This photo was taken on Christmas Day. Here I made friends with Daisy up on Deck 12. She is catching some rays with her handsome boyfriend Donald.
Friday, December 31, 2010
Daisy & Donald In The Sun
This photo was taken on Christmas Day. Here I made friends with Daisy up on Deck 12. She is catching some rays with her handsome boyfriend Donald.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Pinocchio
We Are Sailing
The Disney Dream finally set sail for its big crossing over the Atlantic ocean on Sunday December 19, 2010. I slept great without any notice of the moving ship. It wasn't until I went to brush my teeth the next morning that I felt the ship moving. It was a new feeling to me since I have never been on a cruise ship before. It felt very strange, but I was happy that it didn't make me sick. My returning friends said it was a very smooth sail. I continued to notice it all day it surprised me how much we are always rocking. Our cabins and the theater are all the way forward so we can feel the movement of the ship a great deal. I can't deny that for the rest of the day I was so perplexed that people actually live and work in these conditions. I guess I just didn't really know what to expect. I just hoped my Dad was right in saying "It's a gigantic mall, you won't feel a thing." Well Dad…I wish you were right.
The afternoon of day 3 is when the rocking really took a turn. I was eating dinner at the crew mess on deck 2 and the waves were about 18 feet high. The waves were so big when they crashed they covered the entire port hole window; it was awesome to watch. The captain explained that they were expecting to hit waves up to 30 ft high. It was the rockiest that evening around bedtime. A few of my friends did not take the rocking too well, but I was surprisingly feeling okay throughout it all. It helps to keep your knees bent and your muscles engaged to stay strong with the way the ship is pulling you. I also made sure to keep eating and drink sprite to ensure my stomach would be fully prepared. Sea Calm is the pill they give out at medical for sea sickness. They make you drowsy, so I have only been taking them at night before bed. But overall I found that it is completely mind over matter. I kept saying that to everyone. It was funny because a couple days later I was telling my parents about the rocking and the first thing that came out of my Dad's mouth was "It's really just mind over matter". I guess you could say I'm Grant's daughter alright!
The rocking eventually slowed down by the next morning on day 4. We finally saw the sun and the temperature was climbing. It was about 55 degrees here in this photo, it felt like spring! Since then it has been a pretty smooth sail.
Drills on the Disney Dream
Friday, December 17, 2010
A CHRISTMAS SURPRISE FOR MY FAMILY
Saturday, December 11, 2010
My Cabin
Bremerhaven, Germany
We Met the Dream!
THE SHIP IS BEAUTIFUL!! Oh my gosh, it's the coolest thing! I have never even seen a cruise ship, let alone live on one. It is massive and it's even crazier to see icicles hanging from the "Disney Dream" sign because it's so cold here. There is ice all over the deck. My friend Morgan actually slipped on the deck as soon as we walked on board. whoops…we were a little excited! :)
Unfortunately I cannot post any pictures of the ship until Disney has declared it finished. They do not want pictures of the ship unfinished to be public. Don't you worry, I will post plenty of pictures of the finished product!
December 9th is the first official day that Disney holds ownership of the Disney Dream. When we first arrived on the ship, Disney did not own the ship yet; the company from Germany still held ownership. That company is still doing work all over the place. There are still many things that are unfinished. It feels like a full on work zone in some areas. It has improved a lot since of first arrival, but they still have lots of work to do. There are boxes, stacks of metal, rolls of carpets and much more all over the place! The first week was so overwhelming. Sometimes I felt like I was totally in the way because everywhere I would turn a German guy in a royal blue jump suit was painting a wall, drilling some part of the floor together, or carrying a long metal rod down the hallway! Everything is covered in plastic; most of the carpets, railings, auditorium seats and just about anything that could have bubble wrap on it! Even the tables, chairs, couches and countertops in our crew bar is still covered in bubble wrap; it's hilarious! For the first week the gigantic lighting fixture in the main lobby which they call the atrium is split into 3 separate pieces, hanging from the ceiling because they are still working on it. Sometimes you try to walk somewhere and a hallway will randomly be closed off because they are painting the floor or something so you have to figure out how to get around it. Getting around the ship is very difficult because there are no direct routes, you always have to change direction to a different hallway or through many, many doors. It's so confusing! But, I am starting to get the hang of it.
