Kay came down with the CRUD on the next to last day of the cruise, but she never complains, and made the drive home from New Orleans, via Benton, coughing almost the whole way. Our weather is pretty funky at home this spring, and as evidence a 6-inch snow fell at our house while we were cruising, but it had almost all melted by the time we arrived home. During the week, Kay was in recovery mode, but is a quick healer.
She was called for jury duty on Tuesday for a murder trial, but enough jurors were seated such that she didn’t have to report. We had decent weather part of the week, and I worked outdoors a couple of days, burning some brush piles and killing weeds. We discovered a leak in the driver’s side window in the motorhome during recent rains, and I undertook a major repair after calling our Winnebago dealer in Forest City, Iowa, for instructions as to how to remove molding separating the window from the windshield. On Saturday, we drove to Memphis and spent a few hours with Jenny, Brian, and Harper Ann. She has grown a bunch and is very mobile. We go to Costco while we’re in Memphis, and Saturday was no exception. Harper Ann got all dressed in warm and snuggly clothes, and accompanied us to the store. She loves shopping, so the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree; she’s like her mother in that respect.
On the drive back from Memphis, we stopped at Sam’s Club in Jonesboro and picked up a couple of 6-volt batteries for friend and neighbor Wayne who has installed a large solar system on their motorhome.
After the formal dinner, I changed into more casual attire—shorts and island shirt—and we enjoyed an evening of watching ballroom style dancing and music, “Ballroom Fever”. The show was very well choreographed. All the dancers were good, but the featured dancers, Olga and Dmitry, a Russian couple, were really good.
Today’s port of call, the last one of the cruise, is Falmouth, Jamaica. The small island of Jamaica lies due south of Cuba. Falmouth, located on the north coast, was once a major sugar and rum port in the 18th and 19th centuries—dependent largely on slave trade. This once wealthy Jamaican city was marked by Georgian-style “Great Houses” which remain intact today.
We arrived on the western side of the island of San Miguel de Cozumel about
The entertainment
A long dinner resulted in our being late for entertainment—World champions in Sports Acrobatics Duo Claudio (acrobatics similar to Cirque) and comedian Carl Banks.
On this trip we’re cruising out of New Orleans (our port of departure) to Cozumel, Grand Cayman, and Jamaica (our ports of call), via Royal Caribbean’s Navigator of the Seas.