The breakfast buffet is good, but sometimes has a darker side. This morning I saw them refilling the scrambled egg pitchers at the omelet station from a cardboard box that said "Family Style Frozen Egg Food Product". Yummy. It also features sausage, ham, and bacon under a sign that says "Various Meat Pieces". Isn't that just mouth watering?
Every ship I've ever been on has a display of statues, trophies, plaques, etc., presented to the ship on it's first call in any port. For lack of anything better to do I read some of them today. My favorite, from a Mexican beach town, said "We welcome the S.S. Humungous, and wich you far winds and smoth sees" (sic).
One benefit of cruising with Mrs. Grumpy is that she speaks Tagalog, which is the language of the Philippines. You may not see any benefit to this, but it gives us an odd, at times lurid, look into the crew's lives. The majority of the housekeeping, meal serving, and cooking staff are from Indonesia or the Philippines, and use Tagalog to talk to each other. They assume most passengers don’t understand it. So often the bar staff will chatter while they prepare our Diet Cokes, and afterwards Mrs. Grumpy will tell me that they were discussing who passed out drunk at last night's crew party, or which of our waitstaff wears a thong, or what an ass they think I am (she says the last is the most common topic). At one point 2 waitresses and a cook were in an elevator with us, and after we stepped off at our floor she told me they were discussing their sexual threesome of the night before. Of course, for all I know Mrs. Grumpy is just making this crap up, but it's still entertaining.
The lunch buffet usually has a few bowls of cookies, and some really awesome desserts like "Extra Huge Slab of Chocolate" or "Whip Cream Crumb Streudel Cake". These are closely guarded by the ship's Dessert Nazis, highly trained, no-nonsense servers armed with BIG SHARP KNIVES, whose job is to carefully serve one piece of dessert at a time. If they think you may try to take so much as a crumb without asking them to do it for you, you will lose fingers (though you can get them back later from the sushi bar, if you don’t mind soy sauce and ginger on them).
What's funny is that a few feet away is an unguarded tray of "Mango Diet Cake" which nobody touches. In fact, it looks about the same each day, and I think at night they just dye (or paint) it a different color. So one day it's orange "Pumpkin Diet Cake", and the next day it's green "Asparagus Diet Cake". It's possible they've been using the same tray since the ship was launched. For all I know they're really wood blocks.
Craig lost a tooth today. It fell out while he was getting his face painted to look like a pirate, and the missing tooth only enhanced things. Amazing how fast he learned to suck ice cream through the gap. So now the tooth fairy has to visit the S.S. Humungous, a service not provided by Cruiseship Lines.
Due to my remarkable talent at trivia (we all have our skills, mine are just pointless) I won Mrs. Grumpy and I dinner in the ship's super-deluxe restaurant, which they charge extra for. For the life of me I can't figure out why some suckers pay extra to eat there, considering it has the same food as the rest of the ship, maybe just somewhat better service, and you've already paid for food with your fare. But since I won it for free, we went.
The brochure said it featured "spectacular ocean views", which it did. However, a walkway surrounded the restaurant, so your view was occasionally interrupted by someone going by. This was no biggie until a monstrously obese guy wearing a thong spandex mens bikini decided to stop outside our window and press his nose against the glass to see what people inside were eating. He blotted out the sun to the extent that other diners thought it was an eclipse and lit candles. He was shortly joined by his equally svelte wife, also in spandex gear.
I was trying to decide if I should rap on the glass to make him leave when they wandered off on their own. With the darkness lifted our waiter came over to refill our waters, and softly said he hoped we'd enjoyed the unscheduled whale sightings.
Our dinner also included entertainment provided by an older couple across from us, who ordered crab legs. To our astonishment Mrs. Elderly ACTUALLY ATE THEM WHOLE, biting off big chunks of crab meat AND shell, crunching it up, and swallowing. Her husband was using the shell-crackers, but not Grandma. The waiters and other diners were also watching, and after she finished I thought we should give her a round of applause, or dentures, or something.
