I'm writing this on the first sea day of the final cruise of this 23 day stint away. Because I have done the back end of one cruise and the front end of another on both ships, I have essentially seen 4 lots of audiences in the time I've been away and today as I sit writing this on a sun lounger on deck during the first of two consecutive sea days I possess that ever elusive gift of anonymity as I have yet to perform for this set of passengers and currently they just think I am some sad 30 something on holiday on her own. I love people watching and will often choose the perch that allows me the best view of the specimens around me.I love to create back stories for them and imagine what they're talking about to each other. Occasionally you do catch glimpses of what they're saying, then I feel guilty for earwigging. It's breezy today but lovely and warm and the sun deck is bursting with colour and life. The pool looks like American Soup, filled with bodies bobbing around, meeting new people, sharing their travelling stories and cruise tales of yore. Today would be a perfect day for me to wear aforementioned bikini as nobody knows me and therefore probably wouldn't judge me. However as we all know, brown is the new skinny so I'm working currently on this optical illusion and might try it again in a few days.
My journey to join this gorgeous vessel in Puerto Limon Costa Rica was as per usual an eventful one. After spending three nights in Miami between the two cruises, having meetings with cruise lines and agents accompanied by my own representation from the UK, Alan Frazer who had flown in especially for that purpose, I headed to the airport at 3.30am on the 26th of January, earlier than even the hotel shuttle buses were prepared to wake. So again, I'm in ANOTHER taxi off to Miami airport to fly to Colon Panama to join the ship. It's a really big airport with many drop off points and my driver graciously asks which airline I am flying with so he can deliver me as close as possible to my relevant check in area. I looked at my paperwork to discover I was flying with Avianca, an airline I was not at all familiar with. I checked the details again and told him the abbreviations of the two airports I would be visiting enroute to my final destination onboard. 'Ah, you're off to San Salvador and San Jose... I'm from San Jose! " my driver chirped excitedly.
"You're from Panama?" I added nonchalantly.
"No no, San Jose is in Costa Rica. You're going to El Salvador and then Costa Rica"
To be completely honest I was so tired from my epic few days in Florida and my ungodly alarm call that I didn't really react to the news that this morning I had packed up my belongings and headed wearily for the hotel reception to check out under the complete assumption I was headed to Panama. Now not only did I have the country of destination completely wrong but I was popping to another Latin American destination enroute just for good measure. It wasn't until I had slept the majority of the first flight away and I was trying to ask for a toilet in the airport in El Salvador that it struck me that I Could be heading in completely the wrong direction. By nature I am a worrier and a few years ago I'd have gone into complete moronic breakdown in the terminal at the prospect of being stranded in Costa Rica. Instead I steadied myself with the knowledge that I had probably just read the itinerary wrong online, that I have a credit card for emergencies and that to date I have never been stranded anywhere without assistance from someone and that I should probably just board the plane to San Jose. (After I'd discovered that "Lavados" does not at all mean toilet in El Salvador and I had enacted a little "bursting for a wee" dance for the bemused lady in the perfume shop)
Me and my international bladder issues.
I arrived tired but painlessly in Costa Rica, and was veritably ecstatic to see my battered up purple suitcase (hereafter to be referred to as Murna...( I don't know I just think it suits her) bobbing along the carousel having made the one hour connection in San Salvador between flights. After wrestling with the handle for five minutes (Murna is a stubborn ol mule) we headed through immigration to search for the little white board with my name on and therefore my... You guessed it.. Taxi to the ship. A warm-eyed gentleman smiled at me beneath his curly mop of hair as he beckoned me to hand him control of Murna as we headed to find the car.
"hello... My name is Victor" he said. Honestly, you can't make this stuff up. For those of you who have rad my previous account, you'll know victor was the monicker of my previous aide through Guatemala. Well, at least I'm in for some fun I thought.
I asked him "How long is the transfer to the port Victor?"
"Three hours maam" he replied.
