Exploring Beautiful Vancouver, B.C.

September 4th, 2019

September 1 – 4, 2019

Vancouver remains one of our favorite cities in the world. It’s an enjoyable city to visit and seems very livable: great public transportation, outdoors activities, mild year-round climate, multi-cultural population, friendly people, and many cultural events and activities. Did I mention incredibly beautiful?!! There are many parks and gorgeous view of the sea and mountains everywhere.

Sunday afternoon we took a taxi to Vanier Park to see a performance of Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew. It was performed by Bard on the Beach which is a professional summer theater group. This production was a very funny ‘Wild West’ cowboy version of the famous play and very enjoyable.

Before the performance, we sat on a bench near Kitsilano Beach and Jeff noticed a pink paper origami bird hanging in a tree. According to the label, someone travels the world and hangs origami from trees in public parks and posts locations on social media. The sign said: “It’s never too late to start again.”

The little ferries on False Creek are practical and so much fun!

Canada Place on the waterfront is a convention center, hotel, meeting place, world trade center, and cruise ship terminal with great views across the bay to North Vancouver:

We took advantage of a beautiful sunny day to explore Stanley Park. The thousand acre park on the edge of downtown Vancouver remains densely forested. There are public beaches, trails, lakes, a heated pool, an aquarium, and an outdoor theater. We went to see the collection of totem poles:

We enjoyed walking several miles along the outer walking/running/biking trail. There’s also a statue of a swimmer on a rock which reminded us of The Little Mermaid in Copenhagen.

On another day, we visited Bill Reid’s Gallery of Northwest Coast Art. He was featured on the Canadian $20 banknote. The gallery also had several wonderful exhibits by contemporary indigenous artists.

Downtown Vancouver in the glistening sunshine:

Our time in Vancouver passed quickly and we said goodbye to Vancouver early Wednesday morning. This trip home ended the same as it had begun, with a long delay at the Seattle airport. I took this photo from the plane of Mt. Ranier poking above the clouds, with Mount St. Helens in the background.

The view was a wonderful way to end a great adventure to Alaska and Vancouver.

 

Exploring Vancouver

August 31st, 2019

Saturday August 31, 2019

One of our favorite places in Vancouver is the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia. The museum is renowned for its collection of world arts and cultures and especially of First Nations of the Pacific Northwest.

The museum is an anthropological research center and has an excellent assortment of totems and other cultural artifacts.

One exhibit in the collection is an impressive sculpture by the Canadian artist, Bill Reid. The title of the work is Raven and the First Men and it depicts a Haida creation myth.

There is a meeting house and a variety of totems on the grounds of the museum.

We left the museum and went to Kitsilano Beach near the Maritime Museum to take one of the tiny False Creek ferries back to the city.

It was a beautiful day so we decided to ride the entire route of the ferry:

We left the ferry at Yaletown and walked to the nearest metro station. The SkyTrain is the oldest automated driverless light rapid transit systems in the world. The trains connect people from the airport to downtown Vancouver.

Here’s a photo from our hotel looking toward the mountains of North Vancouver. The city has grown a lot with many new tall buildings and more are under construction. It’s still a beautiful city and a fun place to visit.

 

 

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

August 30th, 2019

Friday August 30, 2019

Vancouver is one of our favorite cities in the world and we were excited to return after our last visit seven years ago. The Celebrity Millennium arrived early in the morning and docked in the heart of the city at Canada Place. With its sweeping sails and panoramic views, Canada Place is a dramatic gateway to this lovely city.

The weather was overcast and 66 degrees. We were off the ship early and wanted to spend some time before going to our hotel, so we booked a Hop-On Hop-Off bus tour. It was fun to see how much Vancouver had changed since our last visit. Also, the Ho-Ho bus was a good activity for a cool drizzly day. Here’s a view of the city from Stanley Park. There are many more tall buildings!

The H0-Ho bus driver was an older local woman who grew up in Vancouver. Everywhere we went she had stories about what the neighborhood was like when she was growing up. Fantastic!! Stanley Park is a jewel in the crown of this attractive city:

We drove past English Bay and memories surfaced of my first visit to Vancouver more than 30 years ago. I sat on the beach at night as music from the Vancouver Folk Festival drifted across bay. I remember hearing Buffy Sainte-Marie and other Native North American and international folk singers.

Jeff and I decided to get off the bus at Granville Island and walk around.

Bagels have arrived at the Public Market on Granville Island:

Back on the Ho-Ho bus we passed through “Gastown.” Tourists were lined up to see the famous Steam Clock:

We got off the bus at the downtown Pacific Centre which was near our hotel. We checked in, got settled, and were ready to begin our northwestern Vancouver adventure.

 

 

Cruising the Inside Passage of Alaska

August 29th, 2019

Thursday August 29, 2019

Today is the last day of our 7-Day cruise aboard the Celebrity Millennium. We traveled south along the Inside Passage from Seward, Alaska, stopping in several ports. Tomorrow morning we’ll arrive in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It’s been an active and fun cruise.