There was a comedy show tonight. At one point the comedian asked "Anyone here from Tennessee?" and the family in front of us all cheered. So he asked them what part, and the mother yelled "Georgia!".
The comedian was so lucky. You can't script that kind of stupidity.
19 comments:
Man I am sure glad that I'm not grandma. She is gonna be regretting when those shells pass through. She very well may hunt you down to look at her anal lacerations. Love your blog and have been checking in several times a day for a good laugh. You always have the best blog fodder. Keep up the good work and enjoy your trip. Make sure to tell grandma if she comes after you that you are neuro and unless her head is up there you cannot help her.
Sicko
I really enjoy your blog, but I just wanted to note that it's dessert, not desert. I always think.. Since dessert is better than a desert it gets an extra s. Stupid trick but it works.
Thank you, Laura. I changed it. Don't know how I missed that.
I used to be on my high school newspaper, and when I make a spelling mistake it drives me nuts.
Do they offer diet coke at breakfast? Glad you're having a good vacation!
Yes, it's available 24/7, though you have to walk to the bar to get it. Fortunately, bars are everywhere. And I need the exercise.
What in God's name made you decide to go on a cruise?
Bad, excessively caloric food. Tempting casino as a source of wallet contents drainage. No excercise. All on top of the continuous meclizine-requiring nausea! Copassengers who think Georgia is in Tennessee and who probably are exploding out of their granny-style bathingsuits. Fun, fun, fun!
ERP-
We love Cruiseship Lines. They are the only line that includes Kids Camp every day (most just do it on port days, and charge extra if you want it while at sea).
The kids love it.
Mrs. Grumpy and I get a vacation, too, because we don't have to watch and entertain the kids all day.
And because we can all use some unhealthy living here and there.
I'm glad the cruise has diet coke 24/7.Random fact- my undergrad school had a contract with pepsi to only serve their products and I wasn't aware until I had already enrolled. I'm always worried that will happen to me on a cruise vacation or something. Can't be without it!
Mrs. Grumpy is awesome! She is probably not making it up. We followed some Norwegian foreign exchange students around Wal-Mart, while they discussed the large breasts of the college girls. My husband was raised in Norway as a child and is fairly fluent still.
at the end of the cruise, does Mrs Grumpy say something in tagalog to the crew, and watch their reaction? that would be fun.
Oooh, that's a GREAT idea! I'll have to ask her to do that on the last morning.
What in God's name made you decide to go on a cruise?
I anticipated your answer, Dr. Grumpy- although my wife and I never did that.
It is rumored that there is a cruise line where you can actually check your kids in at boarding and not have to retrieve them until the end of the cruise.
Happy hunting, although it would make for less interesting blog posts if you were to do so.
Kids are the good stuff in life. The rest is just space and time.
I can see the nausea suffering for the kids I guess. I plan to do that in Disney World (ONCE only though) when my son is old enough to enjoy it. Otherwise, I will remain an armchair sailor...
These ships are so damn big the rocking isn't that noticeable. None of us had any problems, and didn't even need to touch the Meclizine or Scopace we'd brought.
I have been on two cruise ships (pretty big ones) in the Carribean and both times I was ready to turn my cookies - I think it is the sudden slow rock when you are walking down a hall and not expecting it. I did not have as much trouble up on deck looking at the horizon.
That Mango Diet Cake sounds suspiciously like the recycled goulash served 5 consecutive nights in my undergrad firm cafeteria.
Well, because you brought it up with Laura at the top of the comments section, here's another quick misspelling: "Every ship I've ever been on has a display of statues, trophies, plaques, etc., presented to the ship on it's first call in any port."
In this case, it's "its." As a school newspaper writer, I'm sure you know the difference and I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. I'll assume you were writing this by the ship's pool and got a piece of bikini in your eye.
Sorry. Must have been typing too fast. Althought the quotation mark thing is a pet peeve of my mine, because to me it seems to make more sense to have them outside the quotes.
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