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Newly revealed diary entry shows Queen Elizabeth's final moments

<p>A previously unseen diary entry from Queen Elizabeth's private secretary has revealed the final moments of the late monarch's life. </p> <p>Sir Edward Young dutifully recorded every moment of the Queen's life, including Her Majesty's last moments at Balmoral surrounded by her family. </p> <p>“Very peaceful,” he wrote. “In her sleep. Slipped away. Old age. She wouldn’t have been aware of anything. No pain.”</p> <p>The private diary entry was lodged in the Royal Archives and has not been made public until now.</p> <p>Queen Elizabeth passed away at the age of 96 on September 8th 2022 at her beloved Balmoral Castle in Scotland, as she was surrounded by the royal family.</p> <p> </p> <p>Others who were by the Queen’s bedside included the Queen’s senior dresser and trusted confidante, Angela Kelly, along with the Rev Kenneth MacKenzie, a minister, who read to her from the Bible.</p> <p>The diary entry comes from a new book <em>Charles III: New King, New Court. The Inside Story</em>, written by royal expert Robert Hardman, who shared other details from the Queen's final moments.</p> <p>The book notes that after King Charles sat by his mother's bedside for hours before her death, he went out to forage mushrooms to clear his head.</p> <p>It was when he was returning to Balmoral Castle that he was informed his mother has died.  </p> <p>After her death, a footman brought a locked red box of paperwork found by her deathbed.</p> <p>In it, were two sealed letters: one to her son and heir, Charles, and the other, addressed to Young.</p> <p>The box also contained her final royal order: her choice of candidates for the prestigious Order of Merit for ‘exceptionally meritorious service’ across the Commonwealth.</p> <p>Hardman writes in the new book, “Even on her deathbed, there had been work to do. And she had done it.”</p> <p><em>Image credits: Getty Images</em></p>

Caring

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Diary worth over $50,000 found in mother's attic

<p>The world of diaries often holds a realm of personal musings and daily chronicles, but for one fortunate woman, a hidden treasure in her mother's attic turned out to be far more valuable than she ever imagined.</p> <p>In a captivating episode of<em> Antiques Roadshow</em>, an unsuspecting woman sought the expertise of the renowned Richard Price, presenting him with a diary that held not just sentimental value but an astonishing historical significance.</p> <p>With a sense of anticipation in her voice, she began, "We believe that it is the transcript of the diary written by one of the Shackleton expedition crew members aboard the <em>Endurance</em>."</p> <p>This remarkable artefact had been handed down to her father 45 years earlier and had subsequently resided in her mother's attic, concealed beneath layers of dust beside an old television set.</p> <p>The Shackleton expedition, set against the stark backdrop of Antarctica, unfolded in the year 1915. The woman eloquently narrated the captivating tale, "That was the famous expedition that got stuck in the ice, and the crew members survived on the ice for a number of months. Then they made a journey in the lifeboats to Elephant Island, and Shackleton, along with five others, embarked on a perilous voyage to South Georgia as a rescue party.</p> <p>"They managed to secure a ship to retrieve the remaining men stranded on the ice. Astonishingly, every member of the expedition survived, a testament to their incredible resilience."</p> <p>This remarkable diary bore witness to the harrowing journey and contained invaluable insights into the crew's survival tactics, including details of their sustenance during their ordeal.</p> <p>Price, the seasoned expert, meticulously examined the diary's condition. While a few pages had become detached from the spine, the document was, for the most part, remarkably well-preserved.</p> <p>However, one crucial mystery lingered – the identity of the diary's author remained elusive. Recognising the importance of this missing puzzle piece, Price urged the woman to seek out an expert capable of uncovering the writer's identity, emphasising that this revelation could significantly enhance the diary's value.</p> <p>As the moment arrived for the much-anticipated valuation, Richard declared, "I'm just going to say off the top of my head, £30,000 (over $50,000)."</p> <p>The room fell into a collective state of shock, with audible gasps emanating from the captivated audience. The guest herself was visibly taken aback by the astronomical figure.</p> <p>Despite the woman's earnest efforts to safeguard this extraordinary document over the years, Price issued a stern warning, "I don't want it back under your bed or wherever it was before. You must go to Cambridge to let the real experts work on it."</p> <p>In the end, this unassuming diary, tucked away for decades in an attic, not only unveiled an epic Antarctic adventure but also carried an unexpected fortune, proving that sometimes, the most extraordinary treasures are hidden in the most unlikely places.</p> <p><em>Images: Antiques Roadshow / 9Now</em></p>

Money & Banking

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WWI diary returns home after 100 years

