I took these photos from the refurbished Princes Pier.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
Thursday, 7 November 2013
Melbourne Cup - November 2013
Each year P&O Australia sends one or two of its ships from Sydney to Melbourne for the Melbourne Cup horse race. Usually the ships sail from Sydney on the preceding Saturday afternoon, arrive in Melbourne on Monday morning, sail Wednesday afternoon and arrive back in Sydney on Friday morning. This year the visiting ships were Pacific Pearl and Pacific Jewel. I took these photos when they both sailed on Wednesday 6th November.
(L-R) Pacific Jewel at Outer East Station Pier and Pacific Pearl at Outer West. |
Pacific Pearl underway. |
Having attended Pacific Pearl, tug Keera next attended Pacific Jewel. |
Pacific Jewel letting go. |
Pacific Jewel's Captain and Port Phillip Sea Pilot on the bridge. |
Unfortunately a passenger was taken seriously ill during the sailing so the ship had to reberth, at Outer West, to land that passenger. |
Monday, 14 October 2013
Dawn Princess – Venice to Sydney August 2013 – Post 14 (final)
Port Klang, Malaysia 30/9
Sydney 11/10
After a call at Darwin on 5/10, this wonderful voyage ended at White Bay Cruise Terminal, Sydney on 11/10.
Some friends aboard the ship.
Flags at the cruise terminal look like they're sagging in the heat. |
Tugs leaving the ship after departure. |
Port Klang has become one of the busiest container ports in the world. |
Sydney 11/10
After a call at Darwin on 5/10, this wonderful voyage ended at White Bay Cruise Terminal, Sydney on 11/10.
Last breakfast on the voyage. |
Head waiter Nathan. |
My waiters Caroline and Richard. |
Caroline and I Ketut. |
Barman and lounge waiter Sachin and Soccoro. |
Bar waiter Sassy. |
Keith and Geoff. |
Leslie, Stefanie and Jules |
Mick and Graeme. |
Phil and Jules. |
Richard and Wendy. |
Sheree in a thoughtful moment. |
Deep philosophical discussions with Arnold, Mick and Graeme. |
Dawn Princess – Venice to Sydney August 2013 – Post 13
Colombo 26/9
Another interesting port,
Colombo looked quite beautiful in parts and I would enjoy more time here. I had
a buffet lunch ashore at the Cinnamon Grand Hotel with shipboard friends,
Stephanie and Graeme. It was a magnificent buffet with many beautiful Sri
Lankan curry dishes as well as Thai dishes, a carvery, desserts (including a
crepe station) and cheeses. The price – only AUD$18 per head. Even the imported
wines were reasonably priced (by Australian pricing) for a five star hotel.
Before lunch we crammed into
a tuk-tuk to take us to a shopping centre but the driver ran out of petrol on
the way there and had to lead us on foot for the last several hundred metres. After
he returned to the shopping centre to pick us up, he either ran out of petrol
again or his machine was suffering from vapour-locks. Either way, we again had
to walk the last part to our destination. We paid him the agreed amount anyway
– he wasn’t having a good day.
The Colombo pilot launch approaching at sunrise. |
The pilot boarding. |
The harbour entrance. |
Backing up to the berth. |
Other shipping in Colombo harbour. |
On the road in the tuk-tuk. |
Tipping it up to drain the last drops of petrol into the engine. |
Shipmates Stephanie and Graeme at the Cinnamon Grand Hotel. We previously sailed together on an Asian cruise aboard Sun Princess in 2011. |
The mutton curry, especially, was delicious. |
Not how I’d choose to go to sea. Imagine being aboard this in very heavy weather! |
Dawn Princess – Venice to Sydney August 2013 – Post 12
Mumbai 23/9
This was an interesting stop,
though four hours ashore was enough for me. Having not been to India since 1985
(Calcutta aboard mv Baron Murray) I had almost forgotten just how grimy Indian cities
are. Of course, the appalling poverty is unforgettable. I hired a taxi to drive
me around and wait for me while I had an excellent lunch at Khyber, an upmarket
Indian restaurant recommended to me by one of the Indian stewards on the ship.
The restaurant was moderately expensive by Australian prices and therefore
outrageously expensive by Indian prices but I’d rather pay over the odds in the
hope of reducing my chances of getting a dose of “Delhi belly” – fortunately I
didn’t.
Berthing at Mumbai. |
The infrastructure here, while presumably functioning, seems so shabby. |
A car carrier berthing behind us. |
This aircraft carrier, the same design as the old HMAS Melbourne, is now a museum ship. |
The incredibly chaotic Mumbai traffic. |
One of the old colonial buildings still standing here. |
The Taj Mahal Palace hotel. |
The Gateway to India monument. |
Lunch at the Khyber restaurant. |
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