This blog is to help answer questions such as ‘Did you enjoy your first cruise?*’ and ’Where did you go and what did you see?’ Yes, I did enjoy it, and no, I didn’t get seasick.
The cruise was with Julie on Fred Olsen’s Borealis, a relatively small cruise ship (up to 1500 passengers, not quite full); dates were 15 – 27 February, departing from Portsmouth. After three days at sea, we had two stops in north Africa and four on the Iberian Peninsula.
Wildlife at sea: gannets, some guillemots and kittiwakes when near France, a couple of great skuas, though long periods of nothing. Dolphins only when I was somewhere else. The best sightings were when we were in the Strait of Gibraltar when half a dozen short-toed eagles and 20 black kites were making the crossing from Morocco to Tarifa. Dragonflies flying around the moored Borealis at Ceuta were vagrant emperors, probably also about to migrate to Europe.
White stork, Rabat. |
Where do lesser black-backed gulls go in winter? For many, to Casablanca to sit on containers, it seems. |
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Tétouan collage. |
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El Torcal: left photo from Wikipedia, right as we saw it. |
Monk parakeet, Málaga. |
Casemates Square, Gibraltar, in the rain. |
Happily, the next day was sunny for the smallest group we joined, on bikes around Cádiz. A highlight was the Roman Theatre only discovered in 1980. By the coastal Castle of Santa Catalina there were swallows, and a V-formation of birds coming in off the sea were glossy ibises. This fortress had an exhibition about a huge explosion of stored armaments in 1947, causing many deaths and thousands of injuries.
Bike tour in Cádiz. |
Lisbon
was the final port of call, where we took a general tour of city highlights.
There was no official on-board naturalist on Borealis, and I was unable to resist being the unofficial nature guide on occasions: wearing binoculars meant “You’re the bird man” was said a few times. I missed the company of Honeyguiders, though we were quick to make friends.
I was impressed by the activities available on Borealis, especially on days at sea. We attended lectures and several excellent evening shows. I joined a ukulele group and ‘singing for fun’ sessions, did three dance classes and played a lot of table tennis. The ukulele and singing groups put on a performance for other passengers during the final afternoon at sea.
Any down sides? One was being turned away from dinner for not wearing a jacket & tie when I’d forgotten it was a formal night. That time I changed, and after that we ate in the more informal dining area, which worked better for evening show times. I lost my wallet in Lisbon, presumably to a pickpocket, meaning time spent cancelling and re-ordering various cards. Lastly, it’s taken a couple of days to adjust to being on dry land with no swaying floors!
Would I go on another cruise? Potentially yes, if the dates and destinations are good. Though now there are several Honeyguide trips to look forward to …
*Well, first paying cruise. Tucked away on the old holiday reports web page is very old (1980s) Mediterranean cruise report from when I was a guest lecturer in a period when there was a collaboration between Swan Hellenic and the RSPB.
Chris
Durdin, 1 March 2025
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Brugmansia (angel's trumpets) in Rabat; Borealis in Casablanca; dragon tree in Cádiz. |
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