Friday/ Nha Trang, Viet Nam 🇻🇳

The Diamond Princess arrived at the pier in Cam Ranh at 7 am this morning.

My coach bus excursion to Nha Trang was a whirlwind tour consisting of a visit to Po Nagar Temple, a short cruise on Cai River, and visits to an ancient house built from ebony wood, a mat weaving shop and an arts & crafts market.

Thursday/ another day at sea 🌊

The Diamond Princess was still plying her way through the waters of the South China Sea towards the port of Cam Ranh today.
We are due in at 7 am in the morning.

The plaques with artwork on them are from the walls on the Promenade Deck. They commemorate the dates when the Diamond Princess called ports around the world.

The inaugural call for the Port of Seattle was May 29, 2004. This is the very year she was delivered from the shipyard of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in Tokyo, Japan to the cruise line.

The other two plaques are from Nha Trang. (Passenger cruise ships stopped calling directly at Nha Trang’s main port starting around late September 2024. The pier was closed for urgent repairs and safety issues, forcing cancellations and rerouting to alternatives like Cam Ranh Port. Some ships are scheduled for returns for 2026 after the completion of the repairs.)

Wednesday/ at sea 🌊

The Diamond Princess is making her way northwards across the South China Sea towards Cam Ranh Bay— the large and deep natural harbor on Vietnam’s south-central coast.

Cam Ranh is famous for its strategic military history as a major US naval and air base during the Vietnam War.
Fifty years on, it is now a developing tourism spot with beautiful beaches like Bai Dai and proximity to the city of Nha Trang.

Tuesday/ anchors aweigh 🛳️

Early on Tuesday afternoon, it was time to run out to the Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore to board the Diamond Princess for our 14-day cruise up and down and around the Malay Peninsula.

The view from the top deck of the Diamond Princess alongside Pier 1 at the Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore, with the Singapore city skyline in the near distance.
The construction of the S$500 million terminal began in October 2009 and was completed in May 2012.

The tugboat helps a little to make sure the Diamond Princess pulls away from the pier securely.

In the mean time there is party music and Sail Away festivities happening on the top deck.

At about 4.35 pm we had moved away from the cruise terminal and we were on the way. That is Mein Schiff 6 at Pier 2, a cruise ship owned by TUI Cruises.

I was too late to make it to the top deck to catch a glimpse of the setting sun and will do better tomorrow. The Diamond Princess is making her way due east from Singapore and will soon turn northeast.

Monday/ the Gardens by the Bay 🌴

The Gardens by the Bay is a futuristic nature park spanning 101 hectares of reclaimed land right in the center of the city.

The Flower Dome is the world’s largest glass greenhouse and features a spectacular ensemble of plants, trees and flowers from all over the world.

Sunday night / the Marina Bay Waterfront Promenade 🏙️

These pictures are all from the Marina Bay Waterfront Promenade where the Marina Bay Sands Hotel is.

The hotel’s grand opening was in February 2011.
It was designed by Moshe Safdie Architects (Safdie Architects), and features three tilted hotel towers linked by a massive, surfboard-like SkyPark at the top, housing gardens, restaurants, and the famous infinity pool, inspired by a deck of cards.

The sphere in the water is an Apple store and the building with the petals of a flower is the ArtScience Museum.

After sunset, there was a laser and fountain show.

Sunday morning/ arrival in Singapore 🇸🇬

My red-eye flight that departed out of Tokyo after midnight local time (12.35 am), landed in Singapore at 6.55 am.
Passport control and customs was quick and efficient.  I interacted with no humans— only with two camera stations.
One did a facial recognition scan (after I had scanned my passport picture page) and the other instructed me to press my right thumb on the glass for a fingerprint. Twenty seconds and done.

I took a few pictures of the orchids inside the secure area at Changi airport, and then had to move on to pick up my bags and go through passport control.

The mid-day conditions outside— 88°F (31°C)  with a little humidity— is a shock to someone now used to Pacific Northwest winter weather.
I took a taxi to the hotel, instead of roughing it by walking with my luggage and using the metro train.

Saturday night/ at Haneda airport 🛬

We arrived at Tokyo’s Haneda airport at 6.25 pm Saturday night local time (well past midnight, Friday night Seattle time).

It’s 9 hrs 45 mins from Seattle to Tokyo, crossing the International Date Line (IDL) flying westward.
There are two methods to calculate the arrival time in Tokyo:
Method A
Depart Seattle Friday 15.40 pm
Fly 9 hrs 45 mins
Arrive Seattle Saturday 1.25 am
Arrive Tokyo Saturday 6.25 pm (Tokyo time = Seattle time +17 hrs)
Method B
Depart Seattle Friday 15.40 pm
Arrive Tokyo 6.25 pm
Is it Friday or Saturday in Tokyo?
It’s Saturday (+1 day) because the IDL was crossed flying west to east

Our All Nippon Airlines ‘Inspiration of Japan’ Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner after arriving at the gate at Tokyo’s Haneda airport. There was a steady rain as we taxied in from the runway.

