Viking Sky at the dock in Stavanger. All photos by Corey Sandler
The Three Swords monument at the site of the Battle of Hafrsfjord in 872, a naval battle that led to the first unification of Norway.
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2019. All rights reserved. All contents copyright Corey Sandler and Word Association; this website is not produced or endorsed by Viking Cruises.
Welcome aboard. I am happy to share some of my photographs taken aboard Viking Sky on our journey from London’s cruise port at Tilbury to near the top of Norway in Search of the Northern Lights.
Viking Sky in Bergen
The photos presented on the following blog entries are low-resolution and small size. Please contact me if you would like to obtain higher-resolution versions.
Welcome aboard. I am happy to share some of my photographs taken aboard Viking Sky on our journey from Miami to the Panama Canal and back.
Viking Sky at anchor off Key West, Florida
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved. All contents copyright Corey Sandler and Word Association; this website is not produced or endorsed by Viking Cruises.
MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 2018: Key West, Florida
A bird’s eye view of a Viking Sky tenderAn ancient lock on a shipwrecker’s warehouse in Key WestInstituto San Carlos, the headquarters of the post-Independence, pre-Castro Cuban community in Key WestThe files of the former Consulate of the Republic of Cuba in Key West
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved.
Altun Ha, first built about 900 B.C.E.The ruins of the ceremonial site were only rediscovered in the 1960sAltun Ha near Belize City. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of cities and ceremonial sites of the Mayans and other ancient peoples in Central America and most are still covered by earth and hidden within forest. Archaeologists say they are probably safer that way, since there is not enough money to protect and preserve them all once they are uncovered.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 2018: Carambola Gardens at Coxen Hole on Roatan Island, Honduras
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved.
Emerging from the shadows of the forestA tiny hummingbird flits into view
SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 2018: Along the Tortuguero near Puerto Limón, Costa Rica
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved.
A two-toed sloth, just hanging aroundA common basilisk hidden in the green forest. The creature is better known as the Jesus Christ Lizard because of its ability to run across water when necessaryShadows in the waterA blue heron observed us from the shore
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved. All contents copyright Corey Sandler and Word Association; this website is not produced or endorsed by Viking Cruises.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 2018: Colón to Panama City on the Panama Canal Railway
We arrived early this morning at Colón, Panama on the Atlantic Ocean and spent the afternoon in Panama City on the Pacific. Although I have made the transit of the isthmus more times than I can remember, this was the first time I did so by rail.
The Panama Canal Railway was begun in 1850 and completed in 1855 as the first mass transit across the isthmus of Panama, replacing the very difficult trails through the jungle. And then the railway became an essential part of the construction of the Panama Canal itself, when work was begun first by the French in 1881 and then redone and completed by the Americans in 1914
The American effort required the rebuilding and relocating of some of the track because the American design was based on damming the Chagres River and creating a manmade lake as the means of transit between the seas. The track today includes some of its 1850 route and some of the 1914 relocated path which parallels the Panama Canal.
Today the railway serves mostly as a “dry canal”, carrying freight from the Atlantic to the Pacific in containers mounted on flatbed train cars, but it also runs a few passenger trips for tourists each day.
A modern diesel-electric locomotive powers the Panama Canal Railway today on a 48-mile crossing from the Atlantic to the PacificContainers and flatbed railcars, part of the “dry canal”The railway track parallels the canal, here crossing on a trestle over the Chagres River which is the source of the water for Gatun Lake and the engine for the operation of the locksAt Gamboa, near the midway point of the canal, stands “Titan”, one of the largest floating cranes in the world. It was built in Nazi Germany in 1941 to service U-boats in Kiel. After the war it was seized by the U.S. as war reparations and brought across the Atlantic and through the Panama Canal to Long Beach, California where it served for nearly 50 years at the shipyard there. (Its local nickname was “Herman the German.”) In 1996 it was moved once again, this time to Gamboa where it is used in the maintenance of the locks of the original canalAn old piece of railroad equipment on a siding near the train terminus at Balboa on the Pacific sideModern Panama City as seen through a thicket of pleasure boats at the Pacific end of the canal
MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 2018: Partial Transit of the Panama Canal
We arrived early this morning at the Gatun Locks of the Panama Canal and then rose up three locks to Gatun Lake, which today was at its maximum level of 86.7 feet above sea level.
Once we reached the lake, we made a U-turn and then made our way back down to the Atlantic Ocean. In modern cruising language, this is known as a “partial transit”, which sounds like an oxymoron to me.
I have been through the Panama Canal more times than I can remember, and it is always a thrill. I spent the day up on the navigational bridge offering commentary about our partial transit. Call it an up and down excursion…
The view from the navigational bridge as Viking Sky climbed the stairs at GatunOne of the electric locomotives, or “mules” of the Panama Canal. The mules (the name is derived from the original means of moving barges along the Erie Canal in upstate New York) do not pull the ship; instead their function is to keep a ship centered in the lock chamberIn the early morning, we passed below the nearly completed bridge at the Atlantic end of the canal
All photos by Corey Sandler, 2018. All rights reserved. All contents copyright Corey Sandler and Word Association; this website is not produced or endorsed by Viking Cruises.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 2018: Cartagena, Colombia
Cartagena in Colombia is one of the best preserved old Spanish colonial cities in the new world.
We had a lovely day in Cartagena, although we were not alone: four cruise ships in port, thousands of tourists in the streets, and painful traffic jams.
The best time to visit: after hours, when the vendors and the selfie-sticks have gone home.
The old city of CartagenaThe dome of San Pedro Claver Church in Cartagena. Claver was known as the “slave of the slaves”, begging in the streets to help the poor Africans brought by the tens of thousands to ColombiaA golden display of indigenous artA work by Colombian artist Fernando Botero, champion of a style known as “Boterismo.” He obviously thinks large.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 2018: Nassau, Bahamas
So, we weren’t supposed to be here in Nassau, Bahamas this morning. But a combination of bad weather and other factors in the Western Caribbean caused us to cancel calls scheduled for Montego Bay, Jamaica and then George Town on Grand Cayman Island.
We sailed two days eastward along the south side of Cuba and then turned north toward Nassau for a final port of call.
Nassau is an interesting place, mostly because of its history as a British colony somewhat similar to Bermuda and the Turks and Caicos. It was a place of plantations (and therefore slaves), and its success drew in pirates and privateers and attacks by the Spanish who contested some of the same waters.
Today, the English are still here with a Royal Governor and the police force look more like British Bobbies than the ones in London. The Spanish and the pirates are gone, and in their place hordes of tourists. Many of them arrive by cruise ship at the huge port which can accommodate five and sometimes more large ships.
One of our favorite places to visit is Christ Church Cathedral, an Anglican/Episcopal church at the corner of King and George streets. The structure is handsome, with the current building dating from 1841 on a base that dates back to the mid-1600s.
But it is the collection of plaques and other remembrances that line the walls of the church that fascinate. Any one of them could generate a novel, or at least a lecture for me.
Small, medium, and large at the dock in Nassau. Viking Sky sits between the luxurious private yacht Turquoise and the huge and loud Disney Dream
A Viking long boat on the Viking Sky’s funnel catches the morning sun
Christ Church Cathedral in Nassau
A bit of old Nassau, hidden in plain sight
Echoes of Colonial Britain at the Governor General’s house on the hill