<p dir="ltr">A diary containing photos that are more than 100 years old gifted to nurse will be returning to its rightful owners.</p> <p dir="ltr">On Remembrance Day, Jon Ray will board a plane with the diary of a Belgian soldier who fought in WWI which chronicles life in the trenches from 1914 to 1917, helping it make the journey back to the soldier’s family.</p> <p><span id="docs-internal-guid-f752207b-7fff-a51a-a3d3-6d6dbc22e630"></span></p> <p dir="ltr">The diary came to be in Ray’s collection and in his family’s possession for the last 100 years after it was gifted to one of his ancestors.</p> <p dir="ltr"><img src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/2022/11/ww1-diary1.jpg" alt="" width="1280" height="720" /></p> <p dir="ltr">"The diary basically was gifted to my grandmother Clara - Clara Carter - right towards the end of the First World War by a French-speaking Belgian soldier by the name of Jules Geldoff," he told 9News.</p> <p dir="ltr">While he doesn’t know how Geldoff met his grandmother, Ray’s best guess is that it was during her time as a nurse in northern England.</p> <p dir="ltr">"We're thinking probably late '17 is probably the time he might've been injured or something's happened to him and he's obviously given it to her," he said.</p> <p dir="ltr">At the end of the war, Geldoff and his diary would end up on opposite sides of the world.</p> <p dir="ltr"><span id="docs-internal-guid-2b4da999-7fff-c7e2-caff-22f40644104f"></span></p> <p dir="ltr">While Geldoff became an architect, Carter married an Australian soldier, bringing the diary with her to Broken Hill in New South Wales.</p> <p dir="ltr"><img src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/2022/11/ww1-diary2.jpg" alt="" width="1280" height="720" /></p> <p dir="ltr">Now, the diary will be heading back to its owner’s family with the help of a researcher and the Belgian embassy.</p> <p dir="ltr">"Through assistance from a researcher in Brussels, and the Belgian embassy in Canberra, we've managed to locate his closest living relatives in a place called Muskron in Belgium," Ray said.</p> <p dir="ltr">The diary contains priceless photographs depicting life during the war, including downtime, the war-torn towns Geldoff and his fellow soldiers encountered, and being on the front line.</p> <p dir="ltr"><span id="docs-internal-guid-c53534fe-7fff-f629-879f-50e63e48f1e3"></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Images: 9News</em></p>

Travel Trouble

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"I ended her life": Brian Laundrie's diary finally released

<p>Sinister details of Gabby Petito’s murder have been revealed in the form of handwritten notes made by her fiance Brian Laundrie. He offered an apology, along with his confession for killing Petito out of ‘mercy’.</p> <p>The notebook – which was recovered from the Florida nature preserve where Laundrie's body was found after the 23-year-old took his own life in October 2021 – has been shared by the Laundrie family’s attorney, Steven Bertolino.</p> <p>“I ended her life,” Laundrie wrote in the notebook, which was recovered near his body, before going on to detail his version of events of the day that Petito died.</p> <blockquote class="twitter-tweet"> <p dir="ltr" lang="en">Pages of Brian Laundrie’s diary released. On this page Laundrie appears to say he killed <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GabbyPetito?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GabbyPetito</a> out of mercy…because she had injured herself.<br />The diary doesn’t explain why he didn’t call for help <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/nbc4ny?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#nbc4ny</a> <a href="https://t.co/Dhps2JdEwr">pic.twitter.com/Dhps2JdEwr</a></p> <p>— Pei-Sze Cheng (@PeiSzeCheng4NY) <a href="https://twitter.com/PeiSzeCheng4NY/status/1540418661344808961?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 24, 2022</a></p></blockquote> <p>“Rushing back to our car trying to cross the streams… before it got too dark to see… I hear a splash and a scream," the notebook pages read.</p> <p>“When I pulled Gabby out of the water she couldn’t tell me what hurt, she had a small bump on her forehead that eventually got larger.</p> <p>“Her feet hurt, her wrist hurt, but she was freezing, shaking violently.</p> <p>“Gasping in pain, begging for an end to her pain.”</p> <p>Laundrie then describes trying to keep her warm and awake while Petito was in “extreme” pain, but his entries do not explain any effort made to find medical attention.</p> <p>“I don’t know the state of Gabby’s injuries, only that she was in extreme pain.</p> <p>“I ended her life, I thought it was merciful, that it is what she wanted, but I see now all the mistakes I made.”</p> <p>Police encountered the pair during their trip in Moab on August the 12th<br />2021, after reports of domestic violence. The couple were on a cross-country road trip and sharing their adventures on social media.</p> <p>Bertolino said Laundrie flew home to Florida alone on August the 17th, and that Laundrie then returned to Utah six days later to “rejoin Gabby”.</p> <p>On September the 1st, Laundrie drove back to his parents' Florida home, again without Petito. He had been sending text messages from her phone to fool people into believing that she was still alive.</p> <p>Petito’s body was later found on September 19 in Bridger-Teton National Forest in Wyoming, with an autopsy later revealing she had been strangled by someone’s bare hands, and likely died three to four weeks before she was found.</p> <p>The notebook was found in October 2021, along with human remains, a backpack and a revolver, and a month later the remains were identified as Brian Laundrie’s.</p> <p>Bertolino said he met with the FBI in Tampa, along with the Petito family attorney, where personal items belonging to Laundrie and Petito were handed back to their families.</p> <p><em>Image: Getty</em></p>

