go to cliff diving or some such nonsense, so it should be a good day. In the meantime, it’s time for sleep.