Worrying Boat Travel Resume:
1967 – The ferry from Dover to Calais – threw my guts
up.
1968 – The Queen
Elizabeth from London to New York – only one bad night, but Oy!
Solution: Stayed
off of boats for the next forty-six years.
(Additional Note:
Dr. M: No specifics but her
concerns were not dissimilar.)
And now…
Okay, so we packed along Dramamine,
just in case. Which, for me at least, in
my rich and fertile imagination meant, “There is – forgive me – (almost certainly)
some serious upchucking in my future.”
Another Problem:
Our swimming pool at home is set permanently at a bath-like eighty-eight
degrees. Our itinerary, I have trepidatiously
noticed, has scheduled swimming off the side of the boat activities every
afternoon. Two questions quickly arose
in my (perniciously un-disableable) rich and fertile imagination:
“Do you have to jump off the boat to get into the water?”
And
“Exactly what temperature is that water?”
I mean, it’s October.
What does the Aegean in the fall feel like? And will the term “Cardiac Arrest” come into
play, should I be foolish enough to give it a try?
(Leading to the inevitably embarrassing and transparently
deceitful, “I think maybe I’ll swim tomorrow.”)
Okay. So much for the
setup.
Now…
The “Official Beginning” of our tour had started two days
earlier, with a whirlwind exploration of, among other touristical points of
interest, the legitimately breathtaking Hagia
Sophia and the Topkapi Palace
where, in the hour allotted to us, I raced through impressive exhibits of
antique clocks, ancient weaponry and Sultanational jewelry, which included the
prototype, emerald-encrusted dagger memorably showcased in the classic caper
movie Topkapi (1964.)
The following morning, it was a van ride (including our intrepid
“Group of Seven” plus our indispensible guide Serhan) to Ataturk Airport, then a puiddle-jump flight to Dalaman, where
another van awaited to convey us to the port town of Marmaris (on the southwest
coast of Turkey – closer to the Syrian mayhem than Istanbul but still some safe
distance away. We self-hypnotically
liked to believe.)
Dutifully following Serhan, we make our way along an extended
seaside dock…
And there it is.
Our nautical home for the next five-plus days.
It seems pretty big.
Two tall masts, numerous portholes above the waterline, a Turkish flag
flapping on the flagpole…
And that’s all I know about boats. (As demonstrated by my observation that the
portholes were above the waterline. Why
would they have portholes below the
water line? I mean they did in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea
but I think that was made up.)
We proceed – some of us more trepidatiously than others – up
the suspended gangplank, and we step determinedly aboard.
We are now officially “Boat People.”
The cabin we are provided, walled in lacquered dark-paneled
word, is comfortable-looking, sufficiently spacious, and has its own private
bathroom and shower. (WARNING: The alimentarily squeamish are encouraged to
skip this parenthetical. Almost the
first “Boat Rule” we were instructed about was that no paper whatsoever should be
deposited into the toilets. You heard
me. None. Did somebody say “Ew!”? Wait, that might have been me.)
Almost immediately we set sail (though not before I anxiously
queried Serhan concerning the Turkish word for “mutiny.” You can always tell when I’m nervous. I almost immediately stop being funny.)
Habitual Routine:
Every afternoon, after traveling over a thankfully unchoppy
sea, we drop anchor in some secluded (except for one or two boats similar to
our own) horseshoe-shaped cove, a wreath of craggy mountains rising out of the
waters, the inlet’s mouth opening to Cyprus, Rhodes, Greece and fabled
Mediterranean.
The cove water is almost glacially smooth. The Dramamine
will remain untouched beside the Tums
and the Tylenol. (Yes, we are a seafaring drugstore.)
Having anchored for the day, the next item on the agenda:
A refreshing dip in the Aegean.
And so it begins.
I slip on my overpriced French bathing suit (bought
specifically for the occasion; if I were not looking forward to the experience,
I could at least appear stylish in the process.) For safety (but more “Security Blanket’s”
sake), I don a large, orange lifejacket.
(I emphasize “large” because the lifejacket I discover in our cabin is
unmistakably “child-sized”, raising instantly shaming concerns that all Turkish
non-swimmers were under the age of seven.)
Trepidatiously – have I overused that word or is it simply
my “Signature Adjective?” – I make my may along the boat’s wooden-planked deck
to – deep breath of appreciation – a strongly fortified metal ladder leading
down to the indeterminable waters below.
I am, inexplicably, the first of our party venturing into
the Aegean. (What was that about? Am I secretly courageous? I am even now searching for a more credible
explanation.)
Gingerly descending the ladder, I arrive at the square-shaped
metal platform at the bottom, my lower extremities making their initial contact
with the water.
Which it is not, by my definition but possibly anyone’s,
Warm.
Okay, what do I do now?
Go back up the ladder? That way
lies humiliation and failure. The trouble
is, the only alternative direction is
In.
I take a number of deep – possibly final, I fear – breaths, and I flop into the awaiting coldness, a
primal yelp emerging from the abrupt temperature change, and I immediately
flounder around in my familiar, though hardly aquatically admirable, “Dog Paddle.”
Little did I know, to my indescribable surprise, that those
daily dips in the Aegean would rank among the “Most Memorable Moments” of the
entire vacation.
I mean, who’d ‘a
thunk it?
A thing I had worried about the most turns out to be…
Oh, Lordy.
Do I actually know myself at all?
1 comment:
One of the things I enjoy about your blog, Earl, is your ability to change your mind. Many people (myself included I'm afraid) are so set in their ways that all their blogs and other writings seems to be about is how they would run the world if they could. You, on the other hand, seem to be willing to keep your mind open about things. I am enjoying reading about your current trip but I also (over the years) have enjoyed reading about your journey through life where you actually observe and learn. And sometimes change your mind along the way.
You said, "Do I actually know myself at all?" Do any of us? We think we do but...
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