We woke to find there was quite noticeable movement of the ship. Elizabeth doubted she could eat breakfast but was OK in the end. The sea was flat calm but there was a swell which came and went throughout the day.
We had a table for two, but adjacent to a couple from Oklahoma who were moving on from Hamburg to do Norway by train before flying home.
The highlight of the morning was a tour of the galley at which cameras were allowed.
We then had lunch in ‘The Golden Lion’ and sat adjacent to a couple from the Blue Mountains near Sydney, Australia who were on tour for 3 months.
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| Our table! |
We then had lunch in ‘The Golden Lion’ and sat adjacent to a couple from the Blue Mountains near Sydney, Australia who were on tour for 3 months.
This was the last formal evening, described as Royal Ascot Night. Many of the women wore hats or fascinators, but only a very few men wore morning suits and I saw no top hats at all. The evening meal had lobster tail as its highlight and our waiter arranged for us to have crème brûlée as we had joked the day before as to when it might be in the menu!
At the Royal Ascot Ball in the Queen’s Room, there was a parade of ladies who were wearing some sort of Ascot-related head gear and each one was given a voucher to be redeemed for a small memento in one of the shops on board.
At the Royal Ascot Ball in the Queen’s Room, there was a parade of ladies who were wearing some sort of Ascot-related head gear and each one was given a voucher to be redeemed for a small memento in one of the shops on board.













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