The Cruise Line is Holland America, and the ship is the MS Eurodam with 11 decks, holds 2100 passengers, is 935 feet long, and can do around 24 knots.
Our itinerary is: fly from LAX to Barcelona transferring directly to the ship; cruise to several Spanish ports along the Mediterranean (Valencia and Cartagena), sail through the Straights of Gibraltar (with a stop in Gibraltar), around the Iberian Peninsula stopping at several ports in Spain (Cadiz and Vigo) as well as Lisbon, Portugal; traveling through the Bay of Biscayne to Portland, England; across the English Channel to Cherbourg, France; up to Brugge, Belgium, and then through the North Sea to our final destination Copenhagen, Denmark. We'll stay in Copenhagen two nights before flying back home. The cruise itself is 12 days long - total trip 16 days.
Can we handle a 12-day cruise (our longest yet)? Can we survive the flight over in economy class? Will we win the battle against 2000+ passengers for access to the breakfast buffet?..and my first day on board the ship, I discovered that our "Drink Package" which included 15 free drinks per person per day (including alcohol) is not like roll-over minutes - if you only consume 5 drinks one day, you cannot have 25 the next day. *SIGH*....A true test of our survival skills.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Day 1/2: April 25/26 - Traveling to Barcelona
Friday, May 15, 2015
Day 3: April 27 - Valencia, Spain
| View of Valencia Harbor | 
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Day 4: April 28 - Cartagena, Spain
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Day 5: April 29 - Gibraltar
 We pulled into Gibraltar just after noon.  We chose not to take any tours that involved exploring tunnels (which there are some 30 miles worth within the "rock"), encounters with viscous hat-stealing indigenous monkeys (of which there are over 300 roaming the rock), nor take any stairs or gondola rides to our death up the side of the hill.
We pulled into Gibraltar just after noon.  We chose not to take any tours that involved exploring tunnels (which there are some 30 miles worth within the "rock"), encounters with viscous hat-stealing indigenous monkeys (of which there are over 300 roaming the rock), nor take any stairs or gondola rides to our death up the side of the hill.Monday, May 11, 2015
Day 6: April 30 - Cadiz, Spain
| The Port of Cadiz, Spain | 
 The Tour included a stop at Tio Pepes - a Bodega, which is a manufacturer of Sherry (this being the Sherry capital of the world I suppose).  In the Tasting room, we discovered that neither one of us liked Sherry...but I did pick up some Brandy. (I was going to make the joke that neither one of us liked Sherry....but her sister Margaurite was rather nice...but decided not to lower myself to that level and destroy any credibility on the remaining portion of this blog).
The Tour included a stop at Tio Pepes - a Bodega, which is a manufacturer of Sherry (this being the Sherry capital of the world I suppose).  In the Tasting room, we discovered that neither one of us liked Sherry...but I did pick up some Brandy. (I was going to make the joke that neither one of us liked Sherry....but her sister Margaurite was rather nice...but decided not to lower myself to that level and destroy any credibility on the remaining portion of this blog).Sunday, May 10, 2015
Day 7: May 1 - Lisbon, Portugal
 We, on the other hand, ignored the Monastery and headed for an even more famous bakery - Pasteis de Belem (many people on the ship raved about this place).  Diane fought the crowd to pick up some small custard-filled pastry things supposedly made from a secret recipe dating back to 1837.  They were quite tasty, and well worth our own Pilgrimage.
We, on the other hand, ignored the Monastery and headed for an even more famous bakery - Pasteis de Belem (many people on the ship raved about this place).  Diane fought the crowd to pick up some small custard-filled pastry things supposedly made from a secret recipe dating back to 1837.  They were quite tasty, and well worth our own Pilgrimage.Saturday, May 9, 2015
Day 8: May 2 - Vigo, Spain
| Coming into Vigo Port | 

Vigo is in the part of Spain north of Portugal. We opted for a tour around the countryside hitting a few historical sites. We first stopped at a medieval Celtic Settlement on the Monte do Castro hill near the center of town.