Thursday/ Prince and Beni 🦙

My bags are packed for my trip out tomorrow. (Well, almost. I still have to put a few things in and close them).

I fly out to Singapore on All Nippon Airlines with a stop at Haneda airport in Tokyo, Japan.
I will arrive in Singapore early on Sunday morning local time, and spend two days there before my Princess cruise departs on Tuesday.

We don’t have therapy llamas at Seattle-Tacoma airport— and I really should be OK without needing these gentle beasts for my flight out tomorrow. 😁
(Do they not have a reputation for spitting at you if they find you annoying? I will have to look into that first before I get too close too them).
[Page from the online Readers Digest at rd.com]

Wednesday/ welcome home, sailors 🗺️

Aircraft carrier USS Nimitz* returned to her home port in Bremerton yesterday after a 9-month deployment— her very last one, after being in service for 50 years.

*Named after World War II Pacific fleet commander Chester W. Nimitz, USN, (1885–1966), who was the Navy’s third fleet admiral.

The stills below are from a video posted on kitsap.com.

From navytimes.com:
The USS Nimitz aircraft carrier docked in its homeport of Naval Base Kitsap in Bremerton, Washington, on Tuesday for what is scheduled to be its final visit there. The Nimitz returned from a nine-month deployment to the U.S. 3rd, 5th and 7th Fleets that began March 21 when it set sail from Kitsap.

“We have traveled more than two-thirds of this planet during this nine-month deployment, and I cannot overstate the positive impact Nimitz Strike Group has made as part of our mission to maintain peace through strength by sustaining credible deterrence alongside our allies and partners,” said Rear Adm. Fred Goldhammer, commander of Carrier Strike Group 11, according to a release.

The world’s oldest aircraft carrier, commissioned in 1975 with a service lifespan of 50 years, is set to return to Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, in 2026 and be decommissioned.

Tuesday/ happy birthday, Jane Austen 💐

It was 250 years ago when English writer Jane Austen was born— on 16 Dec. 1775 in the village of Steventon, north Hampshire, England.

From Wikipedia:
Austen’s plots often explore the dependence of women on marriage for the pursuit of favorable social standing and economic security.
Her works are implicit critiques of the novels of sensibility of the second half of the 18th century and are part of the transition to 19th-century literary realism.
Her use of social commentary, realism, wit, and irony have earned her acclaim amongst critics and scholars.

In 2017, Jane Austen’s image was added to the Bank of England’s £10 note.
The note carries the quotation, “I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading!”, said by Caroline Bingley in ‘Pride and Prejudice’ (1813).

P.S. As far back as 2015, then-Treasury Secretary Jack Lew announced that there were plans afoot to ‘feature the likeness of a woman who has played a major role in American history and has been a champion for democracy’ (no specific name was mentioned then). As of now, the U.S. is actively working to feature women on its banknotes, with plans to put abolitionist Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill, replacing Andrew Jackson, with a target release around 2030, coinciding with security updates for other denominations, though the process has faced delays— delays of a logistical and political kind.

Monday/ more rain ☔

The rain has started again, and there was a failure in the levee alongside the Green River in Tukwila at around 11:30 a.m.

King County emergency officials sent out a warning of ‘life threatening flash flooding’ for the nearby low-lying area of some 46,000 residents.
There were no injuries as a result of the breach, though. Soon thereafter the area under threat was narrowed down and involved only about 1,100 people, who were urged to evacuate.
The county’s flash flood warning ended by 6.30 pm.

A crew moves sandbags into a gap where a levee was breached along the Green River in Tukwila on Monday, Dec. 15, 2025.
From the Seattle Times:
Repairs were underway for the breached levee and were expected to be done Monday evening, said John Taylor, director of the county’s Department of Natural Resources and Parks. But the risk isn’t over. Whole sections of the levees were soaked through after more than a week of heavy rain and high river levels. Already other spots were seeing water seeping through, and county officials expected to monitor the structure through the coming days, with even more rain in the forecast.
[Photo by Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times]

Sunday/ The Nutcracker, at large 🎄

From the ‘At Home in the Northwest’ supplement to the Seattle Times
[Photo by Jiajing Grygriel]
From the ‘At Home in the Northwest’ supplement to the Seattle Times
[Photo by Jiajing Grygriel]
Jiajing Grygriel writes for this Sunday’s ‘At Home in the Northwest’ supplement to the Seattle Times:

The mail carrier slows his van down to a crawl and gapes. “Is that you folks’ statue?” he hollers out the window. “This is amazing. I love it so much!”

