by Jim Bellomo | Jun 20, 2019 | Uncategorized
After what seemed like a very short night we sailed down an incredible fjord into Akureyri, Iceland’s most important northern city. It’s small town (a population of only around 27,000) but it is the gateway to some pretty amazing natural wonders. The day started with beautiful weather and the sail-in made for some great photos.
I almost forgot to mention that before we got to Akureyri the captain of Reflection decided to make us all what my friend Bob (a long-time Navy guy) calls “Bluenose Sailors” which I am sure means we have been inside the Arctic Circle. He sailed the entire ship north of where he needed to so we could say we had been inside the Arctic Circle. What a guy! We even got a certificate. Kind of the like the one we got when we crossed the Equator many years ago on our SouthEast Asia cruise.
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Sailing into Akureyri takes you up a long fjord that has amazing views
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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Then we saw whales
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Whales
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Whales
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And more whales
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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Eyjafjörður fjord
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You know how I love pilot boats
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Along Eyjafjörður fjord
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Pilot boat!
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Goodbye pilot boat
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Our first glimpse of Akureyri
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Akureyri
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Akureyri
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A beautiful waterfall
We were met by our guide Auðun of No.17 Tours. He had been recommended by the god of shore excursions, my buddy Mike Preisman. Mike had used the services of Auðun a few years ago on their Icelandic cruise and had spoken highly of him. He was right. I should point out that Auðun told us his company used to be Taxi 17 because when it wasn’t touring season, he would drive a taxi but now the government says he is too old to do that. He can drive a bus, a truck and a tour van but at 76 he can’t drive a taxi. Who would have thought. He is an amazing guy who really knew the area he was showing us. Plus he had some great stories from his 27 years as the skipper of a fishing trawler.
We set out a little earlier in Akureyri as the ship was docked and let us off by 10:30. Auðun was ready for us and we were off to see the northern waterfalls, stand with both my feet in different continents and see some other amazing geological wonders as well as two versions of the Blue Lagoon. And we finally got to see puffins. We had missed them before on previous trips to places where they live but this time we got to see a bunch. Check out the photos for all the sights we saw.
Even though we had gone out earlier than we had in Reykjavik, the weather had turned both cold and gray and by the time we had seen the puffins and the waterfalls, we were wiped out so we asked Auðun to just head us home and we were off to the ship were we pretty much caught a late dinner and collapsed. But we did have a super day and the Icelandic landscape is even more amazing up north.
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The brand new 9K tunnel that saved us more than 20 minutes more than the tours used to take.
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Godafoss
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Sorry, I just couldn’t stop taking pics of Godafoss
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On the way to the Lake Myvatn area
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These two mountains stand next to each other, one peaked and one with a flat top
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Couldn’t resist this shot
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Dimmuborgir an area of lava
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Dimmuborgir an area of lava
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The right side of this photo is in North America, the left in Europe. I stood with my foot on each one.
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A smaller and cleaner northern version of the Blue Lagoon
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Dettifoss, the most powerful waterfall in Europe
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Dettifoss
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Dettifoss
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The other end of Dettifoss
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A very cool horseshoe falls
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Dettifoss
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Puffins on the northern coast
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More puffins
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And more puffins
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Northern Coast house
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One more Blue Lagoon wanna be, the best yet!
I still don’t know why, exactly, but I do think people can have a spiritual connection to landscape, and I certainly did in Iceland. —Hannah Kent
by Jim Bellomo | Jun 18, 2019 | Uncategorized
Most everyone else in our party slept in a little bit after getting back at almost midnight from our Golden Circle tour with Birkir. I on the other hand, love it when a ship overnights in a port so that I can get up early the next day and walk through the city. (One of my best photo walks ever was in Québec last October when we overnighted on Summit). More and more cruise lines are doing this (overnighting in cities) and you can get off and on whenever you want all night long. This was a good day to do that but I really missed that early morning golden light I had when we were in Edinburgh and Dublin.
I got up at 5:00 am and headed out to walk the seaside walkway into downtown Reykjavik but the light outside was already like 10:30 in the morning as you can see from my pics. I got some decent stuff and then headed back to the ship to shower and meet Kathleen and others in our group to take a taxi back into downtown to see some more of the city. My pics and their captions will pretty much tell the tale on that. Don’t forget to click on the first one and view them as a slide show. And if you want to see more, check them out on Flickr by clicking here.
