Brief Health Update: Well I thought I was feeling better yesterday, but I still did not have any appetite. I am happy to report that today I am back to my old self devouring everything in sight!
Last night at our briefing they outlined the steps that were being taken to maximize sanitation due to the illness on board. Items included: deep cleaning and sanitation of rooms with housekeeping staff wearing PPE in rooms where people had reported being ill (which included ours), moving the cookies and pastries from the coffee bar station to the main lounge where staff serve them, serving of all food items previously that were self-serve from the buffet at breakfast, removing bread baskets from the table and having staff serve bread, removing salt and pepper shakers and having staff season your food for you, and (the worse) removing the bowl of hard candies from the front desk (although I'm sure they are still available if you ask for them). All common sense steps that eliminate "touch points" while not reducing the level of service. All much appreciated.
Now, on to today's activities:
Guess what? Another morning, a trip to the espresso machine to bring macchiatos back up to the room, and then out to our busses at 8:30 for our tour du jour. Looking our our window this morning we could see our busses lined up with our drivers waiting by each with the tour "lolipops". Joel, our driver, is the one on the left.
Today was only about a 20 minute ride to Lamego. We continue to be amazed by the beauty of the landscape with its tall, rolling hills and deep green valleys. Photographs do not do justice the the immensity of the beauty.
Today's major attraction was the Sanctuary of Nossa Senhora dos Remedios, a major stop on established pilgrimage routes that is one of the two most visited churches in Portugal. We started our day by climbing the 686 steps from the town to the church!
At each of the levels in the staircase there are works of tile art and fountains. It appears the tiles have been replicated and replaced as needed with time. We found one that was completed in 1954, and another that was dated 2024. And yet, they all looked as though they had been completed at the same time.
Reaching the halfway point we were beginning to wonder if we had bitten off more than we could endure. But, we persevered and made it to the top.
Construction of the current sanctuary was begun in 1750 and was not completed until 1905.
Over the alter is a controversial statute of the Virgin Mary breast feeding the baby Jesus. Every mother who sees the statue says "that is not how you hold a baby to feed it."
The walk back down was much easier and more relaxed than the walk up. (Walking up and back down was totally optional, the busses drove right up to the church.)
We then had some free time to explore the town. Being Sunday morning many of the shops were not yet open. The city has a medieval feel to it with the narrow, winding alleys between buildings.
The same beauty we enjoyed on the trip over was there to enjoy on the way back. (Although they usually follow the most scenic, out-of-the-way roads in taking you to places, and the most expedient but less picturesque -- i.e. highways -- to return to the ship).
The afternoon was a quiet day of sailing back down the Douro to Porto. We all met in the lounge for our disembarkation talk where they reviewed the process for getting off the ship on Tuesday (which for us will mean around 4 am as we have a 6 am flight to Frankfort). We went out on deck as we through more locks. This time the river was below us and it took a whole lot less time to empty the lock than it did to fill it when we were going the other direction.
Locals turned out to watch the ships sail through.
Sean, our resident musician was in the lounge playing both classical and popular music. It is pleasant listening to him play Debussy as we are floating down the river.
We then had a demonstration by the bar team of how to open a bottle of old, vintage port. Over time the cork breaks down. Rather than try to pull the cork from the bottle and have it break up and fall into the wine, they heat (with a special iron) and then cool (with ice water) the neck of the bottle so that it cleanly breaks off near the bottom of the cork. They then strain and decant the wine. We will return to the bar this evening to taste this 10 year old Dow Vintage Port once it has had a chance to settle and breathe.
We went down for dinner, checked in on the score of the OSU baseball game (tied 5-5 in the 9th), then headed back to the lounge for the evening's entertainment. It was a group of eight engineering students from the university who routinely sing for fun and money who call themselves TUNA. The student group has a 35 year history.
I turned around for just a minute, and when I looked back one of the students had taken Alice and was putting a black cape around her on the dance floor. (What we have learned is that every student in Portugal has a black suit, a black tie, and a cape).
Next thing I know, the group was serenading her and two other ladies as the student was dancing with her. (You think he would have asked my permission first????)
After just one dance, next thing I know he is down on one knee proposing to her!!!!! Things move really fast in Portugal.
They were a great group, very entertaining with four guitars, a percussionist, and an accordion player (accordions are big here). They had a dance line going around the room. They sang several serenades, and some much faster tunes. They had one member who would dance with two tambourines, able to jump and hit them on his two outstretched legs simultaneously. It was a true cultural experience (ask to see the video clips I took).
And now for the really bad news. We have to have our bags packed and out at 2:45 am Tuesday morning for our departure to the airport at 3:30 am. In Oregon time that is like getting up at 7 pm Monday night and getting home to Newberg at 11 pm, 28 hours in transit. Pray for us that we are able to make it through.
Boa noite.
Sunday Dinner: Gambas al Ajillo (sautéed prawns in wine), Chateaubriand Béarnaise, Moelleux au Chocolat (chocolate lava cake). Wine: Lagoaiva Tinto Castelao & Touriga, Portugal
Daily Step Count: 7,884 steps of which the first 4,013 were before 10 am climbing the equivalent of 36 floors up the steps of the church