So when our captain announced Tuesday evening that a Portuguese planned strike would prevent us from going to Funchal, Madeira and we would be stopping in Gibraltar instead, I did a happy dance around the cabin.
American writer Paul Theroux, in his Pillars of Hercules says, “Gibraltar is just a conspicuous pile of limestone, to which distance adds enchantment.”
Maybe that has always been the case with me. I’ve been enchanted by the place because it was so far from my world. . .I remember being introduced to ‘the rock’ in those Prudential Insurance advertisements during my childhood and it seemed light years from anything I’d ever visit. Of course, I’ve always wanted to see those famous apes who inhabit it. . .whatever the case, I’ve always loved the rock.
I was so excited about our visit that I was out on the deck by 6:30 a.m. – a time still so dark that the Big Dipper looked as if it were sitting on our railing. The waterway was filled with brightly lit ferries and freighters.
Our ship, already creeping in at a snail’s pace began a gradual turn to the right just as daylight was arriving and as we turned, the The Rock of Gibraltar came into view.
It was magic, I tell you, pure, unadulterated travel magic!
Spain ceded Gibraltar to Great Britain in the 1700’s and Sir Winston Churchill is quoted as saying of them, “As long as the apes remain, so will the British.” It seems to be true as the apes continue to entertain tourists in this place that continues to be a British colony.
Leaving Gibraltar – sailing between The Pillars of Hercules at sunset– one on north Africa’s coast, the other being Gibraltar was as magical as our arrival. I am already thinking I must return.
The sea is smooth, the temperatures a most welcome 73-degrees. Today reminds us of why we love transatlantic cruises. I took this photo this morning while having morning coffee on our deck – the sea and sunrise couldn’t have been better