Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Days 48 & 49, 26th - 27th May. Blue Caves and Split

 Day 48, 26th May Bisevo -Blue Caves to Split

Up this morning after a good sleep – my spider bites are still looking angry though, so I am putting antihistamine cream and then antibiotic cream on as well. A couple of them are looking quite dark in the centre and we have seen some disturbing photos of what spider bites can do to your skin, so I want to really look after them!

We had to be up and ready by 7 am, as we have an early start to Bisevo where the famous blue caves are, and our tour director said we would be back within half an hour for breakfast – lovely 😊. You can only go into the blue caves if the ocean is quite still as the opening for the boat to go into, is only about a metre high and you all have to duck down. How lucky were we – and we were the very first boat in there for the day. 

We have seen when we were back in Split, advertising for the caves and it is a huge drawcard with dozens of boats going out every day, so we beat the crowd. The blue light inside is amazing – it was actually discovered by a guy who came in a different way, a small hole in the rock higher up that he had to crawl through, but they have blasted out a small opening for rowboat sized boats to go through since. There is white sand there that reflects the sun, which just happens to come through the hole in the rock, especially in the morning. Given that most of the beaches are stone, this is quite a phenomenal and the blue is an incredible colour. The boat driver was a really funny young guy and obviously enjoyed his job.

Back to the boat for breakfast, then we mooched around for a bit and read our books – I think Graeme has read 5 books while we are away, which is true testimony that he is relaxed! I am on my 3rd book and we swap them as we go along at the different places, so it’s really good. Didn’t swim today as it was a bit cold after lunch and just keep reading. Then we packed our bags up as we headed back to Split. It is a bit of a cheat really as the first and last day of your cruise is just sitting in the harbour, which is rubbish, given the cost.

We got back in to Split about 2:30 pm, and quite a few of the group went on a walking tour of the Diocletian palace, but we have already done it before so just stayed on board and finished up our packing. We wandered off and into the city later – very hot and muggy tonight when it was still 29° at 5 pm. We wondered around aimlessly as we have seen everything before, but then stopped at a restaurant as Graeme wanted to eat and had a cold beer and mojito to cool ourselves down and then walked back to the ship and stopped up top and chatted with some of the passengers. We have all got to know each other really well and very few of the Scandinavians don’t speak English so we have been lucky. They are such lovely people. One of the Swedish guys, who is a fire chief back home was funny. He was getting into the water at one of our swim stops, and I was standing waiting to get in. He asked me if I had seen the white whale and I said no, and his wife started saying ‘Nien, Nien’ but he ignored her, smiling, so I knew something was going to happen – next minute he down trou’s ….so now I call him, Mr Moon!







Day 49 - 26th May - Back in Split

We set the alarm as breakfast was early this morning at 7am then bags out at 9am - better than big cruise ships where they have to be out the night before. We stayed up and chatted with everyone as it was goodbye day - I have Janet and Mike from Manchester and Mona from Norway added on fb, so we can keep in touch. Mona looks so much like Judy Dench only prettier ☺️. 
Said our goodbyes then waited until our bag pick up at 9:40am. The company Kompass provide porterage but its only one guy, so you take the other bags yourself anyway -well we do as it would be too much to take them all. Graeme has decided to put some gear in our soft duffle bag to lighten the load in his suitcase. He feels its too hard to lift when we are getting on and off things and the duffle can be slung over your shoulder, but means we have 3 big bags and our small backpacks. Will see how we go.

I had done some googling and saw there is a bus that takes you to the big shopping centre 1/2 an hour out of the main town. The times were out from the advertised schedule so we had an extra hour to wait after dropping our bags to the same hotel we stayed in pre cruise (would not recommend Kompass though as they are very set in stone with quite a few things and dont budge for anyone, plus the accom is ridiculous being up so many sets of steps (80), with no elevator when everyone is on cruises with suitcases). 

We decided to walk down and check out the ferry terminal so we know where to go tomorrow night. It was pretty hot today so we wandered very slowly - have learned to walk like locals! We sat on a seat under a tree for a bit to just people watch then found the SNAV terminal office that will take us from Split to Ancona. Just as well we did, as it is tucked away at the very far end and around a corner where you would never see it. The lady there said its not busy tomorrow so to arrive and board around 6pm, ready to sail at 7:30pm. We have an outside cabin with dinner booked.

