We ate our breakfast at 7:00 AM and were on the gangway leaving the ship by 8:10 to catch the Out to the Klondike Summit bus tour that began at 8:30.
As we were leaving we noticed that the water level was very low.
When we returned later in the day, the tide was high.
There's not much to say about that bus tour. It wasn't very long. We were back at the ship by 10:00AM. It was foggy so we couldn't see much. The ad promised lots of photo opportunities. We had two stops that were lackluster. The bus tour followed some of the White Pass Trail. Our tour guide, Pete did give us some interesting information about Skagway and tried his best to make the tour meaningful. We saw a valley where 3,000 horses were said to have perished during the gold rush.
We did enjoy seeing the fireweed... true.
After returning to the ship, it was still too early for lunch so we just grabbed another breakfast buffet. There are so many choices that it was easy enough to find something else to eat.
We walked out to Skagway, visited some shops and did the usual tourist type shopping. Our cruise book had an ad to visit certain shops to collect a FREE charm and coin. We were told it was a fun thing to do. The first shop was fine and we got our charm and coin. It's a chain of jewelry shops and it is definitely a tourist come-on. The second shop had an extremely annoying, obnoxious salesperson who insisted we had to try on a bunch of rings or jewelry of some sort. There was NOTHING in the cruise ad that said you had to try on jewelry at these shops. This was such a turn-off.
Once that was over, we walked to a river where Pete had said it was the end of the line for salmon after they had done their spawning. It was sad to see so many salmon coming to the end of their lives.
We could see the salmon coloring had changed to gray and white. Salmon at this stage are apparently not very good to eat for humans. Bears don't care.
We saw a lot of salmon who had already come to the end of their life cycle.
Here's another one of those "Killer" red squirrels.
Mom and Auntie Grace love their sweet wine so we surprised them with some sangria that we purchased during our walk through Skagway. It was a lot cheaper than the $30 bottle of wine we purchased for them during the first formal night in the dining room.
OK... here's some of delicacies that we enjoyed on this evening.
Herb and Sea Salt Marinated Seafood Antipasto, Creamy Lemon Emulsion
Nippy Peach Soup with Sparkling Prosecco
Baked Zucchini with Cheese and Onion Stuffing
Classic Veal Scaloppine in Marsala Sauce
Gamberi alla Fra Diavolo (Flambeed Scampi in Hot and Fiery Marinara Sauce, Pearl Rice)
Tiramisu
After dinner, mom and Auntie Grace loved seeing the Fiesta String Quartet from Ukraine perform.
All in all, an OK day. The food was the highlight.
Our regular server, Chris was from the Philippines. Our maitre d', Ricky was from the Caribbean. Another girl who also served us was Victoria from Hungary and the head waiter was Loida's husband, David (also from the Philippines). They REALLY worked hard to make our meals perfect and they always made our days end on a high note.


















beautiful photos, it is sad about the salmon, we have them come through our waters, they come to our waters to spawn and return to die,, its a smelly time.The food was very fancy for sure,, does your mum or auntie ever get tipsy,, the reason I ask is my great aunt loved sweet wine and several times got a little tipsy, she wasn't a drinker,, it was funny.Lovey trip you had.
ReplyDeleteAlaska looks a bit like 'the last frontier'.
ReplyDeleteweather can make such a difference, our worst weather in iceland was the last day when it rained all day but we took photos anyway of the fog...great looking and sounding food!
ReplyDeleteIt is such fun to "see" these places through your eyes, Kay. You do such a great job with your descriptions.
ReplyDeleteSorry it was foggy for your photo op! When my parents went to Alaska they were disappointed in all the foggy days they had. Sad about the salmon but I guess that is their circle of life.
ReplyDeleteI am still just amazed at all the food. How does anybody keep from gaining weight on these trips??
ReplyDeleteIt sounds as though the day was okay but nothing brilliant.
ReplyDeleteAh, I see you are a two-fisted drinker (lol, we know you're holding Art's glass). Sorry that you couldn't see much of the Skagway area's scenery on your tour... we had the same problem on our train ride & tour. I thought there were waaaay too many jewelry stores in Juneau & Skagway; I enjoyed shopping in Ketchikan much more. Your food pictures are wonderful, as usual. Nancy
ReplyDeleteSad to see the dead/dying salmon, but that is the cycle of life. Overall, it's been a fun trip, though, hasn't it? The food was beautifully presented, which is why I love fine dining. Better than Big City Diner in Hawaii. lol.
ReplyDeleteLaurie: Does mom and Auntie Grace ever get tipsy? Never! It's the most amazing thing. All their siblings can drink anybody under the table. Seriously! Not me though. And not Art!
ReplyDeleteYou're right, Skagway isn't much of a town, although a shot down the middle of the street is nice. I've been there twice. The first time with friends, and we rode the White Pass & Yukon train. The next time, on a cruise, Dick took the train and my friends and I picked him up and we all carried on to Whitehorse. Then our friends took us back to the ship. We were spoiled.
ReplyDeleteYou're right about cruise ship food, though. Isn't it fun? The helpings aren't large, but everything looks wonderful. I love your photos of food. We never think to do that.
— K
Kay, Alberta, Canada
An Unfittie's Guide to Adventurous Travel
We loved Skagway and ate lunch at the nicest place. Of course we had salmon! Hopefully, it was fresh when caught! :)
ReplyDeleteThe tide photos are interesting. The salmon fishies need a hospice, especially if the bears don't want them. I've never seen pearl rice. I'm starving. DrumMajor
ReplyDeleteI liked the photo looking through the center of town. My goodness I could eat all day long if I stayed on the boat! Everything looks wonderful. Great photos.
ReplyDeleteI remember Skagway being not much to write home about also. Of course the cruise industry owns the town so to speak. The food on the trip looks divine.
ReplyDeleteUkraine, yes you were close to Russia!
ReplyDeleteLovely journey, lovely pics.
Thank you for sharing it-
glad you are home safe :)
Warm Aloha from Waikiki;
Comfort Spiral
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G and I cheated in Skagway. We have a dear friend there, and she took the day off to be with us. She drove us around town, out to the graveyard, took us to lunch at a spot the locals eat, suffered through a train ride to the top of Whitepass for the umpteenth time, and took the bus ride down town again. We talked her ear off. I'm afraid we didn't do the tours offered on shipboard.
ReplyDeleteYes, the ship we took was just as much fun as yours but a little smaller. :)
I admire your mum and auntie that they can do so much every day. My sister and I went to Egypt two years ago and we were both very tired after two excursions every day.
ReplyDeleteSound like another great day. The food looks so good. The town looked like it was kept old looking.
ReplyDeleteSad about so many dead horses and dead salmon.
ReplyDelete