Do not read if you are hungry.
I listened to our collective conversation at dinner
last night. We talk to each other about
what we have ordered that night. Does my
maple braised salmon taste better or worse than Moiya’s chicken kiev or Dave’s
pepper steak. Wyona and Greg were
sharing a Slow Cooked Braised Beef Lasagne and a taste of that went around the
table to all. Then we begin about how
tonight’s meal compares to what we had the night before. We can remember what everyone was eating 3
days ago, and how that compares to today.
Since we had eaten lunch together as well, we talked
about the relative merits of the noontime cherry cloufoise as opposed to the
dessert in the evening called ‘Paris Meets New York’. I wish I could say that is all, but our comparisons
have to go through all four courses – the appetizers, the soups and salads, the
entrees and then the desserts.
Wyona studied the menu, then ordered her meal one day,
only to find she had been handed the menu from another day. Only a few days later another of our party
got the wrong menu, so it was slipped to Wyona so that she could repeat the
experience. “I don’t know how that keeps
happening,” said the young Phillipiino waiter, grabbing it from her and rushing
to correct his mistake.
Last night none of us knew about one menu item.
Wyona turned to our waiter. “Baby
Mizuna. That is my choice. What is it?”, Wyona asked, after he had
carefully described everything else on the menu.
“I am sorry to have to tell you we have had to remove
it from the menu. Mizuna is Japanese
spinach, and we have to replace it with regular spinach.”
“Oh no, I would never have a Baby Mizuna salad
replaced with regular spinach, I will have to choose something else,” she said
to him. She is so crazy.
After every meal, he asks how the service was. All of us say perfect. Wyona always says bad to him. This is what
perfect looks like: 9 utensils to start
every meal – 3 at each side of the plate and 3 above. More utensils are then brought, depending on
what one’s order is. On this point,
Wyona came back to me after trying to book a tour on another cruise ship, which
the cruise agent on the boat told her, is a cut above this boat, and that she
will never be happy travelling any other way again if she travels this other
line. One crew member to every two
guests. I told Wyona that the shock of
that would be too great. Going from
being the life-time crew member who serves 8 others, to the other end of the
spectrum where someone serves you and your husband? That shock would give a person a heart
attack. Better to cruise on the cheaper
lines and find eternal happiness on the ocean.
A few days previously we had lunch with an Australian
couple who had visited fellow cruisers in Portland -- their first time to America. Among their top five events there was a trip
to Costco.
“Yes, you can buy a hot dog and unlimited pop”, for
$1.50. And did they have poutine there?”
Wyona asked, continuing, “Why did I ask?
They probably only have poutine at Costco in Canada. Do try that when you come to visit us, but
don’t be disappointed in the size of our sundaes compared to theirs and then
with her hands they demonstrated the magnificent height of that American
delight.”
Yes, food – elegant on the Celebrity Soltice,
memorable at Costco.
As Moiya, Wyona and I were looking at a Special
Jewellery Event -- beads and a charm bracelet.
We continued our chat about Costco, about how when one of us goes there,
we can be sure the two others have been there the day before and bought exactly
the same item. At the same time Wyona
and I were ragging on Moiya. Margaret is
the one who pointed out first that we do this to each other, often. Margaret thought it was a little mean. The 3 of us collectively thought about why it
is seen by the 3 of us as an act of love about which we take no umbrance and
which the one being poked at takes the defense of being aloof to what the other
two are saying. Unless of course we
burst out laughing. Wyona and I didn’t
even know we were poking at Moiya, but since we were alone in the shop with
only the clerk we mocked for a long time and chattered until the clerk finally
said to Moiya, “You are taking the brunt of the conversation today.”
Wyona turned to the clerk. “Where are you from?”
“Canada,” she
said. “I know you are from Canada too,
for I heard the three of you talk about Costco.
It was making me lonely for one of their large muffins.”
Hard to believe that someone on a cruise ship with
food always within an arms reach, could be lonely for a Costco Muffin.
It is morning now. “Going around the corner of Yeman
at 21 knots per hour”, says David, as he is waiting for Moiya to go to
breakfast with him and watching channel 5 that shows the front of the ship and
then a map of where we are.
“Go to the Sky View Lounge and check out the Captain’s
Club Lounge,” I said to her. “We have been on the ship for so many days. There is an exclusive breakfast event there
every morning and I can’t work going there into my busy schedule. You are on your way there. Check it out and tell me later what you think.”
“You can’t trick me,” said Moiya. “ That is so far out
of my way. Two floors up and then I have
to walk across the whole ship since we are in the back and that venue is in the
front? And then I could never report
back to you the lounge as you would have seen.
Nope. You check it out yourself.”
Guess I might miss ever seeing the Exclusive
Breakfast. I wish I could care about it, but I can’t. I would rather blog.
Arta
What a treat to read your note. I couldn't stop laughing. The dynamics reminded me of the trip I took to China but Dave Wood is in my place.
ReplyDeleteThe menu gag on Wyona must have been hard to pull off. She is usually on the planning committee for such fun. Has Margaret been with you all long enough to discover that being the aloof one under attack can be fun when really and truly you are agreeing with what is being said about you and you are laughing at the surprise of it being articulated?Try her out while your on the waters and she has no where to run to except for that captain's breakfast you want to hear about.