That done, we went back and waited for the bus - it is free as well so that’s great. We got talking to an English couple who live in Windsor borough in London, so they get free entry into the palace anytime! We had a great talk as they were chatty. She is Indian and we talked about having travelling parents still :) . The bus arrived - has an open roofed back so we sat there and enjoyed the ride- showed us a different part of Split. It has great mountains bordering it- quite impressive…people all live in apartments here. The porterage guy today was telling me that a lot of people live on their summer income in winter, because its very common to inherit a family property, so they can afford this lifestyle. Although he also said there are corrupt legal people who allow say, 1 brother to sell a property that he owns equally with his other brother, from under his feet without knowing and the police are corrupt too, so you cant do anything about it. Would hate to live under a system like that.

Anyway we wandered around the shopping mall for a couple of hours- the floors are dedicated to similar stores- 2nd floor all sports shops for instance. Graeme found a couple of t shirts he liked, so got those then sat down for a bit as we were pretty hot and tired- had walked well over 10,000 steps again today. We bought a fresh sandwich each and went to sit in the upstairs food hall which has an outside balcony. There are a lot of smokers everywhere in Europe but we were lucky and got a seat outside, with the mountain vista to look at.
Went to the cinema to see if anything was on, but there was only fast and furious - probably number 107 or something! But it wouldn’t finish before the bus returns o Split, so we went and sat down outside a cafe- a guy appeared out of nowhere and so we got a beer each- kinda weird feeling that you can buy alcohol anywhere pretty much!

Back onto the bus and the english couple were there too as they had had enough of walking. We chatted all he way back, lovely the people you meet along the way in life hey?

Up to our accom to cool down as its very hot and we have both had a lot of foot and ankle swelling due to the heat, then out for dinner after catching up with writing this blog! We walked around for quite awhile, looking where we might go for dinner and came back down to a huge, square where you could sit outside under the large sun umbrellas – very pleasant. We had a lovely meal, Black Angus, steak burgers! and then back to our room, not far away.














Sunday, May 28, 2023

Days 44–47, 22nd–25th May – sailing the Croatian coastline

Day 44, 22nd May Sibernik - Galesnjak- Zadar 

We are getting into the routine on board – have a good night sleep, breakfast between 8am and 9:30. Then once the ship stops for a swim spot somewhere late morning, we get to snorkel around or a paddleboard, then move onto the next town with free time or a guided walking tour, then dinner somewhere and the places we visit. Oh to live this life all the time :-)

After leaving Sibernik, we cruised along the coast before stopping at  Galesnjak, where we had a swim spot this morning – 15°C, but what the hell - you only get to do it once in each spot so and I went for it! :-)🥶. Once I came out every little piece of neck and head pain I had was gone! 

We had cruisey time before we arrived at the beautiful city of Zadar where we were taken for a guided walking tour by a local, who obviously loved her city and was quite funny. This is a university town, so there were quite a few young people and all very well behaved. Some of the infrastructure here was 1st century A.D. and we walked through lots of cobblestone streets where you had to be super careful as the old marble pavements are extremely slippery as they have been worn, so smooth over time. The buildings and roadways seem to be have made over many different periods, so one was 16th century like the port gate, whereas others were built in the Communist era, sitting right alongside not quite matching, but have been left there is accommodation.

The tour ended down at seaside, to see the amazing feat of the the ‘insivible’ cathedral pipes – this amazing invention is where they have different lengths of pipes inside the sea wall where the water rushes in and out . This in turn creates loud, organ-like music as the sea water ebbs and flows and sounded like a church organ for sure- right underneath you on the boardwalk, quite fantastical! Apparently Alfred Hitchcock also said that the sunsets here were the most beautiful he ever saw in his life and he probably wasn’t too far wrong.

The tour ended at a small winery in town, where the lovely host took everyone through a white, rose and red wine menu, and they arranged a beer for me! Gave lots of information about the wines….it’s funny as one of them is Danni’s ”fruity jammy tones wine” (Zinfandel) ..her description from the back of the bottle we always joke about. It is made in California, but the original vines came from Zadar in Croatia.

After that we wandered around the town, just enjoying the balmy evening. Graeme was keen to eat so we went to a restaurant called Kompass and had the most amazing simple plate of grilled calamari. It was still in the complete tube, with the little tentacles at the bottom and had some kind of oil and vinegar on it – very light and nice. Of course we had to enjoy it with a cocktail – piña colada and local beer for Graeme. Back to the ship to fell into bed we did our usual 14 to 15,000 steps today :-). We are docked in a harbour every night, tied to another ship on the starboard or port side and you just walk across the other ships to get in and out.