We were back on the ship by 2:00 pm and Reflection set sail for Akureyri at 3:00. It was a pretty great day considering how little sleep was involved. Thursday, I will post all about our travels in Akureyri, in the north. And we cross the Arctic Circle!
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Hallgrímskirkja—this church dominates the Reykjavik skyline
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Sun Voyager—Huge 1990 stainless-steel sculpture of a boat by Jón Gunnar Árnason, set on granite beside the sea.
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Reykjavik’s version of the bridge in Paris
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The green lock kind of drew my lens like a magnet
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Harpa Concert Hall
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Noticed this ship coming in. Not sure what it was.
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Turned out to be a small cruise ship. We met some people who were onboard later at coffee.
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Sun Voyager from a different angle
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A sculpture along the walkway. Looked different on every side
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See what I mean?
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Viking Sky coming into the harbor. This is the ship that had the engine failiure earlier this year.
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The Hofdi House built in 1909, the home of Icelandic poet Einar Benediktsson also hosted an iconic political summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbatsjov
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The lupine was everywhere and in full bloom
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The end of my walk. Almost back to the ship.
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Out later with Kathleen saw this photo shoot in front of Hallgrímskirkja
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Hallgrímskirkja up close
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Inside Hallgrímskirkja we found a small chamber orchestra rehearsing
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Inside Hallgrímskirkja Cassie and Jamie look at the ceiling of this magnificent church
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Above the altar in Hallgrímskirkja
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I love taking photos of artists as work.
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Such great expressions
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See what I mean
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Outside of Hallgrímskirkja is this incredible statue of Leif Erickson
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Kathleen found a friend. Hey, I have to take these tourist photos once in a while.
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Great street decoration
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This is a real place. Seriously.
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I never did find out who these statues represent.
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A closeup of Harpa Concert Hall to end our stay. We went inside but the photos didn’t come out as well as I would have liked.
by Jim Bellomo | Jun 16, 2019 | Uncategorized

Birkir, Reykjavik’s best tour guide
After our Titanic foray into Belfast, we spent the next day and a little more at sea heading to Reykjavik, Iceland’s capital. After a cool sail in (see the photos—we passed a huge iceberg), we arrived around 1:00 pm and after a quick lunch we set off on an 8 hour tour with our guide from Tours by Locals, Birkir. Now normally we would never start an 8-10 hour tour at 1:30 pm because within few hours all we would be able to see is darkness. But this was Iceland and we were within 2 weeks of the longest day of the year so we could tour until midnight and it would never be totally dark. That meant we could see what the tour books refer to as the southern Iceland Golden Circle.
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Iceberg!
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This was kind of disconcerting after visiting the Titanic Experience
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This dormant volcano is covered with a glacier
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We passed by downtown
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And were passed by an NCL ship on its way out.
It included the edge of continents, incredible waterfalls, exploding geysers, volcanic craters, Icelandic horses and some of the most amazing natural beauty we have seen. Our first stop was the Þingvellir Icelandic National Park which has significance for two reasons. It is a historical site where the Icelandic parliament first met in 930 AD. And it is the intersection of two continents. Seriously. The plates that form the North American continent end in Iceland and run directly into the plates that form the European continent. In a way we were walking between North America and Europe the entire time we were in Iceland. In fact, two days later just outside Akureyri in the north, I was able to stand with my right foot in North America and my left foot in Europe. Pretty cool.
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On the way to Þingvellir we passed these wild Icelandic horses
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On the right, North America. On the left, Europe.
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Same here
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The park was well taken care of with great walkways
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People were in the park taking their wedding pics
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Heading down
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Bob is always way ahead of us
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A “natural” rock formation?
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I love the Icelandic flag. This is at the exact spot of their first parliament meeting in 960 AD.
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The top of a beautiful waterfall in Þingvellir
After our visit to this beautiful (in its own way) national park, we drove onward to ice cream. Yes, ice cream. It seems that there is a world-famous dairy and ice cream factory in almost the middle of nowhere. We had some amazing ice cream and even got to meet the cows that had done the original work on it. It was a fun and delicious experience.
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Our stop at the dairy farm and ice cream shop included a look at the basic cream makers. I loved their look.
