Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Dry dock

Today our ship (along with the crew) went into dry dock. That means we moved from our nice dock across the street from the mall and all the action over to an ugly shipyard where lots of construction is taking place. The ship was lifted up out of the water (with us on board) so that maintenance can be done on the underneath of the ship. It was a very fascinating experience and I have the photos to show what happens.

This opening is where we are starting out. The ship goes in backwards so these photos are all from the back side of the ship.
Once we got lined up these two little tugboats came over and our line handlers tossed out two of the lines. The tugboats attached these lines to their boats and they pulled us in.
I'm not sure how these little boats can pull our huge ship but they did.
Once they got us closer to the little canal, the tugboats took our lines and attached them to the side on some kind of machine and then the boats got out of our way. Then these machines pulled us all the way in.
After we were in properly, some divers hooked up things to the bottom of the ship and then the floor was raised up so we were out of the water. Then these bulldozer machines pulled us into our berth. Sorry for the non-technical description...I have no idea what they did to make all this happen.

These are the three ships we are next to so you can see what it looks like when they are out of the water.
This is the view from the front side of the ship...this is where we came from.
Here are the stairs we use to get off the ship.
















We will be in dry dock around one week. During this time, we fortunately have running water (toilets and showers) but minimal power. No a/c so it's really hot in our cabins and no laundry facilities but we have our computers and lights. We are about a 2 mile walk to town which I made tonight for a pizza dinner.

I'll be home in three days!

Peace,
Michele

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi Michele, Kalista gave us the link to this site today. So glad you're getting to go home for Christmas.
Reading through your blogs just tears at my soul. We just do not 'get' how lucky we really are. I think it's amazing what you're doing. You KNOW you're making a difference in the world / one person at a time. You should be very, very proud of yourself. You're an amazing person.
Take care, and stay safe, and have a wonderful, and blessed holiday.