Destinations

Manyara National Park

After breakfast our group climbed back into our jeep and we set out to see the Lake Manyara National Park.  As we first entered the park there were trees filled with storks. Not just one or two storks but a dozen or more storks in each tree.  As with the previous day we not only saw the storks and baboons but we also saw two different types of monkeys where were trying to the stork nests for an easy meal of eggs.

The vervet black faced Monkeys are easily recognizable by their bright blue testicles.   Continue reading

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Lake Manyara

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I woke up early after a good night’s sleep and had a relaxing morning at the hotel.  The large hornbill birds outside woke me up at dawn.  It reminded me of when I worked a couple of projects in Hawaii and the birds announced the arrival of a new day.  I looked forward to hearing them every morning.

The Serena Mountain Village Hotel has vast gardens with plenty of plenty of tropical fauna and wildlife to explore.  I spent the morning sitting near the lodge looking at the various birds including the hornbill which looks like a black and white version of the toucan.

At different times, various members of the group joined me out front of the lodge where we began to get to know each other.  There were six of us, four of us were in IT, there was a retired attorney and we all found the safari through “Living Social” – an internet deal.

After we met our ranger/driver Jabshir.  We climbed into a jeep and headed out to Lake Manyara. Arusha was just a stopping point before heading deep into the Serengeti. Continue reading

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Arusha, Tanzania

IMG_4456“Jambo”, I kept hearing it over and over again and I thought somehow this was an African version of my name, but I couldn’t figure how they knew my name.  In my tired  jet lagged haze, it occurred to me – it means hello.  Remember the Lionel Richie song “All night long?”  We are going to have a party all not long…. …. Jambo Jambo

It wouldn’t be long until I had my second lesson in Swahili – Hakuna matata at least I knew what that means.

My father always wanted to go to Africa but somehow he never made it.  Taking time off of work, kids at school, bills to pay.  When he finally retired my mother didn’t like the idea of going overseas and then it was his turn to worry about upcoming medical tests along with pending treatments. He never made it to Africa. Continue reading

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Ukrainian Supermodels

IMG_4201August 21, 2011

I wrote about this earlier on in my trip and then decided to write a page on it.

I have to comment on a major cultural difference that I have noticed along the way.  Ukrainian women love to pose for photos looking outrageously sultry. They stand next to what they want to be pictured by and then strike a pose – hand on the hip, head tilted just a little, one foot pointed – smelling a flower, draped over a statue, caressing an animal – they all look like they are going for the pin-up look. In the 80’s, it was called vogue-ing and it was done on the dance floor.

I noticed when I travelled in Asian countries that the Asian cultures like to do “quirky” things in front of the camera – holding the sun/moon, jumping , have their hands on top of the pyramid – fun things.  In Yalta, this phenomena reached a new level.  There was a huge area where women could dress up in 18th Century Costumes to Hell’s Angels biker chicks (with motorcycles to sit on).  There were also doves, falcons, monkeys, rabbits, dogs and cats in what appeared to be the world’s largest outdoor photography studio.

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Odessa

IMG_4182August 21, 2011

We set out for a city tour when we arrived in Odessa. At the end of our pier were the Potemkin stairs – the official entrance to the city from the sea.  The designer of the stairs set out to create an optical illusion, looking down the stairs you only see the landings, looking up the steps you only see the stairs and not the landings.

As our bus drove around, parts of Odessa were very nice.  A nice walkway park along the top of the Potemkin steps that let you walk to the opera house and a few museums and parks.

This being a summer Sunday, people were out and about, enjoying the beautiful day.  Unfortunately, it made it difficult to get to and from the ship.

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Aloupka

IMG_4149August 20, 2011

The Aloupka Palace was the summer residence for Count Mikhail Vorontsov, who was Governor-General of the Novorossiisky Territory (Southern Russia).  It was designed by the same architect who designed the exterior of Buckingham Palace.

The palace was built-in 1828 and took 23 years to build.  Inside, the palace is Tudor style but the outside is a mix of various styles.

Churchill stayed at the Palace during the Yalta Conference.  He had an interesting relationship with Stalin and was forever playing with him.  When asked what he thought of the one room, Churchill said, “It is very nice but I think it would be better if there was an aquarium.”  The next day there was an aquarium in the room.  Churchill says, “Very nice, but now it just needs a lemon tree.”

At one point Churchill indicated that Yalta was very beautiful but it reminded him of a graveyard because of all the cypress trees.  Since the time of the Greeks, the cypress trees have represented mourning and grief.  Stalin had all the cypress trees cut down. Continue reading

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Livadia

IMG_4055August 19, 2011

After breakfast we headed out to the White Palace in Livadia.  It was the summer palace for the Romanovs’.  I personally cannot get enough of anything related to the Romanov saga, it is such a fascinating story with a tragic ending.
Nicholas II, the Tsar that didn’t want to be a Tsar.  He was very much in love with his wife.  His beautiful daughters and a single heir who had the bleeding disease.  The family enjoyed an extremely privileged life as the empire fell down around them.
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Yalta

IMG_3954August 19, 2011

Our ship sailed to Yalta.  I am glad I started in Kiev instead of ending it there, I feel like the destinations are getting better.  I had heard of a lot of Yalta’s history as a place for the Tsars to spend summers and as a place to treat Tuberculosis patients which Russia was a continual problem throughout Russian history.  After the Aristocracy fell, the Soviets sent model citizens who must have thought this was paradise. 

I pictured everything being Soviet Style but it isn’t.  Clearly there are Soviet Buildings but there are new buildings as well. This is already a tourist destination but will continue to grow, it already has that cheesy feeling that Oahu has and has the natural beauty with good weather and a dramatic backdrop to the Black Sea. Unfortunately, the beach is rocky and not sandy and only a few yards of it here and there and where there is “beach” it is very crowded.

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Vodka Tasting

IMG_3943August 18, 2011

If the day had not been good enough already, the day finished with a Vodka tasting. It started with the old folks tasting six Ukrainian Vodkas and it ended everyone singing Russian songs, which none of us understood.  For the record, I wasn’t singing.

What was the best Vodka?  I couldn’t make up my mind!

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Balaklava

IMG_3890August 18, 2011

Balaklava (it took me most the day to learn how to say this and not call it Baklava) is an area of Sevastopol that became famous for the Battle at Balaklava in the Crimean war and the suicidal Charge of the Light Brigade where the British, due to a misunderstanding were sent into a valley where the Russian held three sides of it.

I knew very little of the Crimean war and what I learned on the way to Balaklava was fascinating.  It is clear that throughout history, Sevastopol is a strategic port to be held.  Russia who was trying to take control of the Ottoman empire used the port as a base for the Black Sea Fleet.  France and England sent troupes to make sure that the Russians did not secure a route from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Continue reading

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