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I love the coloring of this cow.
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These guys were wandering around the grounds
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And there was an old tractor I could do a still-life landscape on.
Next up was Kathleen’s favorite part of the tour, a visit to feed some very cool Icelandic horses. As you drive through the wilds of Iceland, you see thousands of these Icelandic horses (never call them ponies). They are everywhere. Of course they are owned by someone but you do see some wild ones as well. Birkir knew of a place where a farmer allowed his horses to be petted and fed (he even provided “horse candy” you could buy) and so we stopped and everyone who wanted to got to feed the horses while the rest of us took photos. See mine to see how incredibly beautiful these animals are. That said, it is sad to say that Icelanders eat horse on a regular basis. It is a staple of their diet. Birkir offered to find us a restaurant that served horse but we said we were content to pet and feed them.
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Our closeup with the Icelandic Horses
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Kathleen gets to meet an Icelandic horse
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And feed another
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Cassie and Jamie do the same
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So does Analee
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Everyone wants a pic of the Icelandic horse
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It’s like Icelandic horse paparazzi
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What a cutie!
After that it was on to the absolute, drop-dead highlight of the day—the Gullfoss waterfall. We have been to Niagara Falls but I have to tell you, this was so much better. In my opinion the reason for that was that these falls are still in a very natural setting and incredibly cool. Also, the water is totally unpolluted and blue. When you see the photos, just realize that I didn’t do anything to those pics at all—the water really is that blue. Seriously. The pictures tell the story.
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Coming up to Gullfoss
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Gullfoss. One of the most incredible waterfalls in the world
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Gullfoss
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Gullfoss
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Steve, Jamie and Cassie in front of Gullfoss
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Rainbow over Gullfoss
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Love the trench here
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Gullfoss
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A panorama of the top of Gullfoss
We thought we had seen it all but now it was on to geysers. Compared to Old Faithful that goes off once an hour, Iceland’s southern geysers go off every five minutes or so. They smell of sulfur but they also are very cool. Check out the photos below.
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On the way to the Geysir area
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We arrived at the Geysir just as this one went off.
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The terrain around the Geysir was almost moon-like
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The hot sulfur pools at Geysir
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The hills were covered with lupine
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A close up of the lupine that we were lucky enough to find in bloom.
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Here goes the Geysir
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Geysir eruption
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Geysir eruption
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Geysir eruption
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Geysir eruption
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Geysir eruption
After our geyser experience and a brief stop at a volcanic crater (sorry, this one didn’t come close to Crater Lake and just not impressive enough for pics), we made a brief stop for dinner (by this time it was around 8:30 but outside it looked like the middle of the day) and then it was on to our last stop of the day, The Blue Lagoon.
If you have ever been to Iceland you have heard of the Blue Lagoon. It is so popular that people flying from the US to Europe will do a five hour stopover just to hit the Blue Lagoon (which is located between Reykjavik and the airport). If you have never heard of it or seen photos, just imagine a giant, blue hot tub with hundreds of people (maybe more) swimming around, drinking and rubbing mud on their faces. And the strangest thing was that we arrived at the lagoon just before it closes at 10:55 or so. But you would never know it. The sun was up and there were (see the pics) hundreds of people still in the lagoon. Birkir told us they stop letting people in at 11:00 pm in the summer but they don’t start kicking people out until midnight.
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The walkway into the Blue Lagoon. It is about 11:20 pm and VERY light out. Sun was still up.
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The Blue Lagoon
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The Blue Lagoon
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The Blue Lagoon
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The Blue Lagoon
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The Blue Lagoon
I should add that sunset that day was at 11:58 and sunrise the next morning was at 2:15 am. It never really got dark and when we finally got back to the ship at almost midnight, we were very thankful for the blackout curtains in our staterooms.
Our first day in Iceland was INCREDIBLE! Birkir was an amazing guide and got us everywhere in a fun and beauty filled day. It was just outstanding.
by Jim Bellomo | Jun 15, 2019 | Uncategorized
So our trip is done and we are recovering from 27 hours spent in airports and airplanes to get home. Today is all about laundry and resting up. Not a great trip home due to so many things. Among them were weather (Denver airport closed for a time as we were attempting to land so we got to circle for a while), late flights and construction at airports made this a really long day.
