A Land Animal at Sea
We are on an extended excursion. Over its course, if all goes to plan, it will
involve trains, planes, automobiles, buses, and at least two stints on boats of
various sizes. Our much-delayed winter
vacation, like a good cheese has aged into a primavera (springtime) return
to Italy. We had been on hold — schedules had slipped, prices
were not optimal, time was needed for tulips in Holland to bloom, COVID’s season
of infection had to abate further, and finally, we waited for schools to release
their charges for the summer.
An Early Rotterdam Ad |
Our ship, Holland America’s Rotterdam VII, was fresh
from Venice’s construction yards. Launched
less than a year ago, she was probably
still under warranty. Embarking from Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, the ship stopped in New York, New York, a city so fabulous
they named it twice, which allowed us to board for a slow ride across the
Atlantic with all the amenities you’d expect while on a cruise.
Thrusters allowed us to pull away
from the dock without the aid of tugboats.
Minutes later, we came to a stop before majestic Lady Liberty. This was something unique on the part of
Holland America. The ship then used its
thrusters to rotate completely around so all aboard might see both the city,
originally a Dutch colony named Nieuw Amsterdam, and this special lady,
a symbol of welcome lauded the world over.
In her raised right hand, she held the Torch of Liberty, its flame
symbolic of the eternal flame maintained by Roman Vestil Virgins over two
thousand years earlier. This Priestess
of Liberty was clothed in a simple stole, the long, pleated robe worn by
Vestal Virgins charged with keeping their sacred flame continually lit.
It marked a grand beginning to our eight-day
crossing. After days at sea in total isolation,
enforced by nothing but a blank horizon, we’d have the opportunity to visit
Plymouth and Dover (England), Rotterdam (Netherlands), Oslo (Norway), and Copenhagen
(Denmark), before finally docking in Amsterdam (Netherlands). From there, we’d continue south to Italy and
Calitri.
On this, our first cross-Atlantic cruise, we
were confident that our captain would find it hard to miss Europe. Not being of naval heritage myself and absent
a navy background, I had a hard time with simple basics like distinguishing a
ship from a boat. That was until another
captain on an earlier cruise corrected me when I referred to his ‘ship’ as a
‘boat’ in conversation — “You see son [I was younger then], ships ply the seas
and carry boats while boats are river craft.”
I bowed in obeisance and quietly withdrew backward from his presence. Being more of a land animal, I went off to
ponder ever more challenging nautical issues such as port, starboard, and
knots. He’d made a point. After all, I’d seen those small, orange-topped
lifeboats dangling like ornaments on either side of his ship. I remained confused, however, for don’t
submariners refer to their craft as a boat?
I’d seen enough WWII submarine movies to know that. Then again, it may all have to do with their
length, not the body of water they occupy.
But I wasn’t going to quibble, for I might soon find myself in the brig,
if I have the term correct.
From time immemorial, transatlantic travel had been by sea. That ended with the “Jet Age,” epitomized by the Boeing 707 jetliner. Like the tap of a technological wand, transatlantic travel
The Seventh Incarnation |
In the wake of difficult decision making, Holland
America Line ceased all North Atlantic passenger service in 1971. It chose to abandon transportation in favor of
what would become known as ‘vacation cruising.’
It is hardly a wonder then that Pan American Airlines’ first
transatlantic jet flight was given the iconic name "Clipper
Mayflower". This monicker was reminiscent
of the speedy ‘clipper ships’ of old, accompanied by an illusion to that historic
first passage by sea made by the intrepid Mayflower 351 years prior. There was much I didn’t know about travelling
by sea. Thankfully, without relying on
me, earlier explorers, adventurers, and outright courageous souls had been
trailblazers, but not without excessive costs.
In the distant past, a term like ‘cruising’ was undoubtedly an inappropriate description of the hardships of life at sea. The word has an air of ease, decadence, and indulgence. It extends to the point of extravagance, evoking images of perfumed
Cleopatra Imagined on Her Barge |
In the distant past, a term like
‘cruising’ was undoubtedly an inappropriate description of the hardships of
life at sea. The word has an air of ease,
decadence, and indulgence. It extends to
the point of extravagance, evoking images of perfumed Cleopatra on her barge bathed
in the sound of flutes and the breeze from the slow-motion flutter of ostrich feather
studded fans. For much of history transatlantic
voyages were hazardous and fraught with the unexpected from piracy to
malnutrition.
