I’ve worked out that there are only
30 minutes of each day when I cannot be sitting at a table and chowing down. That’s
between 11am when the Waves Grill closes after breakfast and 11.30am when it
re-opens for lunch. And I wouldn’t have
to restrict myself to breakfast in Waves; there’s also the Grand Dining Room, until
9.30am, or the Terrace Café, until 10am. And I’ve just realised that if I’m really and
truly, dangerously even, in need of sustenance during those barren 30 minutes I
could always take a trip up to the 12th deck and snack on the
miniature rolls and cakes tucked away, with fresh fruit juice, in the corner of
Barista’s coffee bar.
Yep I’m cruising. I embarked as a
passenger in Venice on 7th September and I’m likely to leave as
cargo in Lisbon on 29th.
I’m wondering if
people on an Oceania cruise reach an immunity level to the availability,
quantity and astonishing choice of high quality, freshly prepared food. A
little like people who start work in
chocolate factories and are told they can eat as much of it as they like, as
often as they like, and within two weeks have been cured of any desire for the
sweet milky drug. I’ll let you know when the novelty of being served, and
eating, breakfast, morning coffee, brunch, lunch, afternoon tea and dinner has
worn off. Portion control, that’s the trick. Will someone please show me how
that trick works?
And if being gastronomically
assaulted from all sides on board ship isn’t enough there’s also the food
ashore, like this lunch I had in Dubrovnik a couple of days ago: blue cheese
risotto garnished with freshly grilled Adriatic shrimp.
The old walled city of Dubrovnik
is a UNESCO World Heritage site though that didn’t stop the Yugoslav People’s
Army from shelling it in 1991 during the Croatian war for independence, an
action that contributed to the diplomatic and economic isolation of Serbia and
Montenegro and led to the international recognition of Croatia as an
independent state.
Walking through the old city
today it’s hard to imagine what it looked like two decades ago. It’s even harder to imagine the violence and
atrocities that took place in the region too, neighbour turned against
neighbour, even families dissected and destroyed. Twenty years isn’t a long
time. What were you doing in 1991/2? I attended my first ever residential
writing course at Ty Newydd in North Wales. I was running my second-hand
bookshop, Foxed & Bound, and studying part-time for a Diploma in Comparative
Literature. People in the Balkans were living in fear of their lives. They were
grieving and dying in the onslaught of racial and religious hatred whipped up
by political factions.
Today the ship stops at Giardini
Naxos in Sicily, the site of the first Greek colony on the island. In the
archaeological museum there’s a display of pots and bowls and amphorae, the ordinary
vessels of daily life from the 6th and 7th centuries BCE.
The lived, they ate, they died.
Nothing much changes. Even how we treat one another. What happened in the
Balkans shocked the world. We didn’t believe that those kinds of atrocities
could happen, again, in our post-holocaust ‘civilised’ West. Will human beings
ever learn?
Hungry Writing Prompt
Write about excess, going too
far, about too much of any one thing.
Comments