I wasn’t going to add this but I want to see it in print so feel free to skip it. This is what our travel home day was like.
- Woke up at 3:15 am onboard Celebrity Reflection (As usual, couldn’t sleep).
- Left Reflection at 6:45 am (early).
- Arrived at Dublin Airport at 7:35.
- Sat in shared business class lounge with Bob and Holly until our flight to London Heathrow left at 10:50 am.
- Arrived London Heathrow, Terminal 5 at 12:20 pm.
- Transferred to London Heathrow Terminal 3 for flight to Denver. Took the better part of an hour.
- Sat in British Terminal 3 Business lounge until 2:40 when we boarded our flight to Denver.
- Arrived in Denver at 6:15 pm Denver time after circling due to weather.
- Stood in line for almost an hour at Customs in Denver as all inbound flights had been held for weather and then all arrived at the same time. It was a bloody zoo.
- Due to the fact that we could not get a Business Class award flight direct to Seattle we flew to Denver (instead of home to Seattle) we had to now check all our luggage back in for a short flight to Seattle (that we paid for…in coach) that was supposed to leave at 7:35 pm.
- Due to all the late arrivals, our flight didn’t leave until 9:06 pm.
- Arrived in Seattle at 10:55 pm.
- After getting our luggage we grabbed a Lyft and wound up getting home at 11:45.
So that was our day. Too long. And all to get award seats from BA via Alaska Miles. Which will bring me to a future post on finding award seats in the near future. I promise.
And now to the reason for this post. The schedule of what is to come this week. My plan is to post Iceland day 1 tomorrow afternoon, Iceland day 2 on Tuesday, Iceland day 3 and 4 on Friday. Hope that keeps you all up to date without overwhelming anyone with too much to read.
Technology doesn’t address everything – for example, air travel still sucks. —Brad Feld
by Jim Bellomo | Jun 15, 2019 | Uncategorized
Sitting in the Club World Lounge in Terminal 3, Heathrow, I think I have enough time to upload Belfast (their WiFi is pretty good and it is already written). We shall see. It was the next stop after we boarded in Dublin where I left off (other my WOW Iceland post and my Woeful WiFi post).
We awoke on our first day after leaving Dublin to a truly blustery day in Belfast. Due to tides we weren’t able to dock until almost 11:00 am. As soon as we were able, we walked four of our party who had never been to Belfast before out to a private excursion I had arranged through Tours by Locals that would take them to up the Antrim Coast to Giant’s Causeway. We had done this on a previous visit to Belfast and we along with four others in our group who had been here before decided to forego that and pay a visit to the Titanic Experience.
I fully realize that visiting a museum dedicated to a cruise ship that sank by hitting an iceberg while on a cruise seems to be tempting fate but we went anyway. If you are in Belfast, this is a must-see. They have done an excellent job of detailing pretty much everything about the Titanic, its building, the times it was built in and so much more. Not only are there a number of excellent exhibits, there is even a ride. Who knew? We were pretty surprised. It was a great tour and worth the money and time.
Our original plans after the Titanic experience had been to jump on the HoHo bus but since it was pouring rain, we crammed ourselves into a taxi and headed back to the ship. All and all, a pretty decent day.
Remember, you can click the first photo to see the pics larger and as a slide show.
Post note: Wasn’t able to upload everything in the lounge. Finishing up at home with my usual AWESOME WiFi. Exhausted but more about that later.
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The Titanic Experience
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The Experience had awesome exhibits
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Looking up at the original scaffolding
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Steve, Jamie, Holly and Kathleen take the elevator up to the Titanic Ride
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Looking down from one of the cars on the ride
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Inside the Titanic Experience
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Inside the Titanic Experience
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Was this bar in Belfast or Edinburgh?
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Inside the Titanic Experience
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Looking out of the Titanic Experience
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Inside the Titanic Experience
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Inside the Titanic Experience
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A mural directly outside of Inside the Titanic Experience
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Walking to the Nomadic
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A dry dock plug (used to keep water out while they built)
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The Nomadic. A glorified tender for the White Star ships.
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You can tour the restored ship
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There were hologram guides on the Nomadic and Inside the Titanic Experience
The Titanic hit the iceberg not because they could not see it coming but because they could not change direction. —Dean Devlin