There was no chance of undernourishment, and you can forget about scurvy on our crossing of the Atlantic. While 2,600 ‘cruisers’ like us were being pampered by the 1,050 crewmembers aboard the seventh incarnation of the Rotterdam, Rotterdam VII, with all the comforts modern society can put afloat, our cruise would take a measly eight days without even pushing above 18 knots. If only she’d been prescient enough to known what was coming, Cleopatra might have eaten her heart out in envy. It was a completely different story for earlier travelers crossing these same Atlantic waters, whichever their direction.
Between 1492 and 1504, during the heyday of The Age of Exploration, that resolute Italian explorer from Genoa, Christopher Columbus, led four transatlantic maritime expeditions. Unlike ours, if I have my grade schooling correct, his all-expense-paid ‘anything but a luxury cruise’ was courtesy of
Routes of Columbus' Four Voyages |
Centuries later, on November 11, 1620, a group of Puritans and merchants aboard the cargo ship Mayflower, following a 2,800 nautical mile trek that began in Plymouth, England (one of our cruise destinations), finally arrived at present-day Cape Cod, Massachusetts. After an earlier false start, they’d departed on a historic journey lasting 66 days, seeking a new world and a new life. The 102 passengers included 51 men, 18 women, 33 children, 19
The Pilgrim's Hope - The Cargo Ship Mayflower |
In 2023 we fell asleep each night in a climate controlled stateroom to the soothing shimmy and yaw as the ship’s stabilizers shed the sea’s forces on our hull. In contrast, the Pilgrims retired with storms and headwinds battered them, praying they might awaken. One of those aboard the Mayflower was Richard Warren, a merchant. He survived the crossing, that first horrendous winter, and was present at the first Thanksgiving in 1621 and undoubtedly many afterward. His DNA passed to seven children, and today this single Mayflower passenger accounts for over 14 million descendants. One of those is my Maria Elena. In addition to Maria, a sampling of his more notable progeny includes former US Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D Roosevelt, astronaut Alan Shepard, Ernest Hemmingway, and pop star Taylor Swift of recent concert ticket fiasco fame.
But their crossing took its toll. The Mayflower’s passengers were not used to
the rough weather and suffered greatly from sea sickness. Additionally, much of the food set aside for
the journey had been eaten during the long delays in England. There were hardly any fresh vegetables or
meat onboard. With such a poor diet and
cramped living conditions, sicknesses such as scurvy and consumption were
common. One of the crew died on the voyage
and a servant named William Button died three days before land was sighted. Wrapped in sailcloth both were buried at sea.
In the 1880s, a period of massive
emigration, Holland America Line became a major carrier of immigrants from
Europe to the New World. Much like the
Pilgrims who escaped religious persecution, they fled oppression, tyranny, and war
in search of opportunity and a better life. About two million people made their way to
Rotterdam Harbor (another of our destinations) during the peak years from 1880
to 1920 to embark on voyages that often ended at Ellis Island, NY. One sailing related myth, to no avail, advised
immigrants to eat onions beginning months before departing to avoid seasickness.
Another misconception concerned ship smokestacks. More stacks implied greater speed. Reasoning that speed meant a quicker voyage, immigrants
favored ships with a greater number of stacks, just in case the onion therapy
failed. Capitalizing on this preference,
cruise lines responded by installing fake smokestacks to insure continued full
capacity. As a case in point, the
Titanic’s fourth funnel was a dummy smokestack.
Living conditions, however, had significantly improved over the austere situation
the Pilgrims experienced.
Thousands of immigrants occupied the lower “Minus 2 Deck” aboard Holland America transport ships. Even at a seemingly scant $10 passage fee by today’s standards, transporting immigrants was a
Transatlantic Immigrants on Deck |
I will admit that a primary
activity aboard ship is eating, not shuffleboard. With so many days at sea, there was honestly little
else to do between entertainment venues, reading, lectures, walks along the
promenade deck, and writing this blog but eat.
The time required to cross the Atlantic by ship gave us, for the first
time, an appreciation of just how vast the Atlantic is. Each day, what was on the menu served as a
draw, as effective as a lamp attracts moths.
