On the Migration Patterns of Vacationers

by | Jun 29, 2026 | Travel | 45 comments

Dr. Reginald Percival Throckmorton-Smythe, F.R.G.S.

You board the ship as an observer. A researcher. An anthropologist of leisure. You have come not to participate, but to study the cruise passengers in their natural habitat. Armed with a raised eyebrow and a healthy sense of superiority, you begin your expedition. From a discreet vantage point near the martini bar, you document the behaviors of the species: the Pool Lounger, the Buffet Forager, the Sunset Photographer. Fascinating creatures. You sip a complimentary glass of champagne strictly for scientific purposes. The ship departs. The coastline fades. The ocean unfolds in every direction like an expensive screensaver. Your field notes become noticeably less judgmental.

By the second day, you have embedded yourself within the population. This is, of course, necessary for accurate observation. You acquire a deck chair. You begin evaluating sea conditions with the confidence of a nineteenth-century explorer despite possessing exactly zero maritime qualifications. You discover hidden lounges, tranquil observation decks, and suspiciously comfortable furniture. Waiters appear whenever your drink level falls below a critical threshold, suggesting either exceptional service or a highly evolved predator-prey relationship. You tell yourself you’re maintaining professional detachment as you order another cocktail and spend two hours gazing at the horizon like a philosopher who has recently inherited a yacht.

As the voyage progresses, the transformation accelerates. You awake each morning in a new Caribbean port, stepping ashore to investigate colorful settlements, tropical beaches, and local rum establishments. By afternoon, you instinctively return to the ship, your ship, where your cabin has been restored to pristine condition by unseen forces. You begin referring to locations onboard with alarming familiarity. “I’ll meet you in the Solarium.” “The aft deck gets a better breeze.” “The pastries on Deck 5 are superior.” You are no longer studying the ecosystem. You have established territory within it.

Dr. Deep

On the final evening, your metamorphosis is complete. You stand at the rail beneath a canopy of stars, clothed in enough linen to outfit a minor Mediterranean aristocracy. The sea glows silver beneath the moonlight. Music drifts through the warm night air. Somewhere behind you, elegant dinners are being served and desserts of questionable moral responsibility are being consumed. You remember boarding seven days ago intending to remain an objective outsider. Now you are fully integrated into the habitat. You have opinions about preferred cocktail venues. You know which deck offers the finest sunset migration route. You have developed seasonal behaviors. As the ship glides through the Caribbean darkness, you realize the study has reached its inevitable conclusion: the naturalist has become one of the specimens.

Make your own…scientific observations April 4-11, 2027: https://sklasen.cruiseonegroups.com/Glibertarians

About The Author

Pash KKatel

Pash KKatel

Just a statistic.

45 Comments

  1. Brochettaward

    I just go to the nearest ghetto with a bag of popcorn and a gun just in case. Endless entertainment and makes me feel so much better about the state of my life.

  2. Evan from Evansville

    Ooooh, that’d be two weeks before my 40th! Kinda an epic send-off to my 30s. (Were I still in Korea, I’d already ‘be’ 40.) Parents only really spent on travel. We did a Caribbean cruise in ~’95 (3rd grade) and Alaska in 2001 (a couple months before that big thing happened). Fantastic time had by all, both times.

    This will be on my mind, as is Honey Harvest in Sept. this year. I’m not sure what my schedule will be, but it really really seems like these will be my last three days Receiving at Meijer. (Oooh. Opened that big bag of phrasing avocados.)

    Actual concern: Were I to cruise the waters (for stragglers?), I DO wanna be able to have my weed vape, n the ship and out. Do cruise lines (still?) do security? I kinda s’pose they ‘have’ to, but yuck. (Oooh. May be at 9mo off the sauce, this current stretch? Hrm.)

    • Shpip

      I DO wanna be able to have my weed vape, n the ship and out.

      Cruise ships operating out of U.S. ports are federally chartered, and as such have about as much tolerance for malum prohibitum plant extracts as airlines do for 9mm handguns in their cockpits.

      That said, if you had a vape in checked luggage, and if it smelled like something other than pot, and if you were extremely discreet where you vaped (like just off the aft deck with no one nearby), you could probably get away with it.

