Showing posts with label Traveling & Trinkets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Traveling & Trinkets. Show all posts

Thursday, October 4, 2018

Traveling & Trinkets - Eastport, Maine


Eastport, Maine is the easternmost city in the United States and holds a huge July 4th parade every year.  Since 1905, there has been a Coast Guard or U. S. Navy ship in port, providing free tours and often the sailors march in the parade.


In 2004, Vic's ship was the Navy ship in port for the festivities and he picked up this replica of the Small Town X Fisherman Statue as a memento.  It has quite an interesting history here.

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Traveling & Trinkets - Corfu, Greece


Vic sailed from Denmark, back down through the North Sea, the English Channel, and the Bay of Biscay, and down the Iberian Peninsula to Lisbon, Portugal.  The ship passed through the Strait of Gibraltar again and sailed on to La Spezia and then Trieste, Italy.  I don't have any trinkets from these three ports so they must have been mugs.  In the first installment of Traveling & Trinkets, I said I would address mugs later.  Now seems a good time.  Vic came home with a LOT of mugs from this deployment - probably at least half a dozen, closer to a dozen.  He thought they were great souvenirs, but when I turned them upside down and saw Made in China stamped on the bottom, I had to disagree.  Off to the future garage sale box they went.  Only two mugs were granted a reprieve - the one featured last week from Denmark and this week's from Corfu, Greece.


Vic picked up this plate and mug set and these are really beautiful (and made in Greece by Dagounis Ceramics).  Definitely keepers.  Corfu is spelled Corfou and it appears the two names are interchangeable.  It doesn't appear that Corfou is Greek, as I've found Kerkyra listed as the Greek name for Corfu.  If anyone can clarify Corfu vs. Corfou, please leave a comment.

That's it for the souvenirs from this first deployment as the trinkets from Villefranche-sur-Mer, France; Naples, Italy, and Palermo, Sicily were...you guessed it, Made in China mugs!

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Traveling & Trinkets - Frederickshavn and Aarhus, Denmark


Vic said farewell to Mum and Dad and the ship traveled up through the North Sea and around the Danish Jutland Peninsula, first to the town of Frederickshavn, and then to Denmark's second-largest city, Aarhus.

One of my favorite trinkets, actually a set of two, is from this visit to Denmark.


I wish the plate listed, perhaps on the back, the Danish icons shown on the front but it doesn't.  I did a little research and the rest is just my best guess  From the top center, Fredensborg Palace, although listed as the spring and autumn residence of the Danish monarch, it's also the most used;  a quaint village scene; Danish folk dancers; a windmill, a very large percentage of electricity in Denmark is powered by wind; a cottage with a thatched roof; Danish fishing vessel; statue of Hans Christian Andersen; Royal Life Guards soldiers; another quaint Danish dwelling, and in the center, The Little Mermaid.  Around the edge of the plate are most likely lingonberries, bilberries, or red currants, and on each side of DANMARK is a Viking ship.  The mug complements the plate.

Definitely a wonderful souvenir from Denmark.

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Traveling & Trinkets - Palma de Mallorca and Portsmouth, England


It's time for a new Thursday feature - Traveling & Trinkets, a look back on Vic's travels and the gems (or not) that he brought home.  I'm going to start with his first deployment (1995-1996) and work my way to the present.  Most of the items featured are just as the title says, trinkets, although there are a few other things that I found that warrant sharing.  Enjoy!

Vic's first ever port visit on a deployment was to Palma de Mallorca in the Mediterranean.  Palma de Mallorca is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands in Spain.  It is situated on the south coast of of the island of Majorca on the Bay of Palma (thank you, Wikipedia).  I can't find a souvenir from Palma de Mallorca so I have a feeling it was a mug.  More on mugs in later installments of this series.  The next stop was Portsmouth, England.  Why the ship traveled through the Straits of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean and then zipped out again and up the coast to England, I have no idea, but that's what they did.

Mum and Dad were living in England at this time, in the northwest city of Manchester.  They lived in what is called sheltered housing, which is Brit-speak for a retirement community where the residents live independently but have an onsite manager (called the warden, how funny is that?) who is available in case of an emergency.  Each apartment has a speaker system and each morning Mum and Dad were greeted with the warden's voice saying "Good morning, Mr. and Mrs. H, how are we today?" to which they no doubt replied "We're fine, thank you very much".  If the warden didn't get a reply, she'd be whizzing up the stairs to see why they hadn't replied.  Made my sister and I very happy to know that there was someone looking out for Mum and Dad.  Anyway, back to Portsmouth.  The sheltered housing company has properties all over the UK and residents could make a reservation to stay in the guest room at an alternate location if they were traveling.  Knowing that Vic's ship was due into Portsmouth (pre-9/11, everyone knew the ship's schedule), they motored down to Portsmouth and were waiting at the pier.  It was Vic's first time to meet Mum; he had already met Dad in Saipan shortly after we got married.  Mum and Dad whisked Vic off on the train to London and gave him the royal sightseeing tour.   They had a great time together.

I don't have any trinkets from this trip, they were probably too busy sightseeing to do any shopping but I do have this other great souvenir.  Vic bought a postcard and they all wrote a little message (makes me very emotional to see Mum and Dad's handwriting and Mum began every piece of correspondence to me and later to us with "Hello darling" and "Hello darlings").  The neatest part of the postcard is the little note in the bottom right-hand corner.


  If you can't quite make it out, it reads:
Hi, I've just found this p/card at Victoria Station.  I hope you are well too.  Say hello to Florida from me.  Jenny UK Resident
Somehow the card dropped out of the postbox or the postman dropped it when he was taking out the post.  Either way, Jenny found it, scribbled a little note and put it, securely, back into the postbox.   Wasn't that lovely?  It's one of those souvenirs that are just extra special.

You'll notice I've blocked out our last name for privacy reasons - I don't care about the address, we haven't lived there for almost twenty years.  Also, English is Vic's second language and twenty years ago, his grammar wasn't what it is today so forgive any little goofs.