9.28.2013

DALE CHILUHY AT THE ATLANTIS CASINO

As I wrote in my last post we toured fantastic Atlantis during our port stop in Nassau, Bahamas. Part of the tour included a walk through the famous Atlantis Casino.

It is here that we saw four exquisite glass sculptures by the artist, Dale Chihuly, that were commissioned specifically for the casino by the owner of Atlantis, Sol Kerzner. Our tour guide informed us the glass sculptures are the only thing that you can photograph in the casino.

The gorgeous Temple of the Moon, consists of over 900 separate pieces of cobalt blue and opalescent white glass.
Its counterpart, Temple of the Sun, has more than 2,300 yellow, orange, and red elements radiating from a fiery globe atop a replica of a Mayan temple.
The magnificent Seaform chandelier is made up of over 900 sealife forms of jellyfish, anemones, squid, and seaweed in delicate shades highlighted with silver and gold. It took Chihuly only three weeks to create. Measuring approximately 10 feet by 12 feet, it hangs over the High Rollers area of the casino.
Dale Chihuly describes making the Crystal Gate sculpture: "Sol (Sol Kerzner, developer of the Atlantis resort) came to my Seattle studio many times over the following nine months, and after viewing the beginnings of the moon and the sun he told me about a crystal gate he planned at the entrance to the casino. He wanted to use real crystals, and the piece would be about six feet high. But then he decided that the scale wouldn't be monumental enough for the space, and asked me how I might do the piece in glass. Of all the pieces for Atlantis, the Crystal Gate was the most challenging and difficult. We redid it about five times before we could make glass and armature work together. Finally, I set about making an eighteen-foot-high Crystal Gate out of 3,100 hand-blown crystals."



 































Each one of these glass sculptures is valued at approximately $1,000,000.

For more information visit http://www.chihuly.com/.

All photos in this blog post were taken by me during our visit to Atlantis in May, 2013.

9.07.2013

FANTASTIC ATLANTIS

After visiting Grand Turk Island we had a day at sea before docking at our last stop, Nassau, Bahamas. 

Even though this was our third time in Nassau, we had never been to Atlantis. So for our shore excursion we hired a "taxi" for $4.00 each to drive us over the bridge to Paradise Island. I put the word "taxi" in quotation marks because our "taxi" ended up being a van crammed with 8 people and no air conditioning.  Thankfully it was only a 15-minute drive to Atlantis.

I've always wanted to visit the Marine Habitat so upon our arrival we purchased tickets that allowed us access to the lagoons, underwater ruins and even the famed casino. Tickets were $45 per person but given what we saw the price was well worth it.

A pool of stingrays...
Beautiful coral...



























with brilliant, blue fish darting in and out...
Schools of gorgeous, colorful fish...



Seahorses...



























A couple of hammerhead sharks...

And a manta ray with a 14-foot wing span...
We were told that she may soon be released out to the sea because she is just gotten too big.

Of course, we were also able to walk around the grounds...

Here are the Royal Towers...such an iconic view.
Near the Coral Towers...

The beautiful tropical foliage...



























Next post: our walk through the famous Atlantis casino.

All photos in this blog post were taken by me during our cruise in May, 2013.

8.31.2013

NEXT STOP: GRAND TURK ISLAND

After a day at sea, our next cruise stop was Grand Turk Island in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Here is our boat docked...























And across the pier was the Carnival Pride...look how much bigger the Breeze is!
















A very short walk from the ships is the main attraction on the island, the Grand Turk cruise center. Built by Carnival Cruises in 2006 it features one of the largest swimming pools in the Caribbean...
and a Flowrider...
















Of course there is the usual Dufry duty-free shopping which is always positioned so you have to walk through the store in order to get to the rest of the island's attractions...great marketing!
There are also the usual shops you find in Caribbean cruise ports...

Of course, the beach is the other main attraction.
And what is cool is that the ships are docked directly in front of the beach as you can see below.  It was so hot and humid that day and the water was so refreshing!
There are a couple of other "attractions" located near the cruise center. One is a large sculpture of two humpback whales "breaching" through the sand.
Another attraction in the cruise center is an exhibit commemorating the splashdown on John Glenn's Mercury 7 space capsule off the island's coast in 1962.  It was opened in 2012 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the splashdown.

In addition to a replica of the actual space capsule...
there was John Glenn in his spacesuit...

and storyboards depicting the accomplishments of the NASA space program.




























































I have to be honest and say I was very disappointed with Grand Turk Island.  It seems like it is still a starter cruise port stop because many of the buildings were empty and the few open stores had limited inventories of the usual merchandise you see for sale in cruise ports. It was strange to walk into a jewelry store and see half the cases empty.
   
Other than water sports there is not much to this island.  It has some of the most beautiful water you will ever see...
















But unfortunately when the cruise ships depart, it is a ghost town until the next ships arrive...























All photos in this blog post were taken by me during our cruise in May, 2013.

8.17.2013

IT WAS A BEAUTIFUL SETTING FOR A WEDDING

The first stop on our Carnival cruise was Key West, Florida. This cruise was a family wedding cruise, and the wedding took place at the Hyatt Hotel in Key West.

Taking a cruise for a wedding is nice enough, but the wedding locale was just beautiful.  The ceremony took place on a small beach on the hotel grounds with the beautiful ocean as the backdrop.

Isn't this a beautiful place to hold a wedding?

Perfect weather: sunny, 84 degrees and low humidity.

Ready to toast the happy couple after their "I do's"...
It's easy to see why Key West is the number two destination for weddings after Las Vegas...
Sights of the Florida Keys...jet skis, tropical birds, boats, and parasailing...
After the lovely wedding reception, held inside the hotel, we walked back through the town...
and boarded the Carnival Breeze, seen here docked in Key West, to continue our cruise.  Next stop: Grand Turk.
All photos in this blog post were taken by me during our cruise in May, 2013.