      Don’t try to take it with you getting off the boat though. You’d get nabbed coming back on. Every vessel has airport-style security, complete with X-ray machines and metal detectors, for every returning guest.

      If caught, the cruise line probably wouldn’t throw you in their brig, but they very may lock you in your cabin until the boat reaches the next port, where you would be put off and left to arrange travel home on your own.

      Is it worth it? Up to you. If I had to have some THC on the trip, I’d probably just secrete a few gummies in my toiletry bag and dole them out to myself that way.

    • Furthest Blue pistoffnick (370HSSV)

      Vapes (wacky or not) are now illegal in any Mexican port of call.

      • rhywun

        I hate the nu-puritanism so much.

  3. Fourscore

    Good to see you on board, KK.

    As an experienced mariner, having crossed the Atlantic 3 times with 700 of my newest and closest friends I must have missed something. It was not exactly as you described. I shared my cabin with 50 or so other adventurers, sleeping on bunks stacked 4-5 high with other travelers. The dining experiences were more rustic and perhaps the food wasn’t presented in the same manner.

    Other than that the water was wet and I’m glad I had the fun, travel and adventure.

    • rhywun

      Adorable!

      And then it went indoors and tore the homeowners to ribbons.

      • Brochettaward

        You don’t want to see what an erect bear penis does to a cat.

    • Tonio

      That’s my bro Luigi. He cool.

      Thanks.

      • Fourscore

        Wait ’til Luigi (Louie) decides to take the hose home

        Hey, Louie, Louie

  4. DEG

    I read this in a British accent.

  5. Tonio

    You writes all purty-like KK.

  6. Evan from Evansville

    “Top wedding gurus’ posts spark speculation that Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are already married”

    What in the motherfuck is a “wedding guru?” A magical, shamanistic wedding planner is what I’m feeling. Yuh-huh.

    This gawking is universal in cultures, and deserves mockery. Social primates gotta have their gossip and rumors! Makes ’em feel like THEY are part of the ‘informed’ class, wise in secrets. It’s really rather silly. However, I suppose, it’s (relatively?) harmless entertainment. This is just the setup. The big excitement’s brewing for the inevitable(?) divorce and what song Twizzle will make of it.

    Strange creatures, humans. *checks “Shareable” bag of Sour Skittles, ensures ample supply, backup bag also within room*

    • UnCivilServant

      Yeah, my reaction to whenever these two come up is “Who gives a crap?” Nothing about either of them has any bearing on me or people I care about.

      • Evan from Evansville

        Agreed, but it makes (some) people happy to ‘know’ about other people. Why not the rich and famous? Barring extreme introverts and those on this site, that’s a normal thing to want to be curious about. (Can be) Awfully beneficial in one’s personal social group. Likely why women tend to like it more. Men do the same following sports trades, etc, I s’pose.

        Maybe they’re practicing on the rich and famous to keep those brain circuits charged. I do like two Swift songs. (To be fair, I’ve only heard like three or four.) Random little quirks, I enjoy seeing the strangeness of others.

        Fuck. That very well may be a line from Beetlejuice. Fuck.

  7. Chipping Pioneer

    OK, Fed. Not getting on your boat.

  8. Tonio

    Nice article, hon.

    I apologize for the website running the text right up against the illo. That’s a long-standing known issue and I’ve bitched about it whenever it comes up.

    My work-around is to compose photos with a white (for JPG) or transparent (for PNG) border around the image so as to thwart the evil machinations of PordWess.

    • UnCivilServant

      I miss the older feature where I could put a border around the image and hold a caption under it.

      I just don’t understand the principle of removing the good features.

      • Evan from Evansville

        To make you pay for it.

      • rhywun

        I just don’t understand the principle of removing the good features.

        I do, and it’s not for your benefit.

      • UnCivilServant

        Give me a non-cynical explaination.

      • Tonio

        “I just don’t understand the principle of removing the good features.”

        That’s because you are not a communist retard.