Caring

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Queen Elizabeth has a secret journal only Prince Philip can read

<p>Queen Elizabeth has always been elusive and one secret that has managed to spill out about the most senior royal member has made her just the more mysterious.</p> <p>It has been revealed Her Majesty has kept a diary that she writes in every night, since she was just 15 years old.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.2165345898479px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7828281/queen-3.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/d5f5994a195c4ed4a7b5d2455b40a15a" /></p> <p><em>Monty Python</em> actor Michael Palin said he learnt the unusual fact about the Queen while sitting next to the 93-year-old at an official royal dinner in Windsor castle.</p> <p>The actor had just been given his knighthood when he told Her Majesty he kept a nightly journal.</p> <p>“We were talking about diaries after I had mentioned that I kept a nightly journal of where I'd been and the people I encountered ... she said she did too, the difference being that while mine may have been for publication hers were definitely not.”</p> <p>He continued, “She commented that she found it quite difficult because it always made her a bit wooly and said, 'I usually manage to write for about 15 minutes before my head goes bump', and then she did an imitation of her head hitting the table, as if she had fallen asleep.”</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.2982998454405px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7828280/queen-2.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/4ab25ae97e704b8485986648a21c1504" /></p> <p>Hugh Vickers, who is a royal expert, said the Queen was inspired by her father King George VI to start jotting down her own thoughts after she witnessed him doing so.</p> <p>What makes this little-known fact about the Queen even more interesting is that her diaries are reportedly guarded tightly.</p> <p>Not only are her close aides instructed to destroy the bottling paper used to absorb the ink from her pen, but her personal page is required to destroy the written-on paper so that the Queen’s thoughts can never be read.</p> <p>“The diary is taken with her wherever she is staying, whether it be Windsor or Sandringham or Balmoral, and is kept in a black leather case – a smaller version of one of the red dispatch boxes containing Government papers,” a royal insider revealed to <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.dailystar.co.uk/" target="_blank"><em>The Daily Star</em>.</a></p>

Books

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Anne Frank's diary: "Dirty jokes” found hidden in pages

<p>Researchers using digital technology have deciphered the writing on two pages of Anne Frank’s diary that she had pasted over with brown masking paper, discovering four naughty jokes and a candid explanation of sex, contraception and prostitution.</p> <p>“Anyone who reads the passages that have now been discovered will be unable to suppress a smile,” said Frank van Vree, director of the Netherlands Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies.</p> <p>“The ‘dirty’ jokes are classics among growing children. They make it clear that Anne, with all her gifts, was above all also an ordinary girl.”</p> <p>Anne, age 13 at the time, wrote the two pages on September 28, 1942, less than three months after she, her family and another Jewish family went into hiding from the Nazis in a secret annex behind a house in Amsterdam. They would live there for two years until they were discovered and ultimately deported to Auschwitz.</p> <p><img width="465" height="310" src="http://www.abc.net.au/news/image/9766126-3x2-700x467.jpg" alt="Large screen showing hidden pages of Anne Frank's diary" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p>In her diary, perhaps fearing prying eyes, Anne had covered some pages over with brown paper with an adhesive backing like a postage stamp.</p> <p>Their content has remained a mystery for decades – until now.</p> <p>The pages contained four jokes about sex which Anne described as “dirty” and an explanation of women’s sexual development, sex, contraception and prostitution.</p> <p>“They bring us even closer to the girl and the writer Anne Frank,” Ronald Leopold, executive director of the Anne Frank House museum, said Tuesday.</p> <p>Experts say the newly discovered pages reveal more about her development as a writer than it does about her interest in sex.</p> <p>In other parts of her diary, Anne explored issues around sexuality, her anatomy and her impending period.</p> <p>Those particular passages were censored by her father when the diary was first published in 1947 but became available in recent unabridged editions.</p> <p>In the passage on sex, Anne described how a young woman gets her period around age 14, saying that it is “a sign that she is ripe to have relations with a man but one doesn’t do that of course before one is married.”</p> <p>On prostitution, she wrote: “All men, if they are normal, go with women, women like that accost them on the street and then they go together. In Paris they have big houses for that. Papa has been there.”</p> <p>One of her jokes was this: “Do you know why the German Wehrmacht girls are in Holland? As mattresses for the soldiers.”</p> <p>Another joke: “A man had a very ugly wife and he didn’t want to have relations with her. One evening he came home and then he saw his friend in bed with his wife, then the man said: ‘He gets to and I have to!!!”’</p> <p>The deciphering was done by researchers from the Anne Frank museum, the Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies and the Huygens Institute of Netherlands History.</p>