A jaw drop is the typical response for people passing by this storybook home in Ballard. The 1936 house looks straight out of the pages of a fairy tale, with its steeply pitched roof, rustic stone chimney and turreted entryway.

During the holiday season, it’s decked out in Nutcracker figures designed by Maurice Sendak, of “Where the Wild Things Are” fame.

Pacific Northwest Ballet commissioned Sendak to design original art for “The Nutcracker,” which ran from 1983 to 2014.

It was Seattle’s own wild rumpus, a one-of-a-kind “Nutcracker” production.

A 15-foot-tall figurine stands at the end of the driveway. In the front yard and on the deck are three small nutcrackers and two rats – and by small, we mean 8 feet tall.

Three original Sendak ornaments hang in a nearby tree.

It’s the 11th year John Carrington and Scott McElhose have displayed the Sendak Nutcracker at their home, on the corner of Golden Garden Drive and Loyal Avenue Northwest in Ballard.

Saturday/ three will do it? 💰

We had another interest rate cut this week, and the Fed indicated that (right now) it sees only one for all of 2026.

Of course, all of that may fly out the window if a person such as Kevin Hassett succeeds Fed chair Jerome Powell in May of next year.
(Hassett is seen as a guy who will do whatever it is to push through Trump’s agenda— and Trump wants interest rates to be closer to 1%).

The rate cut of this week was widely expected.
The Fed increased its projected change in real GDP for 2026 to 2.3%, up from 1.8% in September, but the unemployment rate to stay the same at 4.4% — and 4.2% in the longer run (out to 2028).
Inflation projected to stay contained: PCE at 2.4% and Core PCE at 2.5%.
[Screen shot from CBS News 24/7 program ‘The Takeout with Major Garrett’]

Friday/ postage due stamps ✉️

Here’s another interesting envelope that I picked up on Ebay for a few dollars. It was dispatched in Johannesburg to Philadelphia, Pa. The franking on the stamp was done with a metering machine in 1951.
(Franking machines were first used in South Africa in 1926).

The franking of 9½ pennies fell woefully short of what was actually needed, though.
The US post office demanded 27 US cents more for delivery. The last ‘Postage Due’ stamps in the USA were issued in 1985.  They were rendered obsolete by tracking technology and the requirement of full prepayment of postage in most cases. 

Meter Stamp
Printed in South Africa for 9½ pennies, dated May 9, 1951, with Universal “Multi-Value” (MV) metering machine (first used 1933).

Postage Due Stamps
Issued by United States, 1931-1956.
Perf. 11×10½ | Engraving by American Bank Note Company | Rotary Press Printing
J81 D3 | 2c dull carmine
J83 D3 | 5c dull carmine
J84 D3 | 10c dull carmine
[Sources: Wikibooks.org, 2003 Scott Standard Postage Stamp Catalogue]

Taking a closer look at the engraving detail. The design of the stamp and the fonts resemble the design of a banknote.

Thursday/ the waterfall roars 💦

Here are updated pictures of the Snoqualmie Falls from the Seattle Times.
The Snoqualmie river was at major flooding level for much of Wednesday and Thursday.

Visitors to Snoqualmie Falls get soaked by a steady mist kicked up from raging Snoqualmie River waters Thursday morning.
[Photo by Ken Lambert for The Seattle Times. Caption from The Seattle Times]
Snoqualmie Falls roars on Thursday.
[Photo by Nick Wagner for The Seattle Times. Caption from The Seattle Times]

Wednesday/ ‘catastrophic’ flooding 🌊

The second wave of moisture from a strong atmospheric river filled in across western Washington last night.
All that water is flooding from the western slopes of the Cascade mountains into the streams and rivers below.

Greg Kim writes for the Seattle Times:
River flooding in parts of Western Washington is expected to be “catastrophic,” especially in the coastal lowlands near the Snohomish, Stillaguamish and Skagit rivers, according to a new assessment by the National Weather Service.
Areas facing “considerable” flooding stretch from Bellingham through south of Olympia.
Catastrophic flooding could bring significant risk to life and property, with a high risk of levees being topped and landslides expected in steep terrain, according to the National Weather Service. It could also mean record floods that destroy roads and structures and require evacuations or rescues of people and property, National Weather Service meteorologist Steve Reedy said.

The Snoqualmie River floods over its banks in Snoqualmie at Riverview Park, with water heading towards homes, Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 10, 2025.
[Photo by Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times]
 

Map compiled by Mark Nowlin for Seattle Times with information from ESRI and water.noaa.gov/operations/fho

The Skykomish River near Gold Bar is the purple block just east of Monroe on Highway 2 in the map above.
The river is projected to top out at its highest level ever, at 24.87 ft. Flood stage is 15 ft.
[Graphic from National Water Prediction Service at https://water.noaa.gov/]