Tuesday, October 03, 2006

After making weekly runs from Vancouver, BC to Alaska's Inside Passage, we have started heading down to the Caribbean! We docked in Astoria, OR last Sunday where my dad and my friends Troy and Brian met up with me (photos to follow). Today I'm in San Francisco, CA. Here are the other ports I will stop in on the way to Ft. Lauderdale, FL: Cabo San Lucas, Mexico; Puerto Vallarta, Mexico; Acapulco, Mexico; Santa Cruz Huatulco, Mexico; San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua; Punta Arenas, Costa Rica; scenic crusing in the Panama Canal; Cartagena, Columbia; Ocho Rios, Jamaica; Half Moon Cay, Bahamas. Will dock in Ft. Lauderdale on Oct. 21, and then make weekly runs in the Caribbean. Will update you on those ports-of-call then. Will send new photos soon too!

-J.
Eric and I at a party onboard the ship.



Eric and I on a hike to a waterfall just outside Skagway, AK. Posted by Picasa
Glacier Bay Nat'l Park & Preserve, Alaska



The following twenty or so photos are taken onboard the ship as we did scenic cruising through Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in Alaska's Inside Passage. Enjoy!

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay Posted by Picasa

Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve Posted by Picasa
Ketchikan, Alaska




Creek Street.

Eric and I in Ketchikan, AK. In the background is "Creek Street," the town's former red-light district. It now houses shops and museums.



This is downtown Ketchikan. Ketchikan is Alaska's fifth-most populous city, with 8,000 residents. It was also certified as the "Fourth Wettest Spot on Earth," with nearly 170-200 inches of rain annually.