Castaway Cay. Well, kinda. We docked at CC without any problems, which is good. I had heard that a few weeks before,
DCL had been unable to dock there. That would have been disheartening. But luckily, Captain Gus got us in safe and sound. We got a quick breakfast up at BB. By the way, this is the first time weve stayed this far aft (5622 is the first stateroom off the aft lifts on the starboard side on Deck 5), and it was extremely convenient, especially for food and the beverage station on Deck 9. Very cool. The one thing we noticed at breakfast out on deck is that it was REALLY windy. Im talking 20-30mph sustained winds, the entire time we were eating.

Whew.
After breakfast, we walked down to the DVC desk for our meeting. They took us down to the DVC conference room, which is an inside stateroom on Deck 2 with all the normal furniture removed and an office wedged into it. It was surprisingly roomy, but as it also doubled as the DVC goodies storage room, it was a bit Mad-Hattery. We met with Ricardo, who was just super-nice. As I said before, we were pretty familiar with the guts of the DVC, so we could skip that portion of the pitch, and move right into dollars and points. We were in there about an hour, and walked out with 270 points a year at the Animal Kingdom Villas. Plus hats.
The astounding thing to us was the amount and quality of the incentives that they were offering onboard the ships if you bought in. First, they gave us $6.25 per point back as a gift card, and allowed us to basically cut our down payment by almost 60%. Second, they gave us a free week with RCI, which is now their partner in non-Disney-owned timeshare properties. Then, they gave us the option of a free 7-day cruise in a category 9 or an extra years worth of points. We debated, but finally decided on the extra points (which are known as Developer Points). And were glad we did, especially with the bounceback offer that showed up the next night. While we were waiting on some stuff to print out, I asked Ricardo what an average week of sales onboard looked like. I almost fell out of my chair when he told me that on average, they did about

$300,000.00

a week in DVC sales. Wow. I guess that would explain the dozens of people we saw over the next two days wearing brand new DVC member red hats.
So we were feeling pretty good about ourselves, happy with our decision, and we headed down off the ship onto CC. Walked over to the gift shop, and found a couple of really nice shirts. Any time I can find a decent shirt in my size, Im happy. DCL (and WDW) dont offer any tall sizes, and Im 64, 270, so I end up with a 3X, which are unfortunately few and far between. Their 2X cut on me ends up looking like a half-shirt. And Im not going there. (Youre all

)
Jumped the trolley and headed out to Serenity Bay. Now, I am a huge fan of the cancelled before its time masterpiece of television Firefly (from Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy), and any of you who are also fans know what the name Serenity means to us Browncoats
theres no place I can be / since I found Serenity / you cant take the sky from me
(btw, if nothing in that last sentence made any sense to you, its okay.

But I would always recommend people watching that show on dvd. Youll be hooked.) So Im always happy when I get there. Now, at this point, its probably 10:30 or so, and Ive been here enough times to figure were going to be in a chair about ¾ of the way down the beach, and its going to take us fifteen minutes of sand-walking to get there.
But no. We ended up in chairs directly in front of the bar.

So Ive got great music behind me, beautiful water in front of me. What could be better? Well, maybe something less than the 20mph wind we were getting. It was almost too cold to take your shoes off, let alone go down to a bathing suit or even think about getting in the water. We stayed out there for about an hour or so, hoping as the day warmed up, it would get better. Eventually, though, we just decided to pack it in. We did hit the cookout over by the adult beach, which is just outstanding. I love how sheltered and secluded we felt.
There was a small group of people eating next to us, and I so wanted to just go over and sit down and hang out with them. They had sat next to us the night before at the show. The guy was probably early 60s, and he had a not-so-hidden Mickey dyed black into his silver hair. I feel guilty I didnt go over and talk to them. Michele and I want to be them when were older. He knew everybody, everybody seemed to know him, and its obvious that they were having a great time. If youre out there sir, thanks for inspiring me just a little, and reminding us all that youre never too old to dream.
I had another tiny episode of frustration here, as well. Now, as you know, DCL is very good (in my opinion) about enforcing their age restrictions. As adult travelers, I very much appreciate that.

Ive seen people asked to leave Diversions with two 9-year-olds. Ive seen 16-year-olds asked to leave the adult pool. But always in a very respectful and quiet manner, which is the best way to handle it. So at one point Michele is up getting some more to drink, and sorta stumbles into the middle of a scene. I dont know whether this guy was out on a bike or just walking around, but hed brought his three young kids (probably 4, 6 and 9?) into the little food area, and he was filling up on drinks while his kids ran around making a ridiculous amount of noise and bumping into people. (Please remember theres a huge water cooler just out by the tram stop that was not 40 feet away, put there especially for this purpose.) The CMs in the area were quietly informing the guy that this was an over-18 area, and he basically got belligerent and said but
my kids are thirsty. Well, sir, in that case, then obviously the rules do not apply to you, and you are free to do whatever you want to do, all day, every day. The rest of us will just sit here in the dirt and eat wet cigarette butts so as to stay out of the way of you and your obviously superior offspring.
I

sarcasm.
Anyway
After we ate, we rode back to the central part of the island, which, sheltered from the wind, was warm, sunny, and incredibly comfortable.

Oh, well. We eventually made our way back on to the ship and started looking at DVC destinations. And we watched one of the jet-ski tours come zipping by the ship. We may do that next time. It looked fun. But it looked like everybody was doubled up, and Michele looked at me and said hey, pal, Im getting my own, bite me.

Hee hee
We got a call from Ricardo with DVC and asked if we could come and sign our official papers that evening, so we did. We were totally planning on watching Bolt in 3-D, but it just sorta never happened. I heard good things about it, though. So now, with the
Castaway Club stuff and the DVC stuff, we have two more tote bags than we had 48 hours ago. Thats a lot of toting capacity.
We had Palo reservations tonight, which we never miss. Weve had some amazing experiences there, and cannot say enough good things about it. Our server was Coskun (I think) from Turkey. Just as he pronounced his name, somebody behind us sneezed, so I havent the foggiest idea how its actually pronounced. He was really, really good. We are hugely devoted to the Palo calamari, and we always get an order. We remarked how much we love it, and he ended up bringing us two orders. Thats a lot. I had the lasagna, which was a special dish, and it was fabulous. Michele ordered the salmon, but when it arrived, it was a HUGE piece of fish, but unfortunately had this raw onion relish stuff on top of it (which wasnt really mentioned in the menu). Michele does NOT do onions, and the problem was that the flavor of the onions and soaked down into the fish and really drowned out the salmon. She debated about saying anything, but the next time he came to the table, he knew something was wrong. We felt bad, but she ordered the filet (which showed up in like five minutes) to replace it. Our server apologized, the maitre d apologized, but it really wasnt that big a deal.
Then, of course, the soufflés. Please allow me a small moment of Homer Simpson here, while I wipe the drool off my chin
They were showing the first Pirates movie on the Dumbotron, and we talked about watching it, but we were both exhausted from another long day of doing nothing.