Books

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Over60 travel diary: Cruising the Caribbean

<p><strong>Rosie Hersch, 68, is a retired pharmacist, whose hobbies include studying, cooking and theatre. Her biggest passion is travel and like the song says, “I've been everywhere man (well almost).” <em><a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/travel/cruising/2017/06/rosie-hersch-west-caribbean-cruise/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Read part one of Rosie’s cruise travel diary here.</span></a></em></strong></p> <p>March 24 had arrived and in the early afternoon we greeted my sister and brother-in-law on board our beautiful ship. Another lifeboat drill before setting sail and we were on our way to Charlotte Amalie, St Thomas which we would reach after two sea days. It was already March 25 in Melbourne so I was so fortunate that one of the staff at guest services on our ship allowed me to ring our older daughter on a ship phone to wish her a happy birthday.</p> <p>On the second sea day, I celebrated my big birthday. At dinner, the waiters arrived with a beautiful chocolate birthday cake. When I returned to the cabin I found 2 bottles of champagne compliments of Celebrity Cruise lines.</p> <p>On March 27, we had arrived at St Thomas. We took a taxi ride to a chairlift. The view of the island from the top was breathtaking. We then grabbed another cab and visited the many historic landmarks in this beautiful town. Of course, the next thing on the agenda was shopping. Then it was time for lunch and in one of the many colourful laneways we found a lovely restaurant and had a delicious paella and salad.</p> <p>The next day saw us firstly take a wonderful catamaran sail, on the Caribbean Sea, around the islands of St Kitts and Nevis. The sun was shining, the sky was a clear blue and gentle breeze was blowing across the bow. It was heavenly. This was followed by a scenic rail ride around St Kitts. We headed for the upper level of the train carriage and as we chugged along we crossed over narrow bridges, passed almond trees, sugar cane plantations, school children waving from the side of the track and small villages. We drank mango and strawberry daiquiris while listening to our guide’s commentaries in between which we were entertained by some local girls singing to us. It was a great excursion so take this one if you ever venture to this place.</p> <p>On March 29, we arrived at the capital of Barbados, Bridgetown. This port city reminded me of Port Vila or Nadi. It is quite third world, though I am sure there are beautiful resorts around the island just as there are in Fiji and other South pacific islands. We stopped for a drink at a bar by the water. I found the shopping quite lacking. There were the duty free expensive shops or the cheap quality merchandise. In any case, we decided to get out of the town which was quite disappointing and took a taxi to a lovely beach and spent the afternoon swimming in the beautiful clear aqua water and then lay on the sand under the shade of trees. Before we left the beach we found a food truck that served flying fish sandwiches and on the advice of our ship’s cruise director we bought one each. They were delish. Then it was time to get back to the ship.</p> <p>After a matinee concert on board, we docked at St Maarten at 3pm. This island is divided roughly between half belonging to the Netherlands and the other half belonging to France. St Maarten is a very pretty place on the Dutch side and the French side is called St Martin naturally. We grabbed a water taxi to a beach area opposite where the ship was anchored, sat at a bar drinking Carib, the local beer, using the free Wi-Fi to ring our younger daughter to wish her happy birthday. Then we scouted the shops around this beach area. This was an overnight stay on this cruise so it was back to the beach and tomorrow we would participate in an excursion of discovery.</p> <p>March 31 was another boringly beautiful day. It was time to take our trolley tram ride around the local capital, Phillipsburg. The ride was marvellous and we rode through the various streets and alley ways and pulled up at a resort. After alighting from the train, we walked uphill to the historic Fort Amsterdam. This was a very enjoyable excursion. Back at the boardwalk we sat down with my sister and brother in law and ordered more Carib. St Maarten was extremely hot. We sat at the bar looking back on a splendid beach and the beautiful blue shades of water and in the distance, was a view of our grand vessel. We took the water taxi back to the ship and were relieved as we entered from the gangway into deck 2 and air conditioning. Then it was straight up to Deck 14 for a late lunch at the Ocean View Buffet restaurant. The holiday was nearing the end. Two sea days and we would be back in Fort Lauderdale and there would be no boasting this time. I dreaded the packing and leaving such luxury behind.</p> <p>We fast forward to April 3. Our ship arrived at Fort Lauderdale at 6am. We were up and 6.30am, breakfast at 7am and off to our meeting place at 7.45am. We were booked on an excursion to the Florida Everglades and from there would be taken to Hollywood airport, Fort Lauderdale. It would be a total of 38 hours from the time we disembarked till I would unlock the front door, back home!</p> <p>So, we headed down the highway to the Everglades. The air boat ride was sensational. We saw plenty of different species of birds, five alligators, two also in captivity along with other animals at a rescue shelter within the Everglades reserve. We sampled grilled gator at a food truck at the Everglades. Then it was goodbye Florida, back to the airport and homeward bound.</p> <p><em><strong>Do you have a travel story to share? <a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/community/contributor/community-contributor/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Click here</span></a> to share your story with the Over60 community. </strong></em></p>