Friday, May 8, 2015
Day 9: May 3 - Day at Sea
 After Vigo, we spent a day at sea, sailing through the Bay of Biscayne on our way to Portland, England.  Diane had a facial, and we a nice leisurely day on board.
After Vigo, we spent a day at sea, sailing through the Bay of Biscayne on our way to Portland, England.  Diane had a facial, and we a nice leisurely day on board.  | Backgammon on the aft deck | 
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| Our Dining Table | 
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Day 10: May 4 - Portland, England
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Day 11: May 5 - Cherbourg, France
 After Portland, England, we crossed the English Channel and arrived in Cherbourg, France early morning.  It was quite breezy, and cold...the weather was picking up.  We didn't have a scheduled tour in Cherbourg, so we caught a shuttle bus to downtown and took a nice horse carriage tour around town.
After Portland, England, we crossed the English Channel and arrived in Cherbourg, France early morning.  It was quite breezy, and cold...the weather was picking up.  We didn't have a scheduled tour in Cherbourg, so we caught a shuttle bus to downtown and took a nice horse carriage tour around town.  
Cherbourg was a rather large harbor city with significant traffic, rather new industrial buildings, and so many of those damned tourists. Since the city was situated on the Normandy beach area, it suffered from the WWII invasion, corresponding structural damage, and hence had rebuilt. Nevertheless, there were a few quaint narrow streets and french cafes.
We happen to be there just prior to the 70th anniversary of D-Day.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Day 12: May 6 - Brugge...Where for art thou?
 The weather worsened while in Cherbourg, so instead of leaving Tuesday afternoon for Belgium, the captain made the decision to remain in port overnight and wait for the weather to subside. There were reports of storms and tornados in northern Germany.
The weather worsened while in Cherbourg, so instead of leaving Tuesday afternoon for Belgium, the captain made the decision to remain in port overnight and wait for the weather to subside. There were reports of storms and tornados in northern Germany.So, instead of arriving in Brugge on Wednesday morning, we remained tethered to the port in Cherbourg. We remained in port pretty much the whole day 11, and finally left port around 7:00 m on Wednesday - more than 24 hours later tan planned.
Understandably, this caused us to skip the port of Brugge in Belgium (which we were very much looking forward to), and instead sail straight away for Copenhagen.
Monday, May 4, 2015
Day 13: May 7 - Day at Sea
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Day 14/15: May 8/9 - Copenhagen
Saturday was dark, cold, rainy, and windy. We took a nice double-decker bus tour around town which allowed us to hop & off. We “hopped off” and had lunch on the famous Nyhavn (New Harbor) canal despite the inclement weather. saw the historical Mermaid statue, the queen’s yacht, many great medieval structures, and the famous Tivoli Gardens (which is more an amusement park - like a smaller version of Knotts Berry Farm than gardens).
| An Old Elevator - It'll never Pass OSHA | 
| Double-Door Entry to the Hotel Room? | 
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| The Copenhagen Fire Dept as our Sunday morning wake up crew! | 
Saturday, May 2, 2015
Epilog
The Pros:
- We saw many great historical sites
- Visited foreign countries and cities for the first time
- Learned about Stonehenge and other ancient celtic and medieval ruins
- Met some interesting and fun people from all parts of the world
- Relaxed & had fun
- Played Team trivia with new friends (and won twice!)
- Ate way too much food
- We played our International Backgammon Tournament (which out of a total of 26 games played, I won only 8 of them…so that’s kind of a con)
- Perhaps the biggest Pro: Ability to see all of these sites without checking in and out of hotels, packing & unpacking, renting cars, and getting lost driving on foreign streets.
- Getting up at o’dark 30 to start or end a vacation is not our idea of a vacation!
- Fighting crowds of people at the Lido breakfast buffet and on and off buses and tour groups
- We must say that Holland America could have done a little better job with their communications, procedures, and services
- And it may be just Holland America (and we’re no spring chickens)…but there a lot of really old people on these cruises! We felt out of place at times.



 




