This is where the sea pipes were that played organ-like music under the boardwalk, then they paint the promenade to look like organ keys to match  🎹 

                        
  


Grilled calamari was beautiful 

 

Day 45, 23rd May – Zadar to Primosten

We departed Zadar in the morning and cruised through the Kornati National Park, which has lots of long chain-like islands – 89 islands, islets and reefs. We stopped and had a swim spot – beautiful and clear and back into the cold, cold water. It almost hurts your head when you first get in. They have a couple of blowup paddleboard and Graeme has started having a go with these and today was up and standing and peddling! Very impressive for an old boy ha ha! well we aren’t  20 any more 🤫😅. Most enjoyable :-) 

We cruised all day until 4:30 pm – everyone just laid out in the sun, some  with lots of sunscreen and some not! I could see people getting really burnt, but we were really good with sunscreen – hopefully we won’t run out! We read and read and lay in the sun and listened to music and read some more, then got in the shade. Had a couple of beers and then a lovely three course lunch. Small portions as they should be! But finished with the most beautiful huge custard square. There is a husband and wife team cooking on this boat – think there are only about 6 staff in all. They are all smokers whereas no passengers smoke, so they smell when they are having a fag somewhere on the boat. 

We got to Primosten and walked along the lovely promenade to the old town, which rises out and up like so many of the mediaeval villages in a triangle shape. There really was nothing but eateries along the waterfront and a few stalls, and everything else was rental accommodation – like everything! So obviously it has huge appeal in the summer months. We are just on the shoulder of the season, so it is still nice and quiet. 

There is also a new town but we didn’t go over there as it was very hot walking and Matija “Mar-tee-a” our tour director had offered to take any of us who wanted to go, to a rustic little restaurant called Saricevi Dvorak 4 km away, if we were interested. They do something similar to a Hangi, but do it in pots on a huge open stove where they cook either veal, lamb, or octopus for three hours in the embers. We decided to go and what a great experience – so glad we did.

Matija organised 2 maxi taxis for the 11 of us going for €6 return per person. It was pretty cheap, especially as it was uphill ha ha! This beautiful little restaurant is so rustic and run by a young family who obviously worked very hard. The husband did the cooking, while the wife did absolutely everything else! What a lovely evening we had – they only sold wine or brandy liquer shots, so we had a cherry brandy, fig brandy and Graeme had a herb brandy which was like grappa – in another words rocket fuel! The owners they were so lovely and went up the road and bought some beer for a guy and I to have. It was a lovely evening, and we all decided to pay Matija’s meal and drinks, as he had researched this and organised everything for us earlier in the day.  The restaurant needed to know because the food takes 3hrs to cook and is pre-ordered. – €90 per couple for what we had with a lot of wine and brandy shots for everyone was pretty good! :-) lovely evening👏😁.


















Day 46, 24 th May - Stari Grad

We woke up after a good night, sleep and up to breakfast – I like to go early before everyone’s there and sit on the back and catch up with my blog and chat with friends and family back home as this is the only time that we cross over timewise – our morning and Australia/New Zealands evening. 


We had two swim stops today, and the water was 19°, which was nice! I snorkelled around as I have done every day as I think this is the only time I will be here, so even though the water has been a chilly 15° the previous days, it makes you feel good and I like comparing what I see in the different bays underwater.


Today I saw an amazing huge millipede like creature under the water. It was about 20 cm long, and had grey horizontal stripes all the way down its back, with bright pink and purple all over the sides and top. To add to that, it had a large amount of teeth-like tubules I think they were, all over the underneath inside and it was going over the rocks feeding on tiny little shells that look like mini mussel shells with multicoloured feathers on the top of them! That topped the yellow piece of coral I saw yesterday :-). Then later a huge wasp thing eve landed on our outdoor table. I could see its whole face and thought it was quite fascinating but Graeme was like nah it has a Huge stinger at the back so he made it fly away lol.


We had a nice lunch – they give us 3 small courses every day! Then we were meant to sail until 4:30pm, but by 2 pm we had stopped again for another swim stop as I think they got to the Stari Grad area much sooner then they had expected. We all mooched around and lay in the sun for awhile on the top deck, which has got lots of loungers and some shade to lay under as well.


At 4:30 pm, we got to the town and went walking – we found a lovely little church, and some old, old buildings! There are so many in Croatia and they are all made of the huge sandstone or marble blocks. We found a restaurant to sit outside of and have a nice cold, big beer and enjoyed the breeze, then back to the ship.