Cruising

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Over60 travel diary: Cruising the West Caribbean

<p><strong>Rosie Hersch, 68, is a retired pharmacist, whose hobbies include studying, cooking and theatre. Her biggest passion is travel and like the song says, “I've been everywhere man (well almost).”</strong></p> <p>We arrived at 9.30 pm, Fort Lauderdale time on March 10. It was a balmy Florida night. After a smooth check-in at our resort hotel on the beach it was straight to bed. We woke next morning surprisingly energetic. The very first thing we did was to knock on the hotel room door of our London friends who had also arrived the previous night. We spent March 11 and 12 together catching up, laughing over the good times, sharing stories about our kids and grandchildren back home, sunbaking, shopping and dining at two great restaurants, PF Chang, the first night and Coconut on the second night.</p> <p>March is spring break for the college kids that go to universities in the Southern American states. You can believe everything you see on those American college movies. They had invaded our hotel and during those two days they would gather on the beach in front of their fraternity flags. The girls in their flimsy bikinis much to the eyeful pleasure of my Peter and London Peter, and the guys hauling their alcoholic drinks. When night fell they became extremely noisy party animals. They would be still celebrating at 4 am.</p> <p>But we were all so excited about what was to come that we did not mind the noisy continual racket of these kids.</p> <p><strong>The cruise</strong></p> <p>March 13, our anticipated embarkation on the Celebrity Equinox had arrived. So the four of us booked a maxi taxi and headed for our ship which was to take us to the West Caribbean. Our London friends had New Hampshire friends whom we had not yet met who were joining us on this cruise. I was greatly anticipating meeting them. We did not know it as we approached our beautiful ship but we were about to have a wonderful time, the six of us, over the next 11 days.</p> <p>The boarding went smoothly and quickly. Ah, that glass of champagne that is offered as you step from the gangway into the foyer of deck 5. Three beautiful days at sea followed. There is no better feeling than sitting on your stateroom balcony, looking out at an ocean that stretches as far as the eye can see, listening to the swish and roar of the waves beating against the sides of the ship that glides gently along and feeling that cool Caribbean breeze gently fanning your face and blowing your hair so soothingly.</p> <p>So many activities, so much to do on a sea day if that’s your bag. If that is not your thing, lying on a pool lounge, soaking up the warmth of the tropical sun, the pool waiter handing you that delicious Daiquiri, ear phones plugged in to your favourite I tunes is such a pleasurable experience.</p> <p>Day 4 and we were in Costa Rica. We visited the Veragua rainforest exploring the flora and fauna on a tram top ride above the trees, walked a trail though the under growth then took a riverboat ride on the Tortuguero canal past mangroves, palms, plantains, watching for the numerous species of birds, sloths, alligators and cayman.</p> <p>Day 5 came and we were in Colon, east of Panama. We were driven to the Gatun locks to witness two ships pass through the locks. It is an incredible sight to see two enormous ships steadily transiting the canal with only about 18 inches clearance on both sides of the ship’s hull. Next stop, the man-made Gatun lake where the ships await passage through the Panama Canal either to the Pacific from the Atlantic or vice versa. Again, we witnessed nature’s beauty and saw more wildlife. We then alighted from a pier on the lake to visit a village of the Emberá Indian tribe. Through an interpreter, the chief, speaking in the Emberá language, told us that this entire area is a world heritage protected reserve and the tribes that live around this huge lake are not allowed to hunt any form of wildlife. Fishing is however permitted but watch out for the crocodiles that live in these waters!</p> <p>Day 6 and 7 and we are in a very hot Cartajena, Colombia. The old town has such beautiful Spanish and Moorish style architecture. A most enticing walk lead us to the house where Sir Francis Drake lived for a month to rest between his adventures on the high seas, plundering the Spanish forts and fleets for their gold and other valuables in the service of his Queen Elizabeth the first. After some shopping, we returned to the ship. This was an overnight stay in this port. The next morning many left the ship to further explore or to take an excursion. I stayed on board to relax and just chill out.  There is so much history in this place but the heat was too brutal for me to venture out again</p> <p>Day 8 and another beautiful sea day was spent attending lectures about the Caribbean, enjoying the culinary delights on board and browsing the many sales in the onboard shops. Around 4pm the heavens darkened, the wind came up and it was time to leave the poolside deck chair and retire to our cabin, to sit on the balcony and watch the dark clouds transform into rain. We were heading for Georgetown, Grand Cayman Island, and I was thinking what a shame I don’t have a small fortune to deposit in an offshore tax free account in one of the many banks on Grand Cayman. Then it occurred to me that I was still so lucky that I could afford to travel to this far-off destination.</p> <p>Day 9 and we had arrived in Cozumel, Mexico. We headed by ferry to the mainland of the Yucatan Peninsula and then bussed to a Mayan ruin site.  For those of you who have visited Pompeii, Herculaneum, Ephesus in Kusadesi or the Pyramids this is a tour, the travelling time of which took a total of 4 hours, was not as good as anticipated. If you have not seen ruins of the past then this excursion will most likely intrigue you.</p> <p>Day 10 and our last day spent at sea again, heading back to Fort Lauderdale and for most disembarkation on Day 11. But, not for me. Peter and I were staying on board to do a second cruise, this time to the East Caribbean. All through that last day people were grumbling about having to pack and go home. Wherever I was I must admit I was very cheekily gloating to other passengers that I did not have to pack because I was staying on board. I probably depressed at least 100 people that day. It was pretty naughty of me. However, I was both sad and excited. I was sad because our London friends and our New Hampshire friends were leaving but happy because my sister and brother-in-law were embarking for this second, my big birthday cruise. The last and only time that I had ever holidayed with my sister was 54 years ago when I was only 16.</p> <p>Keep an eye out for part 2 of Rosie Hersch’s cruise story.</p> <p><em><strong>Do you have a travel story to share? <a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/community/contributor/community-contributor/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Click here</span></a> to share your story with the Over60 community. </strong></em></p>

