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ColoradoGurl

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  1. I'm taking my first cruise on the Freedom of the Seas in 6 weeks (Yah!!) and am having a difficult time deciding on a spa treatment. So I was hoping you guys can help me out. What are your very favorites and what ones are a rip off? Thanks in advance!

     

    I'm sure it's the same as any spa on land; totally and completely dependent upon the person giving you the treatment. I've had a lot of massages and few of them have been the same unless they were from the same person. I tend to really like sea salt scrubs. They slough all the dead skin off with a brush (this is where the treatment person makes a huge difference because they are either very thorough with the brush or very lazy with it), then they rub oil and sea salt on you and rinse it off (again, this part can vary because some spas use a wash cloth while others have a shower bed and others make you get up and get into a regular shower), then it's usually followed by a massage, or a partial massage at least. These will make your skin glow, it'll be nice and soft. It's like a facial for the body. The only "problem" is that they can remove spray tans, or any tan you've accumulated, because it's taking off a layer of dead skin, which might at that time be your tan layer. I would ask the cruise spa if there is at least a partial (20 min) massage included and how they'll rinse off the salt (it doesn't really matter but one of the two shower methods is best). If those two things are included I'd do that treatment. Second choice would be a massage.

  2. "...so it will readable". (?) I did not teach grammar. (and probably did not study enough of it)

     

    Don't bother listening to that poster, if you take a look at his posts in his profile, he (or she?) specifically seeks out posts that he can make snarky and insulting comments on. Everyone on the boards seems to know about him and warns everyone to just ignore them, you'll see him pop up and learn to do the same. He's a waste of time. Sure, it's easier to read when things are broken into paragraphs, but take a minute to imagine the kind of person who feels the need to chastise someone for not doing that. Your post was fine and any literate person will find it completely readable ;)

  3. Today I took a phone call from a representative of Royal Caribbean asking why we had not booked any dining options on our Anthem cruise in 2 weeks .

    I explained that we were not booked on Anthem of the seas !

    He insisted we had a reservation for the inaugural cruise out of Southampton on the 22nd April.

    He advised me of our Stateroom number and the names of the passengers which appears to be me and my husband .

    After pondering this all afternoon, I think I know what my birthday suprise off my husband is.

    Yes we are on holiday for 2 weeks starting the 20th of April, yes he has told me he has a suprise lined up for me and to wait and see what it is.

     

    Dilemma....Number 1 .. Do I tell him I now know what he has done for my birthday or. .. Do I act dumb ?

     

    The poor guy at RCI did appear mortified to think he had let the cat out of the bag , he did say he would call again when my husband was home .

     

    Dilemma number 2 .... How the hell am I going to hide how excited I am about Anthem ?

     

    Also I am chuffed my husband does actually listen to what I say, I mentioned over a year ago how I would love to see this ship

     

    I would pretend not to know. He went through a lot

    of trouble to book the trip and hide it and it would spoil the fun for him if he knew you were in on the surprise. It won't hurt anybody to pretend you don't know, but it will definitely hurt his feelings if you tell him you found out. It's not really RC's fault, since your husband gave them a phone number that you have access to, and it may end up getting RC yelled at and make your husband upset all because of a mistake. Better to pretend you don't know and make everyone happy. That's what I'd do 😀

  4. We have my time dining - looking to eat around 7:45. When I book our times on Royal Caribbean, it's says 7:45 to 9:45.

     

    Does dinner usually take the full two hours? Does it matter if it's just the two of us at the table?

     

    Thanks. :)

     

    Yes. It takes at least 2 hours, if not more. But that could also be because I've always sat at a big table and we take advantage of the opportunity to socialize.

  5. What about a promenade interior?

     

    The only time I've seen those is from the outside when I was looking into them from the inside of the ship. I actually think these could be a fun room to have, as long as you are ok being on display because everyone is going to be looking up at your room to see what's up there. Otherwise you'll have to close the curtain, in which case, what's the point of paying for a view you can't use. It sounds like a lot of people enjoy these rooms and I wouldn't be against trying them. I've just never tried it and again, didn't think it was worth the extra cost in my case for this trip.

