Queen Mary Haunted Encounters Tour

story and photos by Kayte Deioma

We meet our guide, Yolanda Muńoz, near the entrance to the Engine Room. Along on the tour are Deborah and Joey Lane of Arizona Paranormal Investigations and their 14-year-old son Jordan. They have their Queen Mary Passports handy, ready to participate in the Ghost Sighting Scavenger Hunt. They have already seen an unusual orb appearing in their digital images shot near the engine room.

The tour starts with a film introduction in a small theatre that used to be the second class swimming pool. We get our first introduction to the ghost of a little girl who seems to have the run of the ship and beyond. She has been heard and seen in this area. As we leave the theatre, Yolanda tells us it’s best to stay silent to experience the atmosphere of each location.

We head down a stairway to an area known as Shaft Alley. Yolanda tells us Tour guide Yolanda Muńoz on the Haunted Encounters Tour of the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, CA.of a young sailor who was found crushed by one of the water-tight doors after a fog alarm prompted all doors to the boilers and engine rooms to be closed. “Rumor has it…” she says “that the sailor was playing chicken to see how many times he could jump through the door before it closed. He made it six and a half times…” she concludes, with a ghoulish lilt to her voice. The specter of a bearded young man in coveralls has been seen in various parts of the ship and heard whistling through the boiler rooms.

We are led through an exhibit hall that used to be a boiler room. Apparently when the ship was purchased, part of the agreement was that it had to be dismantled so that it could no longer travel under its own power. The boilers where taken apart and removed through the smoke stacks. Now there’s a dance floor where there used to be a boiler. An apparition of a little blond girl in a bonnet has appeared to various workers here.

The little girl has also appeared in boiler rooms 1 and 2, which are used for the Ghosts and Legends Show. Joey Lane of Arizona Paranormal Investigations, who normally has no fear of heights, experiences a sudden inability to look down crossing the wide platform over the boiler rooms.

Deborah and Joey Lane of Arizona Paranormal Investigations and their son Jordan check out the first class swimming pool on the Haunted Encounters Tour  of the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, CAWe are back in the first class swimming pool. The pool is a popular hang-out for spirits. The little girl, a young woman in a tennis skirt and a woman in a bridal gown have all been spotted here as well as miscellaneous other paranormal phenomena. I finally learn why the pool is not in use. Even without resident ghosts, the 12 foot depth of the pool is too deep for California State Code.

Visitors on the Haunted Encounters Tour of the Queen Mary hold their hands over an alleged "vortex" in a narrow corridor near the first class swimming pool. Long Beach, CAYolanda leads us in groups of four to the changing room area adjacent to the pool. There is reported to be a vortex here, “a whirlpool of energy circulating in a spiral motion, which allows the spirit to enter and leave this dimension.” We extend our hands over the spot to see if we can feel it…an electric tingle, a breeze from nowhere.

Next stop is Room B340, one of the staterooms that became part of the hotel. The dark changing rooms near the first class swimming pool is part of the Haunted Encounters Tour of the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, CAIt is no longer used as a hotel room because too many visitors and cleaning crew complained of disturbances in the room. Lights and water faucets go on by themselves. Bedding flies around on its own. Knocking is heard in the middle of the night. Although this room is no longer available to hotel guests, other haunted rooms and suites can still be reserved by the paranormally curious.

After the tour, three of the visitors discuss whether the child they heard laughing in the hall on R Deck was real or not. The rest of us didn’t hear anything. Yolanda doesn’t think anyone would have been in the area besides us.

“In certain areas I felt electricity going through my skin,” reports Deborah Lane, one of our paranormal investigators from Arizona. “Other areas felt very thick,” she adds. “It’s definitely haunted.”

Theoretically, our Haunted Encounters ticket also entitles us to a visit to the Paranormal Research Center located on A Deck in the bow (front) of the ship near the exit from the Ghosts and Legends Show. We follow a maze of signs to a pair of plain brown doors which are firmly locked.

 

The Russian Foxtrot Submarine: “Scorpion”

strong>story and photos by Kayte Deioma

The Scorpion submarine, decommissioned by the Russian Navy in 1994, was added to the Queen Mary attraction in 1998 after a brief tour in Australia. This Soviet foxtrot sub was built in 1972 in Leningrad and used to search for and track enemy forces during the Cold War, especially in the Pacific Ocean.

Vivian Trifonov of Los Angeles climbs through a hatch of the Russian Foxtrot Submarine "Scorpion" at the Queen Mary in Long Beach, CAClimbing down into the cramped quarters of the sub, you might get the impression of crawling through a children’s maze at Discovery Zone except for the posted warnings: “Submarine is still in operational condition. Please do not operate any equipment.” Since there’s no room for a tour guide, a voice recording tells you the function of each compartment. Seventy-eight crew members were packed together like sardines for up to three months at a time in this 300-foot nickel steel tube. They shared two showers and three toilets and slept in shifts.

A visitor looks through the periscope of the Russian Foxtrot Submarine "Scorpion" at the Queen Mary in Long Beach, CASix giant torpedo tubes greet you as you climb down the ladder. Doubling over to climb through a hatch into the next compartment, you just about bump into the periscope. You have to bend over or crouch down to look through, but the awesome optics give you a great up-close view of the Shoreline Marina across the bay.