Due to the construction we don't always have space available for rehearsals, so we have had our share of time off here and there. In our time off we have actually been able to go into the town of Bremerhaven. It's so cute! Germany really neat. There is a free shuttle service provided for us so we able to go to town whenever we want. In Bremerhaven there is a huge mall as well as an outdoor Christmas Village with craft vendors, a few little outdoor bars, carnival like rides, and even a man-made hill of snow for sledding in tubes! My friends and I did it; it was so much fun!
My cabin is super cute. I share with my friend Emma, I absolutely love her. All of us characters are in one hallway which is so fun! I can knock on anyone's door and find a friend to go to dinner with! Our crew cafeteria (which we call the crew mess) is for the German workers at the moment, so the crew has the privilege of eating in one of the guest dining rooms. The food is actually pretty good, but all the returnees say that it will most definitely get worse once we move on to the crew mess food. yikes…not looking forward to that!
The Walt Disney Theater is amazing! It is so beautiful and it is also so incredibly high tech it's almost scary. We have three lifts, which are parts of the stage that elevate down below the stage to move props and to transport people. They move so fast!!! It's scary!! But also very cool of coarse. I have never worked on such a technically advanced theater. I am really looking forward to performing on this stage. :)
Our phones are not working yet, and we have very limited internet privileges right now. We are only permitted to use it from about 9pm-8am. It is not at all consistent, sometimes it's just not working at all, and it is extremely slow when it does work.
I have almost no concept of what day or time it is. I have to wear a watch because I would never know what time it is. We are also 6 hrs ahead of you which is terribly confusing for when I want to contact my parents.
We leave on December 19, and I have no idea if I will be able to contact anyone. But, we are scheduled to be in Florida on January 4th. Once we get there, I can use my phone and finally make contact with the real world!!! yay!
Okay so that sums up a lot of my life right now, and it will be changing everyday. There is so much going on here, it's crazy. But, I am having so much fun I have made a lot of new friends. I am totally enjoying myself and I am so happy I took this job.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Gronigen, The Netherlands
On Monday we had the afternoon off and a bunch of us took a cab into the happening city in Gronigen. It was quite chilly, and the streets were filled with bikers. They would come at you in every direction and they did not care if you were trying to cross the street. The second photo here is some sort of bike drop off station. The third photo is of the Martini Tower, a few of us took the tour and climbed up the tower. The brick spiral stairs were very narrow and we climbed all the way to the top where you can see over the city. The fourth photo is a view from the top of the tower. We shopped and explored until dark, as you can see in the last photo.
Travelling to the Ship
We left Toronto Saturday November 27th to fly to Amsterdam, The Netherlands. It was a really neat airport. The first five photos were taken at the airport in Amsterdam. The flight was not too bad, about 7 hours. We left at 6pm east coast time and then we flew into the central european time zone (6 hrs ahead) and it was morning time there about 7am. Then we took a bus to the first hotel, still in Amsterdam. We checked in with the Disney people there and ate breakfast until we got onto another bus that took us 2 hrs to the middle of nowhere in The Netherlands, to a town called Zuidbroek, Gronigen. We had to stay there a few days because the ship was doing sea trials. Sea trials are tests the limits and capabilities of the ship at sea, so the ship did not dock until Tuesday night. So we stayed at that hotel until Tuesday morning.
On Monday we took a cab into the happening city in Gronigen and spent almost the whole day there. I'm not too sure what it was called, we all just called it Gronigen. The next post will have a description and pictures from that little outing.
On Tuesday all the new hires had to go through what we call "wet drills". It's a safety course on water survival. As you can see in the sixth photo, we had to wear red dry suits. That is my friend Morgan pushing all the air out of her dry suit. Obviously the idea is that the suits keep you dry. They were all extra large and it was obviously not tight enough for me, so I was unable to stay dry. The last photo was taken at the marine school where the wet drills were held. The indoor pool was freezing! But, I guess we were lucky to have it there instead of the waters the ship is sitting on now. We had to practice certain survival positions in the water in groups. Then we had to practice getting into a life raft, helping others into the life raft, and also practice flipping the life raft right side up if it were to flip over. It was really fun, besides being cold, but we were able to meet a lot of new people in other departments on the ship.
After our wet drills we took a 3 hr bus ride to finally get to the ship in Bremerhaven, Germany.