  6. What stateroom do you pick for port intensive, last one my DW picked an Ocean Suite

     

    This is another area where I'm probably in the minority on this board, but I chose an inside. The reason is because the last 2 times I chose a balcony and never used it. It was nice to have and I would book one again someday, I just didn't think it was worth it on a cruise where I'd be off the ship every single day (except the last one). We're traveling with friends so even when we're on the ship I foresee us spending a lot of time in common areas, so the room will be for sleeping and showering only. No need to pay extra money for those ammenities since they'll be the same in any room. I saw an inside room last time I cruised because a couple I met let me see theirs and I was surprised that it had almost the same amount of room as our balcony and it was plenty of space for our needs. People have mentioned that the ocean view windows are cloudy and hard to see out of, and also that they're on the bottom 3 decks so I didn't feel that was worth paying extra for. I was ok forgoing the natural light for the few hours I will be in the room. I'm also traveling during a peak (expensive) season this time and a balcony was almost $2,000 more than the inside. I just feel my money is better spent elsewhere (excursions, alcohol, tips, casino, etc) than on a balcony I Will almost never use; certainly not $2,000 worth. But others will have a very different take on this and it just depends on where your priorities are for this particular trip and what "arguments" persuade you one way or the other. My vote is get an inside and save money.

  7. We've never sailed either RC or Celebrity, did you find AOS more livelier and more things to do? I hear a lot of things lately about RC is that the food is lacking and the cutbacks, did you find that on your cruise

     

    Also, to answer the question about the atmosphere on the ship, I found it to be really fun (the voyager class ships). I think a lot depends on your company because you'll tend to do things that you both enjoy. In my situation, I sailed with a 10 year old so I didn't get to have as much grown up fun as I could have liked, but it was definitely available and I saw and met others who were doing things I didn't even realize we're available. In fact there was so much to do that there was no way I could have gotten to all of it anyway. We spent a lot of time at the pool listening to live music, watching movies on the poolside screen and walking around just looking at stuff. That being said, I still had a lot of fun. I think on port heavy cruises there may be less organized activities on the ship but we'll see.

  8. We've never sailed either RC or Celebrity, did you find AOS more livelier and more things to do? I hear a lot of things lately about RC is that the food is lacking and the cutbacks, did you find that on your cruise

     

    I don't sail her until August, but I sailed Mariner in 2013 and Explorer in 2004. In 2004 I recall being amazed at the food as was everyone else on my trip. They had a midnight buffet and a chocolate fountain etc. In 2013 all that stuff was gone and the food had definitely decreased in extravagance. That being said, I'm not a foodie so it didn't bother me. I thought the food was great and I didn't find anything to complain about. There were some people I talked to during that trip who complained about the food and said it was bad or that other cruise lines were better etc. But I remember thinking they were making a big deal over nothing. Sure, did the buffet offer things like hot dogs? Yes, and I suppose if you're a foodie that would offend you. But I ate them and thought it was great, especially since I don't often eat junk good like that at home. I recall there being plenty of items on the menu as well as in the buffet that were too fancy for my palate as well. So there was a mixture. The food every day was repetitive, but you could still eat something different each day. I personally didn't expect anything more (besides the midnight buffet which I was bummed was gone only because it was a fun luau type party and I like chocolate ��), but I thought they did a great job given they have to prepare and plan for food for thousands of people for 7 days at a time without being able to go to the store.

     

    I think it boils down to this: Are you a foodie and are you expecting or wanting a large variety of fancy food that rivals 5 star restaurants? If so, you probably want to find a cruise line that specializes in gormet food. If you are laid back and happy that you're not having to cook and grocery shop and wash dishes, then you'll not only be fine with the food, you'll probably be impressed with it. I'm not very fussy myself so take my opinion for what it's worth; everyone is different and expects different things. I thought it was great and I can't wait to go on our next cruise. PS all the ships I've sailed are in the same class of ship and from what I hear, they all have the same menu, give or take an item or two.