Cruising

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Diary of a cruise rookie

<p>In his first time on a super liner, Kevin Stent takes a three-day trip to Sydney on Explorer of the Seas, the largest cruise ship based in the South Pacific this season and leaves about five kilograms heavier and dreaming of his next adventure on the high seas.</p> <p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Kevin’s cruise diary:</span></strong></p> <p><strong>Day 1</strong></p> <p>Blimey, this floating resort is massive. Approaching the mega liner from Wellington's Aotea Quay,my neck hurts as I strain to get a complete view of the Explorer of the Seas.</p> <p>My room is on the sixth floor (the ship is 15 storeys high). Small but perfectly formed, it's an upmarket self-contained space, complete with minibar and flat screen TV.</p> <p>All unpacked, it's time find my way around this enormous floating hotel. Up on the top deck I'm surprised to realise we are already well out of the harbour. It barely feels like we are moving. A poolside band play a selection of wind muffled reggae classics. A huge gust of wind almost knocks me over - and my only pair of reading glasses fly overboard. A passenger wonders aloud if it's always this windy in Wellington. I pretend not to hear them.</p> <p>The best way to truly get your bearings on a mega liner is to take a self-guided tour. The glass pod like elevators offer great views, and at each level maps and interactive screens assist with navigation.</p> <p>It's a lot of fun exploring, which is just as well. The amenities are staggering: the ship has recently undergone a refit and now boasts a large "Royal Promenade" complete with shops, a cafe and bar. Elsewhere there's a 3-D movie theatre, more lounges and bars, a fitness centre, sauna, day spa, swimming pools, hot tubs and a solarium. There is a FlowRider surfing simulator, basketball court, mini golf, multisports simulator and even a rock climbing wall.</p> <p>"This is some kind of boat," I gush to a crew member, only to be swiftly corrected: "Sir, she is not a boat, she is a ship". Oops. Sorry it's my first time...</p> <p>Dinner is at 7pm and tonight there's a formal dress code. I feel a tad under-dressed but no-one bats an eyelid. The Royal Promenade is packed: loved-up elderly couples pose in front of the Xmas tree for professional photographers. Note to self: be nicer to my wife - we have a long way to go. The ship can accommodate 3100 guests and it's clear that the older demographic dominates the clientele on this journey.</p> <p>Tonight I feast at Chops Grille, which boldly promises the "best steak on the high seas". The grilled New York strip steak is so good the hype might even be true. The Grille is one of three specialty restaurants where prices are not included in the the cruise costs, along with hip American hamburger joint Johnny Rockets.</p> <p>I finish up the first day with a token attempt at exercise, strolling around the two-lane athletic track as the sun melts into the sea.</p> <p><strong>Day 2</strong></p> <p>A sign in the elevator tells me today is Thursday. Apparently it's easy to forget what day it is when you're cruising.</p> <p>At 7am I head to the gym on level 12. It's a magnificent view, with running machines spread out around a curved wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. Thirty minutes battling to stay upright was more than enough and I get off quite dizzy, the combination of the running and gentle roll of the ship taking its toll. Retreating to the exercycle I sit between two 70-something Aussie blokes discussing a "good looking broad from Adelaide". I feel dizzy again. </p> <p>Time for a plunge into the pool - but which one? There are 10. The tepid salt water option brings my heart rate back to approaching normal.</p> <p>Breakfast is at The Windjammer, a huge buffet-style dining area which is always open. Talk about the agony of choice - there are 10 food benches with every possible breakfast offering imaginable. I'm overwhelmed by the selection and plump for cereal and toast. For the next meal I'll be much bolder.</p> <p>I retreat to my cabin and try out cruise ship TV, with several promotional channels - nearly all of them featuring super-enthusiastic cruise director Graham. For something more sedate there's a live camera view of the ship's bow. I drift away watching her plough through the waves.