CACruisin'
<font color=teal> If she can do this, so can I!<br
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2005
- Messages
- 2,626
Rae Annm thanks so much for all the info/pic's/etc you have posted! It has been great!
DH is definitely in your DH's camp regarding DIS color and thinks he has a good point about the canopy tour too!
DH is patient with my DIS "habit", but definitely considers it an addiction
I am game with a cruise meet. We are not travelling with an extended group (just us) so it will be fun to "meet" everyone and know other people on the ship.
Reading the live reports has been great. It is wonderful to finally get some solid information to plan with! I must say I am not surprised about it being cold on the ship -- It is sailing "in" the June Gloom. Hopefully, it will be warmer by tomorrow.
For those of you not from Southern Ca, June Gloom is the marine layer along the coast in May and June. It is overcast, foggy, and occasionally even drizzly in the morning. As the day heats up, the marine layer burns off or recedes back over the ocean so it is generally sunny and nice in the late morning and afternoon. The marine layer rolls back in for the evening and night. It has something to do with the desert heating up and "sucking" the moisture inland from the ocean, I think? Dave or Rae Ann, maybe you can help out if this explaination is confusing?

DH is definitely in your DH's camp regarding DIS color and thinks he has a good point about the canopy tour too!



I am game with a cruise meet. We are not travelling with an extended group (just us) so it will be fun to "meet" everyone and know other people on the ship.
Reading the live reports has been great. It is wonderful to finally get some solid information to plan with! I must say I am not surprised about it being cold on the ship -- It is sailing "in" the June Gloom. Hopefully, it will be warmer by tomorrow.

For those of you not from Southern Ca, June Gloom is the marine layer along the coast in May and June. It is overcast, foggy, and occasionally even drizzly in the morning. As the day heats up, the marine layer burns off or recedes back over the ocean so it is generally sunny and nice in the late morning and afternoon. The marine layer rolls back in for the evening and night. It has something to do with the desert heating up and "sucking" the moisture inland from the ocean, I think? Dave or Rae Ann, maybe you can help out if this explaination is confusing?
