By
Evan Bleier
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Lee Wachtstetter, who has been nicknamed Mama Lee, sold her five-bedroom
Fort Lauderdale area home and moved aboard a luxury cruise ship after
her husband died in 1997 |
After her husband died of cancer in 1997, a Florida woman decided to honour his wishes and live on the sea... permanently.
Lee Wachtstetter, 86, sold her five-bedroom Fort Lauderdale home and moved to a stateroom aboard a luxury cruise ship.
The
widow, who often cruised with her husband during their
50-year-marriage, lived on a Holland America Line ship until it
discontinued its dance host program.
She then moved on to the Crystal Serenity and has been living on the 1,070-passenger ship for almost seven years.
Since
setting saii, Mrs Wachtstetter has completed more than 200 cruises -
including 15 round-the-world trips - taking in more than 100 countries.
Some of the ship's 655 crew members took to calling her Mama Lee and the nickname has stuck.
'Nobody can pronounce my last name anyway, so it's fine with me,' she told the Miami Herald.
Mrs
Wachtstetter rarely goes ashore but does keep in touch with her family
via computer, visiting them when the ship docks in Miami.
She misses her three sons and seven grandchildren, but says 'they have families of their own and do what's right for them'.
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The Crystal Serenity can carry up to 1,070 passengers and has a crew of 655. It's been cruising for 11 years
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'The
day before my husband died of cancer in 1997, he told me, "Don't stop
cruising." So here I am today living a stress-free, fairy-tale life,'
the widow told the Asbury Park Press
'I
enjoy dancing, and this was the best of the remaining ships that still
use dance hosts. My husband didn't dance, just didn't like to, and
encouraged me to dance with the hosts. I dance every night for a couple
hours after dinner.'
She believes that living on the Serenity
this year will cost her around $164,000. That price includes her room,
meals, beverages, dancing programs, entertainment, movies, lectures and
cocktail parties with the captain.
In
addition to spending time dancing and taking part in other scheduled
activities, Mrs Wachtstetter devotes some of her hours to doing
needlepoint work in the ship's Palm Court lounge.
She's
been doing needlepoint about as long as she's been cruising and gives
everything she makes to the Serenity's crew because it gives her 'great
pleasure' and they are 'almost like family now'.
Don't
expect to see Miss Wachtstetter back on land to celebrate her 87th
birthday in May - or any other subsequent birthday for that matter.
She
says she isn't sure if she would ever 'be able to readjust to the real
world again' because she's spoiled and that the 'crew members bend over
backwards' to keep her happy.
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