Tonight we had the captains dinner – I think they probably hate coming to those ha ha! We have got to know our fellow passengers, quite well and enjoyed the evening with a couple of Brit’s, a couple of Norwegians, a Scot and a Polish lady– so quite the melting pot.


They put on some abba so we enjoyed having a little dance, then down to bed after a lovely meal. We had cuttlefish tonight with risotto, so it was all black from its ink– very freaky looking and delicious.






Nektar” alright!


Day 47, 25th May Hvar and Vis


I didn’t sleep well last night – kept waking up and gave up between 2 and 3 am and just lay there until 6 am. Had a shower and went and sat up on the top deck which was lovely and quiet and the water was so still. Caught up on Internet stuff. Then we had breakfast before the boat went around to the next harbour, and we got off in Hvar to go on a walking tour.


The lady who took us clearly loves her town – she said from September to Easter they basically going to hibernation and are ‘very lazy’! The town sports a huge fort at the top plus a smaller newer fort further over. After the tour, we walked all the way up to the big fort, took about 20 minutes, and lots of steps! It was interesting to listen to all the different accents as we walked up. Lots of Americans and Brits in this area. 

It was €15 per person for entry and that also included going down into the old show theatre at the bottom in town and the arsenal, which I thought would be weapons – found out later it wasn’t!


Wandered around – there is only one room you can go inside the fort that it had some cool, big urns and things they had found in the harbour, I think it was that were really old. We walked around the rampart, and then back down the hill, looking over the amazing view of the city in the harbour.

Then we went back down into town and the little old theatre that had booths where the rich people would sit and then downstairs into the arsenal, which was actually about people from the area and the different things they had invented or been known for ….like Nicoli Tesla, of direct current ac/dc fame. Hvar is a beautiful town and worth going to see.


Then back onto the boat where we went out into the harbour, had a nice lunch onboard. They stopped for the swim spot but no one really wanted to go in as it was just in the harbour and not in a sheltered bay.

We went and lay down as I was pretty tired, we had a nap for 45 mins and the funny for the day……


When Graeme got up his blue shirt had a huge, wet looking stain all down one side – he opened up the shirt pocket and realised he had put a small butter pack in there to soften it up at lunchtime, forgot about it, then lay down and cuddled up behind me… end result, the butter had completely melted in his pocket and had gone all over his shirt, on the sheet and the pillowcase! – Talk about trying to butter me up ha ha ha! :)


I washed it all out with some hot water and soap, and then we were off again for another walking tour. Now we were around in the town of Vis - It was where the second mamma Mia movie was filmed, and that is its claim to fame. It was very hot on the walk and it’s not even summer!


Don’t think we came on the right day though as there were so many yachts and catamarans along the harbour filled with very loud drinking brits, all dressed up. We found out later that on a Thursday they all come from somewhere? and get taken up to a nightclub on the hill and get off their faces, which they were already doing when we were there. We are all moored close together, so glad we have earplugs when they all come back tonight ha ha!


With all the drinking yelling boozed young people here tonight it doesn’t give the town a good feeling though overall and I felt for the guy he was telling us about it that lives there and runs the restaurant we were at.


We stopped and had a snack and a drink at a restaurant, which was where the filming was done for mamma Mia, apparently where Meryl Streep starts singing and the shop next door is where she buys her first pair of dungarees in the movie. They were saying that when they did the filming between September and October they had to keep trying to trick the paparazzi, so they wouldn’t hassle Pierce Brosnan, but he was very good about talking to all the locals. Apparently if they wanted your boat to stay moored in the harbour for the shoots because you just happened to be there, they would pay you €400 a day or €200 a day if you took it out of the harbour if they didn’t want it while they shot scenes. One guy got paid €1000 for opening and closing his boat shutters twice!


We walked up to the pharmacy – cos it’s been very hot today, and the bites all over my abdomen that I got 5 days ago have got really nasty. Thought it was mosquito bites but it didnt make sense as they have flared up and have started to spread in diameter and are hot and itchy all the time- showed them to our tour director Matija and he recognised them straight away as spider bites….then it made sense why they are getting worse not better. I think it must have been inside my dress the 1st night onboard and got me good trying to get out - they look quite the picture. The pharmacist gave me some antihistamine cream as the antihistamine pills haven’t worked. Will have to see a doctor if they don’t get better because they are growing quite large.

                        






                            

                        


                 





                         


 


This is the bite on my shoulder, the abdomen ones were pretty yuck