"You're joking though right?" I giggled
"No no maam three hours. We are on the pacific coast here. The ship is on the Atlantic coast."
My heart sank. I'd had my mind set on an afternoon in bed after a leisurely breakfast onboard and maybe a spot of sunbathing at sail away. I hurriedly asked Victor to excuse me as I ran to the nearest small store in the arrivals hall to stock up for my epic voyage, surprised to discover the shop didn't sell bottled water. I bought a few other drinks and ran expediently back to the waiting mini bus and a smiling victor. I offered him a bottle of my pop and he smiled gratefully back at me from the front seat of this vehicle that coughed and spluttered so demonstrably I doubted he'd make it out of the car park let alone coast to coast.
Needless to say the journey wasn't the most comfortable. The suspension on the van tested to its limits by the winding and undulating roads of the countryside, both beautiful and painful in equal measure.
The trip was made somewhat more palatable by the company of 'Costas' the Greek staff engineer who was heading to join the ship with me. He was a thoroughly nice bloke and we whiled the hours away chatting and grimacing together at the effect the potholes were having on our bottoms!
Se tried several gas stations and cafes enroute to buy a bottle of water but again no water only fizzy sodas. Odd really .
I reached the ship in one piece andthough fatigued thoroughly jubilant to see the beautiful Celebrity Equinox waiting for me there in Puerto Limon. I thanked Victor mark II and dragged Murna aboard. I was assigned the same cabin I had resided in before Christmas on a previous trip here so I already knew my lovely stateroom attendants, Joanna from the phillipines and Vikas from Goa. Joanna is awesome. She always manages to get me extra goodies, slippers and pears and the light waffle dressing gowns she knows I like. I never have to ask her, she just knows.
So I settled in for what proved to be a lovely and successful cruise. I met some other fabulous and talented entertainers who invited me to dine and socialise with them which is always good when you're travelling on your own.
As I write this I am well aware from my sky news obsession that the weather in the uk at the moment has been less than fortuitous recently and my heart goes out to the residents of the Somerset levels as once again they are flooded. It makes me all the more conscious of the fact I'm being paid to sit in the sunshine today and furthermore aware how in danger I am at appearing to gloat about my ever increasing suntan. Please don't misconstrue me, I never have and never will for one moment take for granted a single iota of the fortune bestowed upon me as a result of my career path. But after a brief conversation with my husband on FaceTime earlier, who is currently in Thailand attempting to qualify for the Asian tour (follow his progress as of Wednesday 5th Feb on www.asaintour.com) and a lovely couple of text messages from my best friends from home, indeed from school, Julie and Tammy, I am acutely aware how on my own I feel today. To an extent it's good not to be recognised just yet by the passengers. It means I haven't had to bother with a full face of makeup yet or the understandable regularly occurring questions you get once they know who you are. But today I feel more alert to the fact that I haven't seen steve or my parents for over two weeks now and though seeing my agent in Miami was a nice taster of home, I'm a 12 hour time difference from Steve now and at sea the Internet is both slow and expensive. Thank god for it.. But inevitably there's a delay.
Today however I started to cement my plans for my time off at home. The one benefit of steve not being there when I get back is undoubtedly the seldom opportunity I'm going to get to zip about and catch up with friends scattered all over the country. I'm beyond excited for the night out in Accrington we have planned for my return, with my oldest friends I don't see as often as I'd like and the even rarer chance we're going to get to have a drink together. Children, family lives, holidays, schedules, occupations all stand in the way of us regularly meeting but when we do its like we're 17 again trying to con our way into nightclubs we're too young to be in and laughing heartily at the crazy antics we'd get up to in our younger carefree days. I cannot wait.
And finally... I have moved cabins. And though I'll miss Vikas and his constant need to stroke my arms, I was more than delighted to be introduced to my new stateroom attendant yesterday. He knocked on my door to introduce himself to me. "Hi my names jayne nice to meet you" I said
"Hi jayne my names Princey. But you can call me Prince"
Awesome.
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