Okay, here we are, finally ashore on
Castaway Cay. On each of our three days there (one in 2013, two on this 2014 double dip cruise,) we stopped for this photo op.
I love the Dream, I love CC, so I love that picture. All good things, all good things.
As I mentioned (somewhere? on the blog?) you pick up your towels as you exit the ship. I'm on a Bahamian paradise, I have no right to complain, but I'm going to complain just a little bit here. I imagine it is probably a conservation/laundry issue, and they want to encourage one towel per person. But say you are a mom of three kids....
You are already managing all of the random beach gear and sunscreen. Your one opportunity to pick up (free) towels is almost the moment your foot touches the dry ground. Before you get to the beach, you will stop for approximately fourteen (okay five) photo opportunities, walk either eight minutes to the nearest beach or four minutes to the trolley stop. You will be glad to have your towels as you play at the beach. When you are ready for a lunch break, you've got five sopping towels, because even though you yourself found the water too cold to swim, your kids have splashed you and begged you to come in and you are wet too. Now you could drop these sopping wet towels off in one of the many receptacles, but then if you choose to swim again after lunch, somebody is going to schlep herself all the way back to the dock to get five more towels. So you are going to encourage every person to manage their own towel. And their own lunch tray. At the same time. Oops, that kid's towel is already on the ground. In the bathroom. Where is your husband during this, can't he help? Well, he is carrying the two bags and the kid who can't walk because their "feet are too sandy." So we are back to you. Carrying the four remaining non-disgusting towels, your own lunch tray and maybe one or two other lunch trays. For the love of Walt Disney, can I please, please just be done with these towels and pick up some fresh white ones at the beach when we leave the water, because it is November and we are in the Bahamas, not the Carribbean, and it's not completely sweltering and more than a little windy when we are again dripping wet and walking back to the ship at the end of the day.
I would imagine this is why their souvenir towels sell so well. Next time (?) I will save up a little spending money, use the free towels in the morning. Ditch them when we are done swimming and buy new ones after the second round of swimming. Why didn't I think of that sooner?! Oh yeah, because I am super cheap. But it's a good strategy anyway. Feel free to use it if you are someone who would spend more than $5 on your CC souvenirs. We came home with a magnet, but we spent hundreds on professional photography, so I will call that my souvenir budget. TETO.
Since I mentioned cold water, I'll just dive right into that subject. Early November 2013: Brr, this water takes a little getting used to. Let's go down that awesome water slide into the ocean over there. Fun! November 2014: You all play in those rough waves right there. I will be in this little chair right here.
Did I mention we were having a GOOD time? Towel rant aside, these days were golden. It was windier this year, yes, the water was choppier. Last year, the big guys went snorkeling. This year my oldest kid swam out to the monkey bar/obstacle course looking thing, but nobody wanted to do Pelican Plunge. Did any of this stop my kids from hours of digging in the sand with their bare hands for hours? Nope. Was I sorry to sit with my feet in the waves and my face in the sun? Uh-uh.
I'm going to take a second and see if I can get back to the chronology of the day... Before we got to the beach, we stacked our five dry towels to the side and got in the photo with this guy:
Yes, all three of my kids wear prescription Transition lenses. Almost all of our beach photos come in option a) squinting or b) sunglasses.
Then we deposited the towels at our beach spot:
(There are three kids in the hammock, you have to look twice for the camo kindergartner.) I loved all the shade available. I don't know what it would be like when the ship is full of families on summer break, but we never had a problem getting a chair, a hammock, or an umbrella in November. The sun was actually pretty warm, just ask me when I was staring into it, waiting for the tram to take us from beach to beach.
We played, we swam, we moved from one family beach to the other. The first one had really gritty rough sand, and we didn't remember it being like that before, so we tried another spot and found the beautiful, comfy, wet sand that you can dig your feet into and let the waves wash over. Paradise.
We tried and failed to tie towels around our waists and go to Cookies BBQ for lunch. Have you seen these pictures of my kids? Not a single hip among them. But we succeeded at the lunch part eventually, and it was delicious. I remember I got some kind of chicken with the same marinade that my son had ordered off the adult dinner menu the night before and my eyes rolled into the back of my head. I ordered steak for dinner every night because it's something I don't cook well myself, but, oh, that chicken. I will eat that chicken at lunch every day. (Except I didn't. But I would have.) Don't quote me on which MDR has that chicken though, because maybe that was the second day at CC and he had ordered it for dinner at Enchanted Garden that night, not Animator's Palate the night before. I'd hate to send you on a wild chicken hunt. Order steak or seafood in the main dining rooms and eat the chicken and RIBS (the RIBS!) at Castaway Cay. Alright, I'm not a foodie, but I am a mediocre home chef and I'm impressed when I taste something that I haven't previously made myself. Almost everything we ate on the cruise falls into that category.
We also found In Da Shade.
Somehow we missed this last year, but it's got two mini-golf holes, shuffleboard, ping pong, billiards, free throw hoops, all... in da shade. There were also tables with umbrellas and a rope fence I used to hang up the towels. (Okay, enough about the towels already.) It's also right next to some bathrooms. I was ready to camp out there for a good while. I was also hoping that the kids could get their ping-pong fix in, because playing on windy Deck 11 (12?) was on the bottom of my list of things to do. DH actually took the oldest back there the next day for some "guy time" while I watched the little ones entertain themselves on the water's edge. We ran into our other most favorite CM several times on the island, and here she was, about to run a free throw contest, but we had other places to go.
I'm just going to power through the rest of our island time before I wrap up this post. We took the kids to Scuttle's Cove (childcare) so that we could check out Serenity Bay (adult's only beach.) We had to negotiate how long we were going to leave them there, because they claim to like it less than the on board childcare. I think it was probably only 90 minutes on this day, because we had to be back on board by 4:30 or 5 p.m.
Ah, Serenity Bay. These two pictures are from 2013, when the water was so smooth, we were up to our knees and this far from shore:
And here we are with our half-price Bahama Mama's last year (a deal that was sadly not to be found this time
We had another CC day coming up for Day 3, and we did more new things. Even after that, we agreed we'd need at least one more visit to CC to say we had seen and done it all there. But next time, just a little warmer water, smoother seas.. please?
Our on board adventures continue in Day 2, Part 5: formal night, Enchanted Garden, a show, a surprise, and of course our nightly visit to the D Lounge. What does this self-identified "musical theatre person" think of the
DCL main stage shows? I'll try to remember to tell you in a future post.
