The Silver Whisper waiters remember TSH and Diva and the new
maître d’ already knows them by name, so it’s a good start. Food as good as
ever. On the other hand, the butler
service requires refinement. The actual butler was away training, so the
greeting was by two eager but obviously inexperienced room stewards. The
requests were for champagne, shiraz, warm water for Diva’s interdental gadget
and plenty of still water. The first two arrived OK. Eventually boiling
water arrived complete with a cup for drinking it, which was perhaps an
understandable misunderstanding. Even
later, a large bottle of distilled water arrived. No idea what they
thought it was for or where they got it, but top marks for effort.
At the safety drill, Diva always tests the light on the
lifejacket. They specifically tell you not to do that but how else do you know
it works? But now they have some new lights which allegedly come on when in
contact with water. How would that work? And how would you know it was working?
TSH suggested a test involving wearing
the lifejacket in the shower but that seemed a bit drastic and the test did not
take place.
A bracing walk along the waterfront and through the town in
Falmouth, with the weather just the same as when TSH and Diva were last here –
grey and drizzly but no actual heavy rain. TSH took lots of pics.
The rumour on board is that a massive storm is heading for
Stornoway and that as we are possibly due to anchor and tender so it won’t be safe
and we will miss out the port. Bad news in itself but what does this mean in
sea sickness terms?
The Whisper was in Dublin until the evening, so TSH and Diva
were able to go around the city on their own, taking in the Guinness
Storehouse, O’Connell St, the Post Office and Trinity College, with views of
Dublin Castle and the Cathedral en route.
On the crowded bus to Guinness, a friendly Irishman who
helped with finding the right bus stood up from his aisle seat to allow Diva to
sit on the empty window seat, as he was getting off first. Before he could get
his seat back, TSH (oblivious to what was going on), took the elderly man’s
seat, forcing him to look elsewhere for a scarce seat. Diva did not recover
from the mortification for some hours.
Diva drank her first ever Guinness. Not a whole pint – just the
little taster. In spite of much tuition, involving clouds of vapour, a white
room and a transfer to a dark ‘velvet’ room, she didn’t really get it and will
be sticking with cab sauv rouge.
The other Guinness fact is that 14 tankers of it were lined
up on the quayside when we arrived. (Information courtesy of TSH)
The most interesting part of Trinity College was the
stunning library, with an exhibition of the Book of Kells.
La Terrazza for dinner.
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