        WressPord is the socialism of website engines. Everything intuitive, useful, or giving the author control must be disabled, deleted, or made impossible. It’s all about dumbing-down, and enshittification.

      • rhywun

        Give me a non-cynical explaination.

        Often, it’s a “rewrite” and “we’ll restore the features you like some day”.

      • rhywun

        IOW, the benefit is entirely for the developers.

      • Brochettaward

        I can barely think of a product I have used over the last 10 years or so that hasn’t been subject to extreme enshitification.

        It’s everything. I don’t think this is just good old capitalism at work.

      • Brochettaward

        Also, there’s this constant need to keep updating shit. Not to keep it running, but just changing shit for the sake of changing it. Why the fuck does a restaurant app need to update every week?

        Why do they change shit that no one is complaining about to begin with? It’s rarely they had some brilliant idea to make it better.

        At work every time something gets upgraded it objectively becomes worse. Less intuitive and straight forward. More layers to get to the shit you need to get to. And can’t forget the ever increasing security theater.

      • Brochettaward

        I’m still pissed at whatever asshole thought it was brilliant to take an operating system meant to be run on a desktop and make it more like a fucking phone. I don’t want “apps” on my god damn PC. I don’t want it to run like a shitty tablet. No, removing the start menu button isn’t a good idea.

        IT baffles me that people who make a lot of money tinker with shit seemingly to justify their existence. All change isn’t bad, but you should sure as shit be asking yourself if whatever improvement you are seeking is really worth making your entire userbase relearn how to operate your shit again.

  9. rhywun

    OK, while FIFA is getting nit-picky about everything else… can they please for the love of all that is holy put a stop to the pitch invasion every time someone scores? It is so gross and such a waste of time.

  10. Evan from Evansville

    Today’s interview went remarkably well. First dude, VP and Closing Manager, was thrilled with our chat and what he said I brought to the table. Said I made a very good first impression. Onward to another talk with a closer (get some coffee for her!) and my will-be trainer. They talked like I already worked there and how my on-the-fly training would work. (Individual tasks first, graduating up through the process.)

    I had on my blazer and dress shirt and they were in short-sleeved company polos. I sent a thank you email and am confident this will happen. (I ain’t got no hand in no bush, yet, so I’ll just get these two birds stoned at once.)

    Many gear changes in my professional life, and this oddly feels like one of the biggest. Like Costanza, I’ll (soon?) be in real-estate. But just office work, in general. That’s a big First for me. I’ve got so many odd, big Firsts, Bro’d choke for the *second* time out of jealousy.

    • Brochettaward

      If anyone ever says that they like what you bring to the table, it’s very very important you get offended and tell them you don’t bring anything to the table. You ARE the god damn table!

      • Evan from Evansville

        And THERE IS NO BATHROOM!

    • Evan from Evansville

      Regardless, I’m greatly pleased tomorrow to Thurs I go back into the most chill gig ever. I may miss that bit. And the 10am start, five min away. I chill in the parking lot to finish my morning smoke.

  11. rhywun

    For German players, officials, and fans, this VAR decision will be talked about for a long, long time.

    To be fair, that decision was complete bullshit BUT the German team still sucked.

    I mean… Paraguay? AYFKM?

  12. Evan from Evansville

    “No God But Us by Bobuq Sayed review – a buzzy and political queer love story
    Two gay Afghan men find each other in Istanbul, in a much-hyped debut that fails to sustain the killer energy of its opening act

    Everyone in No God But Us is performing. Families perform respectability; lovers perform fidelity; NGOs perform goodness; autocrats perform power. The drag queens in Bobuq Sayed’s anticipated debut novel are the most honest performers of the lot. They’re the only ones who admit they’re in costume.

    Delbar is the “door bitch” at a drag club in Washington DC. Fresh out of college and not yet out to his family, he has no idea who he is. He knows who he is expected to be: the well-buttoned son of Afghan immigrants. He also knows who he might become under the spotlight; his drag persona, Sharia Raw, is waiting in the wings.”

    Yeah, I doubt I’ll be reading that. The push to make drag and trans so common to ‘require’ such coming-out stories is flagrant bullshit to me, and why not make it Afghani?!

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