</p> <p>I'm roused by the captain announcing over the intercom that we are 330 nautical miles from the South Island and travelling at 16.7 knots. Oh, and we're experiencing 4-metre swells.</p> <p>It's time for round two at The Windjammer restaurant and this time I'm ready for battle:  Cajun fish, Vietnamese catfish, Southern fried chicken, Shanghai noodles, sweet chilli shrimp, eggplant Parmigiana, Irish stew, Cantonese beef - and that's only from one food island.</p> <p>My head spins and I go in for the garbanzo salad, followed by cheesecake.</p> <p>By mid afternoon I'm in the grip of a food coma and am forced to take advantage of a complimentary massage in the day spa. Rohanna from the Philippines  works for 40 minutes on my neck and shoulders with a mix of incredibly strong fingers and forearms. A regular headache sufferer, this is the first one I've ever had cured without codeine.</p> <p>The afternoon slips by watching a big screen movie while sitting in a hot tub. Heaven.</p> <p>Dinner is at the specialty Japanese restaurant Izumi. Our table shares a selection of nigiri and sashimi, and ishiyaki (hot rock). The chef presents his signature dish - Izumi Ryu Futomaki- sashimi with spicy aioli, cream cheese and wakame salad with fried tempura.</p> <p>After an evening walk on the deck I return to my room to be greeted by a towel folded into the shape of an elephant.</p> <p><strong>Day 3</strong></p> <p>Today I brave  a walk up to top deck via the "Stairway of the Stars". Each floor level has a collection of framed photographic prints and artworks. Level 4 features Elizabeth Taylor, John Wayne and Audrey Hepburn by Milton H Greene, level 5 Woody Allen, Dolly Parton and Andy Warhol by Annie Leibovitz. Weirdly, a framed copy of Paul McCartney's album Londontown also features.</p> <p>At 11am the fitness centre presents "Secrets of a Flatter Stomach". I'm tempted, but instead wander back to the promenade and indulge in a cheesecake lollipop.</p> <p>Later I meet Jack from Brisbane, a 15-cruise veteran, who tells me the secret to lunch in The Windjammer is to hold your ground. I'd grabbed a great dining spot with ocean views, but returned with my dessert to find the super-efficient staff had cleared my table - and a family had taken my spot. Jack explains that the trick is  to "load up the table before you start eating with everything you want, even if you don't want it".</p> <p>By 3pm it's much warmer - we must be getting closer to Australia. I'm curiously gripped by a desire for exercise (perhaps my body has decided to fight back against all the food) so I tackle the surfing simulator, rock climbing wall and mini-golf. That night there's a 15-minute parade on the Promenade to mark the last night at sea on this leg, followed by a rock trivia competition in the Star Lounge. We move on to dinner at Giovanni's Table, the last of the main specialist dining options. I marvel at the thought of fine dining in an Italian restaurant in the middle of the Tasman Sea.</p> <p><strong>Day 4</strong></p> <p>What was supposed to be a leisurely cruise into Sydney becomes much more urgent when the captain announces a medical emergency. I hasten to add it's not me, after successfully negotiating an early morning workout and stretch session.</p> <p>Within hours Sydney's heads come into view, followed by the city centre. To further confirm we are in Australian waters, a huge team of chefs wheel out a queue of barbecues and a poolside band starts up.</p> <p>Sadly my rookie cruise ship experience is at an end and I'll be flying home.</p> <p>I'm asked at Customs if I have anything to declare. Indeed: I'm about 5kg heavier - and already dreaming about my next cruise.</p> <p>*The writer was a guest of Royal Caribbean International.</p> <p>Written by Kevin Stint. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Stuff.co.nz.</strong></span></a></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/travel/cruising/2015/11/picturesque-ports-to-visit/">8 picturesque ports to visit</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/travel/cruising/2015/12/most-luxurious-cruising-suites-in-the-world/">12 most luxurious cruising suites in the world</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/travel/cruising/2015/12/cruising-by-yourself/">8 reasons to go on a cruise by yourself</a></strong></em></span></p> <p> </p>

