Good morning,
I'm back on the Royal Promenade with my camera again today. It is a port day so most guests have gone ashore.
Can you see that orange high lift equipment in the center of the above image?
That is the piece of equipment that is used to clean the inside of the ship and the windows of the staterooms overlooking the Royal Promenade.
It's quite a process to keep this ship so clean, shiny, and ship shape all the time.
It's a constant process and so fascinating to see.
Best,
Lois
14 comments:
LOL! It amazes me, Lois, how you can find unlimited places and things to cover on that ship!!! To be honest, I have wondered how they keep everything so clean with all those people.
HI Lois...Now that is interesting!! Something that has to be done that I would not have considered..thanks for sharing this part of the trip..what goes on behind the scenes! : }
Grace
oh, i bet! hadn't considered that part of things!
Wow! I am glad I don't have all those windows to clean!
The things we don't normally think about when we go on a cruise, not that I have ever been on one. A pleasure I have yet to experience. What a monumental task. Very interesting, thanks Lois.
Great view of ship life!! Boom & Gary of the Vermilon River, Canada.
wWhere is his brush and bucket then? Aye Jim m'lad.
That answers one of my unasked questions: how in the world do they clean all those windows? Now I know! LOL
It is almost unbelievable that this sumptuous promenade is on board a ship...
Lois, when those guys are finished window cleaning, could you send them our way as this is a chore I dislike and have nowhere near as many to clean.
I would not want that job!
Keeping all those windows clean on that ship would be a house keepers nightmere!! I can't even keep our 28 windows clean. Not my favorite job....debbie
Cleaning that ship's window's would be a housekeepers worse nightmere!! lol. And I can't even keep our 28 windows clean.
Oh, yeah! They must be washing glass constantly.
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