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Showing posts with label cruise ship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cruise ship. Show all posts

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Camera Critters: sea lions in Ensenada

A few are dozing.

Then a few more.
One goes for a swim.


Everyone joins in.

Guess that just leaves me up here!

Photos by Richard Schear at the cruise ship wharf in Ensenada.
Posted for Camera Critters hosted by Misty Dawn. Thanks, Misty!

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Back to Barcelona?

Above, our hotel was in this beautiful palm-dotted square a short walk from La Rambla.
Below, Dick loved his first taste of European architecture.


Below, La Rambla (the area is often called 'Las Ramblas') was all lit up at night. The evening marketplace, which Dick explored with his camera and without me, was as colorful as the lights could ever be, with candy, fish and fruit.


Photos by Richard Schear.

My husband (that big healthy guy who drags me around the world by the scruff of my neck) has booked us a Tulips and Windmills cruise in The Netherlands and Belgium next spring, and, after eight days of driving around France, a week in a condo in the south of France. It is in the very south, so far south we'll be able to drive to Barcelona and back in a day. Possibly we'll be tempted to pop down there in our rental car just to see if it's still as wonderful as it was a few years ago when we stayed there prior to a Royal Caribbean Canary Islands cruise and a week of driving around Spain. We stayed just a short walk from the Columbus statue on the Barcelona waterfront, and an even shorter walk from the wonderfully entertaining thoroughfare known as La Rambla.

You can visit more sites from around the world at My World Tuesday

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

CHAPTER 2 — FROM THE AUTHOR

This is a true story. It more or less has a beginning and an end, but it isn’t a novel and it doesn’t have a plot. It happened to me. The ‘I’ in the book is me, Kay Davies, a former workaholic and now a government-registered unfittie; the ‘he’ in the book is my husband Richard Schear, a senior who can still run fast enough to referee high school basketball and football.
Being away from home isn’t a new idea to me. My parents spent some 25 winters in Mexico’s Baja Peninsula, as well as many summers traveling and camping while my father gathered material and took thousands of 35mm color transparencies for his books about the rivers of British Columbia.
So travel isn’t new to me, either. When I was younger, I thought nothing of flying from the west coast of Canada to the east coast of the US for a long weekend, or catching a flight to southern California to rent a car and pop down the Baja to visit my parents for a week. I once took a year off to play rather than work, and during that year I took my brother to Australia for a month.
But the time came when it all stopped. Not just running foot races with my youngest brother. That went first, of course, because he got faster as I got slower. But my pick-up-and-take-off lifestyle eventually stopped, too.
I didn’t relinquish my wanderlust willingly, but relinquish it I finally did, because I could no longer work. I could no longer guarantee I’d show up on the job every day, or produce any significant amount of work once I got there. When I was thoroughly beaten down, the government ended up giving me money every month to make up for my general uselessness and lack of reliability.

KAY’S COLLECTION OF ILLNESSES
For a while (for too long, in fact) I fought my fate. I denied it even as I railed against it, and refused to apply for a pension until several different pains and problems in various parts of my body had me pretty much licked. I tried to work, but couldn’t, so I had to sell my house and live on the proceeds. Then I gave up, applied to the feds, and had to wait for my application to be approved. I moved myself and my two cats to a drier climate, but the medication prescribed for one illness had caused more damage to my already beleaguered body. My eyes developed cataracts, my blood sugar went wonky, my bones got terrifyingly thin, and I got fat. I swelled up like a balloon, and I’ve never lost that steroid weight.
I did, however, lose my looks. Sometimes I still wonder which I miss most, a successful career in the newspaper and printing industry, or a pretty face and a slim body.
It’s a tough call.
Newspaper compositors are being replaced by computers every day, and on the other hand, it doesn’t much matter if old ladies aren’t pretty. Dick thinks I’m cute, which is probably why I married him. However, it is a compliment about which I’m ambivalent. Most of the time, I am glad he thinks so, until I remember I’m a cute old lady, not a cute young thing. Sigh.
So, where was I? Ah, yes, I relinquished my lifestyle, moved away from the wet west coast, and some years later settled into semi-domesticity (I’m no one’s idea of a housewife) out here on the prairie, where the deer and the antelope play. I could book a seat-sale flight, or Dick would drive me out to BC to check on my elderly parents a couple of times a year. I’d see other members of the family, visit a few old friends, get some good fish and chips, and it was enough. I was content.
“There are penguins in the Galapagos Islands,” said Dick.
We’ve been traveling ever since.