Ketchikan, AK - The gateway to Alaska. The last time I was here, I didn't take the opportunity to visit Creek Street. This time around, I made sure that I had the chance to see it.
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The day started by us waking up early and going back to the bed to rest for a while. Then, we got dressed and went to the main dining room for breakfast. There were already 6 other people sitting there, and we broke into conversation with 3 of them. (Of the 3 we didn't speak with, 2 were not native English speakers, and 1 was on the spectrum.) It was a pleasant and lively conversation about cruising in general, 1 person being a former travel agent. All too soon it had to end. RQS and I had to make it to the staging station to take the shuttle to the Alaskan Lumberjack Show.
As expected, there was a little confusion in the theater when our group was called to go outside. No one knew where to sit, and we (like others) were scattered across the theater and had to make our way to our group as it was leaving the theater. But we made it OK, and got onto the shuttle which would take us into the heart of town for the show.
The Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show is a competition between two 2-man teams competing against each other. There is a bit of humor thrown into the narrative, but it is simply a friendly timber sports competition. Everything one might have seen lumberjacks do in their work 100 years ago, one would see today in competition. These are skills which this show preserves for posterity as entertainment.
After the show, we walked over to Creek Street and visited Miss Dolly's House. Dolly, a former bordello owner kept her business running until prostitution ended in the 1950's. However, the house itself is shown mostly as it was when Dolly passed - as an old woman who chose to stay in town when others of her profession left. When done with Miss Dolly's, we walked along Creek Street and explored the area. Then we went for lunch at a local shop. It started to drizzle (no surprise here - Ketchikan gets over 240 days of rain each year), so we decided to take the local free shuttle back to the ship and rest for a while.
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When dinner time came, we went to the main dining room and sat at our usual shared table. Our dinner reservation was for 7 pm, and no others were at our shared table by 7:30. So we ordered our food, and had a nice meal. Since our waiter, Marco, had time, he asked us some questions about how we felt about cruising on Princess. We mentioned that this is our favorite cruise line, and explained why. Then, he asked whether we had cruised on Carnival, and we said 'no'. He asked why, and we noted that they have a completely different target demographic, and he agreed with us. Marco is a waiter who loves his work, and his professionalism and personality comes out in every meal he serves to "his" cruisers.
It was nice to have a pleasant conversation with Marco. But I think the relatively empty dining room gave him the time and freedom to do so. We would have loved to know more about his life, but he was slightly too busy for us to consider that conversation. And it was just as well, as there are some things that are best not known. With that being said, we want Princess Cruises to know how good a waiter Marco is, and that we'll be sure to write about him in both post-cruise surveys and in emails to Princess' corporate offices.






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