Cruising

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The grandparent diaries

<p><em><strong>Over60 community member, Carolyn Le-Grand, shares her thoughts on the special place three little grandkids play in her life.</strong></em></p> <p>“Grandkids are our future. I remember when I was growing up spending every holiday at my grandparents’ farm. These trips are indelibly imprinted on my mind and I want my grandkids to have happy memories of their grandparents and special experiences which hopefully will stay in their memories forever.</p> <p>Grandchildren will too quickly grow and have other priorities, as we did, so we want to grab every moment we can to form a lasting close relationship with them. I have three grandchildren – Crystal, 13, Nikita, 11 and Vance, five. Just some of the special memories I’ve had with them are:</p> <ul> <li>My little grandson Vance asked me who I was speaking to and I told him it was my friend Heather from Tasmania. His little eyes lit up and he smiled. He then asked if Tasmania was real. I told him it was and he said, “I knew it! So it is real?” “Yes Vance.” I said, “and I can take you there someday if you like”. Vance was beside himself with a smug look on his face. He couldn’t stop talking about it and asking when I would take him. It turned out that he thought Tasmania was Transylvania! He also had things a bit confused and thought Transylvania was where dinosaurs came from. When my friend Heather heard this she sent him a huge blow-up dinosaur, which only confirmed his suspicions! (Still wanting to go to Tasmania).</li> <li>The special times of passing along my skills to my granddaughters – teaching them to sew, cook and garden.</li> <li>Recently I bought the grandchildren some special vegetable seeds to grow. To keep their interest and ensure they tended the vegetable garden I bought seeds for the biggest pumpkin in the world (has grown to 1385lb but 22 to 44kg are more common), giant tomatoes (grow to three kilograms each) and the little grandson some colourful spaceship shape squash. The seeds are all up and about to be transplanted to their garden. They are all excited and waiting to see what they can grow! It will be interesting to see the outcome. </li> <li>Lying in bed with grandchildren and telling them stories from my childhood. This lead to me writing a book of little stories from my past to hand down to future generations.</li> <li>I am currently assisting my granddaughter Nikita with her inventions!  One of her inventions was not successful but the thought was there. She is a caring girl and always thinking of what can make older persons’ lives easier. This invention was to place a hook on the end of a walking stick so Nanna (great-grandmother) could hang her handbag or shopping.  However, having explained the impractical nature of this invention, although very thoughtful, she has now produced plans for something which will be practical, useful and convenient, making older persons’ lives more comfortable. (I am not at liberty to release further information at this stage as I am working on the prototype!) Nikita has also asked me about patents! She is only 11 years old so I can’t wait to see what the future has installed for her. Go girl!</li> <li>Crystal, my eldest granddaughter is the sporty one, the musical one and the academic! The high achiever! Trying to keep up with the entire goings on is a task on its own.</li> </ul> <p>I find it interesting that all of my grandchildren are so different. They all come from the same parents! Even from the youngest age (just after birth) the children displayed their personalities. Crystal was a fiery little firecracker, resisting cuddles and showing determination. Nikita was a placid little darling and grew up silently achieving (no fanfares for her). Vance is Vance! So proud of all three children and the people they becoming. Different personalities, all loved!</p> <p><em>Photo is a stock image and not of Carolyn Le-Grand.</em></p> <p> </p>

Family & Pets