This morning, we scheduled to take a “Behind the Scenes” tour to see the workings of the ship. First, our guide took us up to “The Bridge” located on an upper deck in the bow of the ship. This is where navigation and steering of the behemoth takes place. There is no huge wooden wheel however there are many monitors and a relatively small “joy stick.” There were just two people “driving” the ship! One officer was watching the “Auto Pilot” which was actually doing all the work. Another officer was looking out of the front windows to see where where the ship was going. Amazing!!!

The navigation area was behind the steering section. There were just two officers; one man looking at monitors and the other making coffee:

Next we went to the “Control Room” which is where all the systems on the ship are managed. Everything is monitored and controlled from here: engines, generators, electrical systems, plumbing, alarms, air-conditioning, desalination, waste removal, security, communication, etc. etc.  It’s a large room full of monitors and one man watching them:

The next area we visited was the huge stainless steel kitchen for the main dining rooms:

Then we descended several flights of stairs to the Laundry Room. Two men were feeding sheets into a machine which dried and folded them in minutes:

Our tour was extensive and fun. It took two and a half hours to run around and up & down to see everything. We worked up an appetite and went to the Oceanview for a tasty lunch. The dessert offerings were too pretty to eat:

We returned to our cabin to pack and watch the scenery from our balcony. The weather was gorgeous: sunny, cool, crisp, and clear. At one point we saw splashing in the water. First a spout, then the dark moving curve of a dorsal fin, and finally a large tail. It was a pod of whales stirring up the calm bay!

Later, we went out to the aft deck to watch the sun set. It was a spectacular ending to an amazing Alaskan adventure.

 

 

Ketchikan, Alaska

August 28th, 2019

Wednesday August 28, 2019

the ship arrived in Ketchikan early this morning. It was a bright sunny day and 51 degrees. We were fortunate to have a beautiful dry day because the naturalist on the ship had said that rainfall in Ketchikan “was not measured in inches, but in feet.” The city gets an average of 13 FEET of rain each year. There are only 60 days of sunshine per year. We were VERY lucky!!!

We watched from the balcony as the Celebrity Millennium slowly cruised past several other ships and docked in front of the Holland America’s Amsterdam. It simply amazing how the crew can “park” these behemoths like valets in a parking lot!

Ketchikan looked like another small Alaskan village, sandwiched between the sea and the mountains, developed for tourists and supported by cruise ships. Ketchikan has the world’s largest collection of totem poles in the world. Our plan for the day was to visit Totem Bight State Park and the adjacent Potlatch Park which are located 30 minutes outside Ketchikan. We learned we could take a public bus to the parks, so we set out to find the bus stop.  On the way, we stopped at Creek Street which was full of tourists.

The Creek Street Historic District was the “Red Light District” during Gold Rush days and it is still a major tourist destination. Today the buildings are occupied by shops, restaurants, and cafes.

Ketchikan Creek is a salmon spawning area and looking down into the water, we say hundreds of salmon swimming up stream.

All of a sudden, the salmon dispersed and jumped out of the water in a flurry of excitement! Behind them was a harbor seal hunting for his breakfast!! There were two harbor seals in the creek looking for food.

Jeff and I boarded the 10:25 public bus to ride ten miles out of town. The bus filled up with cruise ship passengers and local moms with young children, teenagers, and grizzly old men. A local woman, who began a conversation with me, said she was happy to have cruise ships in port because it gave her employment in a local fish processing plant and she could earn $8,000 this summer. The factory closes in the winter and she has to find other employment. The bus pulled up to a Walmart store and the woman wished me well and got off.

Jeff and I left the bus at Totem Bight State Historical Park. The park was established on the former site of a traditional Native campground and contains a collection of 15 totem poles and a replica of a traditional chieftain’s house. Skilled carvers were hired to repair or duplicate the totem poles. The park was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1970.

The wood-frame house had a low oval entrance which led into a single room decorated with carved “house posts.” There was a central fire pit to heat the house.

Adjacent to the state park is Potlatch Totem Park, a privately owned facility built on ancient Tlingit fishing grounds. The park features a large clan house flanked by four smaller clan houses, designed to show how local tribes lived through the 1800s.

We had paid $5 each to enter Bight State Park but there was no admission fee for Potlatch Park. When I asked a worker, she said that Potlatch runs a gift shop which pays all expenses to maintain Potlatch. Potlatch Park had exhibits of antique guns, old cars, and also a totem restoration building.

We returned back to Ketchikan early enough to explore the Creek Street area and see salmon jumping up the rapids on Ketchikan creek.

 

We hurried back to the Celebrity Millennium late in the afternoon. The shops in Ketchikan were closing as cruise passengers returned to their ships and the huge ships were leaving the port. Four ships had been in Ketchikan today bringing about 10,000 tourists to the Alaskan village, perhaps doubling the population of Ketchikan. Amazing……