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Saturday, February 13, 2010

Seeing Hawaii in Cruising Style

     The Hawaiian language is based on five vowels and just seven consonants, but this is more than enough to utter the word "Aloha".
     This greeting written out in lights already  welcomes those arriving at Honolulu airport, but it is in fact much
more than a greeting or farewell. Aloha means love and well-being and somehow stands for everything  that goes to make up the image of  Hawaii, from colourful shirts, through flower garlands and grass skirts to coconut bikinis.
     Hawaii is the "Aloha State" and  the 50th state of the United States of America. A visitor to these islands in the middle of the Pacific feels immediately that he has one foot firmly anchored in the American Way of Life, and this is particularly true when he sees the islands from the vantage point of a cruise ship.
     "Aloha. How are you today?" is a frequently asked question on the "Pride of Aloha". The simple response,
"Fine", or Mahalo in Hawaiian, suffices as answer.
     The passenger aboard the Norwegian Cruise Line vessel would have little reason to respond otherwise. At breakfast, travellers are greeted by mountains of ham and pancakes,and this is the pattern throughout the day.
     Most of the almost 2,000 aboard have their homes in the U.S. Midwest, where there is general scorn at the notion of going on diet.
     The Pride of Aloha bears witness to this attitude, consuming 9,700 kilograms of meat during the seven-
day cruise – the equivalent of 700 grams per passenger per day.
     The Norwegian Cruise Line is no more Norwegian than the food aboard the Pride of Aloha is Hawaiian.
The cruise ship belongs to Star Cruises, the third-largest cruise operator in the world, and the Pride of Aloha was built in 1999, initially bearing the name Norwegian Sky.
     In 2004 it was converted for duty on the Pacific cruise route and is the first cruise ship to fly the U.S. flag in some time.
     A cruise aboard the Norwegian Cruise Line vessel is perhaps the most comfortable and by no means the most exclusive way to see Hawaii.
     A cabin with a sea view costs as little as 1,250 euros per person for the seven nights of the cruise. Included in the price is full board, a nightly entertainment program and transfers between the four most important islands of the Hawaiian Archipelago, Oahu, Kauai, Big Island and Maui.
     Honolulu on Oahu, where the cruise starts, has a population of  900,000 inhabitants and is the largest
human settlement in the South Sea.
Taken from: The Jakarta Post, February 13, 2005