A Day in San Francisco

We awakened this morning on Eastern Time at 7 AM. Unfortunately, that was 4 AM Pacific time. By 6 AM we gave up on sleep and started morning coffee then showers etc. We were first at the 7 AM breakfast buffet arranged for Cunard passengers then first at the Big Bus for our quick tour of San Francisco,

It provided a good quick look at San Francisco. It has been more than 5 decades since either of us visited this city and the tour was quite enjoyable. Being a Hop-on Hop-off operation we thought initially that we might do it twice but changed our minds. The day was bright and sunny but quite cool especially for the trip across the Golden Gate Bridge and back.

This was the most spectacular picture of the bridge but it was taken from Fishermans Wharf at sunset. Elements of the city remind us of Quebec City and Vancouver at the same time. As we finished the tour we passed Pier 27 where our ship for tomorrow, the Queen Elizabeth, was berthed.

We continued to explore the Embarcadero and Fishermans Wharf then retreated to the hotel for a break before dinner.

For dinner we returned to the wharf area and Alioto’, a restaurant recommended to us. It lived up to its recommendation. We enjoyed a great meal and fantastic view.

Tomorrow, we will send off our dental claim to our insurer so we shall see how they respond. There may not be a post or a very brief one before we board the ship. Perhaps something will pop up on Facebook.

Oh yes, there are photos on the photo album website. You can find a few previews on the website sidebar. Click on the email message to visit the website then Australia 2018 below the sidebar photo previews.

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First day of air travel, Feb 3

What we won’t see in Ontario ’til May

Let us begin on January 30. That was the date Gail had her second dental crown repair in preparation for our odyssey Moving forward, Friday arrived and Kevin was kind enough to transport us to the Toronto Airport Hilton for the night. Much thanks for that as it delayed our Saturday wake up time by 2 hours meaning we were able to delay our rise time untill 5 AM.

A full sized motor coach served as our shuttle from the hotel to the terminals. Amazing how many people are travelling on a Saturday morning. Even more interesting is the drop off procedure at Terminal 1. Even though your are departing, the shuttle lets you off in a desolate area of the arrivals level. If you happen to be with at least one other person who has done this before, you find your self in a very large elevator; reminded me of a freight elevator. We had the privilege of a jolly airport employee who inquired; “everyone going to the same place?” My immediate response was “I certainly hope not”. That stopped him for a moment but gradually a few announced their destination.

We arrive on the departures level at check-in bank 1, ours is 11. Fortunately the airport is not over crowded and checkin at the kiosk, luggage drop-off, NEXUS security and immigration all went uneventfully and we arrived at Gate F65 in time to have breakfast. Of course technology has taken over airport breakfast service. The iPad ordering went fine, credit card payment seemed to lock up their system for me, Gail’s worked fine. With assistance from a server/tech support person we both received breakfast, not too bad either.

We had checked two bags and had two smaller bags to carry on plus two very small bags with medical supplies and shoulder bags. The Air Canada offered to gate check our two small bags for free we said “let’s make a deal”. Boarding was easy as was reversing the procedure about six hours later. Then the miracle happened. The luggage carousel started to move and our two smaller bags emerged from the darkness below almost instantly. Only moments later or two large suitcases emerged and were claimed. This, without priority luggage consideration.

Our Cunard representative had met us at the luggage claim area and escorted us to a prepaid taxi to carry us to the Sheraton Fishermans Wharf. Apparently, everything was going far too well. As we travelled to the hotel Gail noticed another dental crown seemed too loose to trust for a three month tour. As we checked into the Sheraton, Gail starts talking to the Concierge who immediately called a dentist who actually answered the phone, on a Saturday, and was prepared to offer treatment, on a Saturday afternoon if we could get to her office in 15 minutes or so. Twenty minutes later we were at the dentist’s office. About an hour later, with the application of suitable inducement provided by our deal with Mr. VISA, we were off to start exploring the Embarcadero.

We took Taxi’s to and from the Dentist’s office which was a little less than 3 km away, up a steep hill, and down a steep hill. The two “steeps” helped persuade us to ride rather than walk. Once at the hotel walking on level ground along the sea front seemed like a good idea. After we wandered for a while we stopped for something to eat. For us it was dinner time but it was only around 3 PM local time. We found ourselves at an eatery called Castagnola’s where they had already declared it to be happy hour and they offered Dungeness crab and pasta which pleased Gail. What a way to try to forget about the dentist.

More walking, then back to the hotel. As I write this the clock indicates 6:30 PM but it feels closer to midnight. If we manage to keep the eyes open for four more hours perhaps we won’t wake up before dawn tomorrow. Here goes.

San Francisco Skyline

 

Alcatraz

 

 

 

 

 

 

A couple of housekeeping items:

Don’t forget to click on the text within a post. The email often contains fewer images than the full post.

I have made a number of updates to the website. Technology changes, new techniques replace old ones. During our last trip some of you attempted to add comments to a post discovered that the CAPTCHA technique I used to help avoid spammers malfunctioned. Should you add a comment to this or future posts you may notice the CAPTCHA is absent. However, the anti-spam prevention remains, it is just hiding. Hopefully this will make it easier and encourage more to add comments. I have also tried to identify potential problems and prevent them.

You may notice a couple of new features on this and some future posts. Each post will have a travel related quote at the end of my ramblings. I hope it may sometimes be inspirational. Some, probably not all, posts will end with a leaflet map identifying my exact geographical location at the time of posting. I have way points for maps today but I’m too tired to build the map. Perhaps I’ll backtrack on one of our sea days.

—30—

Preview of the next trip

It is now just two weeks until we set off again. This will be for three months, hopefully, winter will be over by the time we return.

For any of you who wish to follow us I have created an annotated map. You can use it now to preview our intended path. Here is the link. MAP You can also find the map at any time by visiting the menu item at the top of the page labeled “Map – Australia Trip 2018“. You will not always see it in the email but clicking on the email should launch your web browser and display the web page.

I’d appreciate hearing from some of you before I travel about your experience using the map. As you might appreciate, internet access time is sometimes at a premium when traveling so if anything needs fixing I would like to do it now.

Thanks in advance.

“Every hundred feet the world changes” 

Roberto Bolaño

Posted in Map

An apology and some information

At the end of each new post there is a Leave a reply  link which has not been working correctly. If you attempted to reply to a post using this link it simply refused to perform the task. For this I am sorry.

It should now be repaired so please feel free to make use of it. You can, of course, contact me by return email but when you make use of the  Leave a reply  link other readers have the opportunity to read your comments. Once a post has received a reply the  Leave a reply  message is replaced by  1 Reply and the count increases with each response. However, clicking on Reply will allow a new response to be posted.

Just be aware that the first time you leave a reply I must “approve” your message. Once your first message has been approved (usually within a day) any subsequent message from you will be automatically approved and attached to the post.

One other detail, you must perform some simple arithmetic before a reply will be accepted just to prove you are a person. Unfortunately, there are a few individuals who create robot programs that search the internet for journals or blogs and automatically post nuisance messages.

I hope I have not confused anyone too much. Should you find any other problems please let me know by email.

Thanks for reading along.