Proceeding down the starboard side of the submarine, I marvel at the dozens Lisa Raymond examines the torpedo tubes on the Russian Foxtrot Submarine "Scorpion" on display in Long Beach, CA.of dials and wheels available to my curious hands and wonder at what they might do. While the controls are exposed, the radio equipment and bunks in the next compartment are protected by glass partitions. We get a glimpse in the kitchen and a look at some submarine guts through glass panels before we pass some more exposed bunks and an escape suit. We make our own escape up the aft ladder and back out to daylight.

Because it is challenging to maneuver up and down ladders and through hatches, people with even minor mobility issues may have difficulty on the Scorpion. Children must be at least 48 inches tall to enter.

 


The Queen’s Best Kept Secret: Queen Mary Spa

story and photos by Kayte Deioma

After exploring the haunted halls and hearing about all the skeletons in the closet, the Queen Mary has one last secret to reveal. Tucked into a suite on the Main Deck right off the hotel elevator is the Queen Mary Spa, the perfect place to leave your tired feet in the hands of a pedicurist or have your luggage-burdened back massaged by one of the talented masseurs and masseuses. If you’ve got all day or just half an hour, you can treat yourself to a bit of royal pampering.

The ship’s original spa and Turkish baths were located near the first class swimming pool which can be seen on several different ship tours. A sign near the pool lists the spa services that were available in 1936. The location has changed. There are no Turkish baths. But a massage can still be had for a smidge more than the $1.90 charged in 1936. The infra-red treatment listed for $1.25 is now incorporated into the price of your facial.

I have never been to a spa. The closest I got was having a pedicure once at a Lana Fender gives a hot stone massage at the Queen Mary Spa aboard the RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach, CAnail salon and periodic therapeutic massage from physical therapists and acupuncturists in clinical settings. So, for the sake of research, I have to try out these treatments that managed to stay on the spa menu for 70 years. Both of these historical services are incorporated into the Queen’s Royal Secret, a luxurious hour-long facial followed by a half hour general body massage.

Jennifer Mott, receptionist at the Queen Mary SpaThe smiling Jennifer greets me from behind her art deco glass counter in the gleaming wood-paneled reception area. Potted plants in the curtained portholes add a homey touch. A pitcher of water with strawberries and orange and cucumber slices stands invitingly on the counter. After filling out the requisite paperwork, Jennifer introduces me to Joseph Garcia, my “esthetician.” I wonder when they dropped the aesthetic a.

Next door, in another wood-paneled room, Joseph invites me to get “as comfortable as I want to be” under the sheet and towels provided and leaves me to it. I get as comfortable as I want under the sheet and bid him “enter” when he knocks. How regal of me. Soothing Native American flute music is playing in the background. From the first smooth of cleanser gliding whirls and swirls across my forehead and around my cheekbones, I am entranced. I ask Joseph to narrate the process, elucidating each texture as it is applied. This is, after all, research.

A steamer is directed at my face to open the pores. After two moisturizing Esthetician applies a moisturizing masque to a client at the Queen Mary Spa.cleansers, a gentle rice-based exfoliant…discovered by women working rice fields in Asia…and why do I need to remember this again? Oh yeah, research. A gentle massage of my face…hands…arms…shoulders with stress relief and toxin relief oil. All the stress is gone. In between layers I glean from Joseph that he has also done make-up for Pamela Anderson, LA Fashion Week, photographers and filmmakers, as well as visitors to the Queen’s Spa.

Infrared light shines on a woman getting a facial at the Queen Mary Spa aboard the RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach, CAHot towel. Painted on masks – two flavors at once. Eyes covered. Now comes the traditional infra-red lamp. Joseph brings something warm and heavy, smelling of oatmeal and places it over my already-covered eyes. …a few more moments and the weight is lifted. The darkness is peeled away. Another hot towel, then a spray of cool mist toner, hydrating booster, moisturizer, sunscreen, protective sealer to keep the pollutants at bay… As the last layer is smoothed over my skin, I am thinking…this is the best hour of work I have ever accomplished. And there’s more to come…

Joseph hands me a robe to change into to cross the hall to the massage room where Michael Mata is waiting to give me my 30 minute body massage. We determine that the most practical use of our 30 minutes together is to work on getting the kinks out of my typing and camera-carrying shoulder through a combination of massage techniques, mostly Swedish with some therapeutic spot massage.

An afternoon well spent.

I’ll have to watch the weather forecast and come back and try the Queen’s Royal Bath or a Royal Body Polish the next time it rains. The Queen Mary Spa has a variety of beauty and wellness professionals available by appointment. If you just want to be pampered and aren’t particular, you can stop by and take your chances with whatever treatment happens to be available. Special bridal packages are also available.

    Hours of operation:
    Tuesday through Thursday - 12 noon to 6 p.m.
    Friday and Saturday - 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
    Sunday - 12 noon to 3 p.m.
    www.QueenMarySpa.com