Chefs sporting billowing puffy hats did their utmost to keep our forks
occupied while specialty restaurants, for an additional cost, as Emeril Lagasse would
say, would “kick it up a notch”. I’d
swear there was a method in their eagerness to fatten, forgive me, over nourish
us.
In Italy, there’s
nothing more important than coming together to celebrate the joy of great food. Aboard ship, they had created a close second.
This was undoubtedly the inspiration for
our onboard Italian restaurant, The Canaletto, which served as a
romantic alternative to the main dining room. There we enjoyed astounding Italian classics
like braised chicken cacciatore al forno, branzino shrimp ravioli, or saffron
risotto topped with ossobuco … and for dessert why, not cannoli alla Siciliana,
affogato, or lemon ricotta baked cheesecake along with an obligatory aperitivo
like Frangelico. There was certainly
time. It was Buon Appetito day
after day as we gradually made our way eastward, and the weight of the ship’s
stores gradually transferred to the weight of its passengers.
The Canaletto Ristorante was named for the celebrated 18th-century Venetian artist, Giovanni Antonio Canal, born in Venice in 1697. His father was a painter of theatrical scenery and was called a pittor di vedute (painter of views). In Canaletto’s early career, he assisted his father as a theater designer. While in Rome in 1719-1720, Giovanni abandoned the theatre and began to draw and paint architectural views. He would adopt the
Bacino Scene of Venice by Canaletto |
His Venice cityscapes captured the daily life of
its people. “His art retains many
vestiges of his beginning as a scene painter for the theater with his
characters in and out of the light in the foreground of architectural marvels.”[2] Like the old masters, his paintings
approach photographs of familiar Venetian sights in their clarity and detail,
something I prefer over abstract depictions.
One day in the late afternoon, in a touching tribute to all who perished at sea aboard the Titanic in 1912, the Rotterdam came to a stop above the
Memorial Over The Titanic |
I was familiar with the Titanic from an
early age when my father introduced me to a man from Wales. At the time, I’d no idea where that was. I learned that he’d been a crewmember aboard
the Titanic on that fateful voyage and survived because he was one of the
lifeboat operators. We paused just days
before the 111th anniversary of this catastrophic accident which
took the lives of 1534 and spared 706.
At the stern of the Rotterdam, the Captain along with some of his staff
and surprisingly a large contingent of passengers filling the deck, gathered
for a ceremony of remembrance. In the
solemnity of the moment, all was silent but for a bracing 40-degree wind. Following some brief words, a moment of
silence, and a blast of the ship’s horn, a wreath honoring those who had died
joined those who had perished in these ocean depths. This act of respect commemorating this tragic
loss had been special — a solemn moment at a historic location.
Early travelers like Columbus, the Pilgrims, and millions of immigrants who followed made this danger-filled journey. They include my mother’s bloodline that departed Normandy for Quebec in 1644. In addition to Richard Warren, Maria Elena’s Irish ancestors on her mother’s side likewise transited these same waters as my Italian grandparents had. Thankfully, all survived. But for them, Maria Elena and I would not have been on this crossing. Would we have existed? It was what my inner monolog was processing as I stood on the fantail that day, mid-Atlantic, close to nothing and far from everywhere. Sometimes in the sweep of history, life’s details fall short of historic but are nevertheless equally worthy of veneration to those who gambled and won.
From That Rogue
Tourist,
Paolo
P.S. Columbus’
heroic 61-day voyage and the Mayflower’s historic 66-day transit can’t compete
with today’s long-duration cruises. Take
for example, a 274-day world cruise circumnavigating the globe. If that is not sufficient, today’s ships
offer the ability to reside continuously at sea. Mrs. Clara MacBeth, an American heiress,
already holds the world record, which may just be impossible to beat. She achieved this distinction by making her
home living aboard Cunard’s RMS Coronia for 15 years at a cost of $20M. In doing so, she holds the undisputed record
as the world’s longest cruiser.
[1] National Gallery of Art, https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1080.html
[2] Canaletto,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canaletto
Note: Information about the Pilgrims was obtained
from the Mayflower Museum, Dover, England during our visit. The history of Holland America Cruise Line and
immigrants was drawn from lectures aboard the Rotterdam given by “Mr. Ocean
Liner,” Mr. William H. Miller, Maritime Historian
Cruise Ship Lecturer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjRk3hgWWjc
No comments:
Post a Comment