  9. Cruise Ports

     

    Departing from:San Juan, Puerto Rico

    Sailing to:

    Tortola, B.V.I

    Fort De France

    Roseau, Dominica

    Basseterre, St. Kitts

    Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas

    For an OV on the continental deck is 1,888.00

     

    Adventure of the Seas

    Adventure of the Seas

    THIS CRUISE VISITS 6 PORTS

    San Juan,

    Puerto Rico

    Charlotte Amalie,

    St. Thomas

    St. Croix,

    U.S.V.I

    St. Johns,

    Antigua

    Castries,

    St. Lucia

    St. George's,

    Grenada

    For OV is 2,153.00

     

    I know the AOS has ice skating, rock climbing wall, Royal promenade, AOS has more dining options, we sailed in Nov to St Maarten, barbados, St Thomas, St Lucia and St kitts. If you could share your opinions on either ships from dining to entertainment and OV staterooms and anything else

     

    In your circumstance, since you've visited St Thomas and St. Kitts already, I'd do your second choice because the price difference isn't that much and you'll get to try more islands that you haven't already done vs the other option. Just a thought.

     

    Edit: I see you've also done St Lucia so I guess in either case you're only seeing 2 new places. I'd choose the route that gives you the islands you'd like to visit the most. If you're neutral on ports and are going more for the ship then I don't have an opinion because I know nothing about Celebrity :)

  10. Looking to plan my next cruise and hubby wants to do southern caribbean as it has a lot of ports to visit. There are 3 options and all around the same price so which one would you choose. We have never been to the southern caribbean or on these ships before so any insight would be most helpful.

     

    Option 1 (On Adventure of the seas)

    Leave from San Juan

    -Phillipsburg, St. Marteen

    -Bassetere, St. Kits

    -St. John's, Antigua

    -Castries. St. Lucia

    -Bridgetown, Barbados

     

    Option 2 (On Adventure of the seas)

    Leave from San Juan

    -Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas

    -Bassetere, St. Kits

    -Willemsted, Curacao

    -Oranjestad, Aruba

     

    Option 3 (Jewel of the seas)

    Leave from San Juan

    -St. Croix

    -Phillipsburg, St. Marteen

    -Roseao, Dominica

    -Bridgetown, Barbados

    -St. George, Grenada

     

    So which one would you decide and why and if you have been to thee ports before can you tell me a little about what you liked and what you didn't like.

     

    I would choose option 1. I haven't been yet myself but I did some research and chose that exact ship and route for my next cruise. I like the ship (I've been on 2 in that class and have been very happy with the size, amenities and layout)

    The Jewel (your option 3) is a smaller ship with less activities and no promenade inside the ship.

     

    I like the islands in option 1, they all get mostly good reviews and have great beaches and interesting activities. There are also 5 islands as opposed to 4. Your option 2 would be my second choice as it has great islands as well and is on the same ship, but it has 1 less island. That's the only downside. But Aruba and curaçao are supposed to be great islands (especially if you dive or snorkel).

     

    Your option 3 has 3 islands that don't seem to get great reviews. 2 of them (Grenada and Dominica) don't get great reviews because they are very small and run down and not quite ready for tourists, which is fine and some people probably like that. I'm sure there are beautiful beaches to visit there, but other than that, it sounds like most people would rather skip the islands or stay on the ship because there is no shopping, restaurants, activities etc. I can't vouch for that myself because I've never been. St. Croix seems to be one of the least favorite southern islands as well, with lots of reviewers saying they'd rather skip it. Not sure why, I guess there's not much to do and it's not as pretty as other options? Idk, but read the port reviews and you'll get a feel for it. So option 3 wouldn't even be on the list for me.

     

    I like to be active and social so I like to have lots of options and I like to have lots to do. I can always choose to sit back and relax if I feel like it, but I want the option, so that's why I like the bigger ship, more ports and ports with fun stuff to do.

     

    Barbados is great because of sea turtles, water activities, beaches like the Boatyard (look on trip advisor) where there's lots going on at the beach.

     

    Antigua has great beaches with lots of amenities as well, but also has quiet beaches. You can snorkel and scuba and jet ski. I'm not sure if there's a whole lot more to do there, maybe zip lining and horseback riding. But there are lots of beach options.

     

    St Kitts has a lot of island tours that take you to plantations and old forts. Grays Island Excursions seems like a popular and well rated choice. You can also take a ferry to the nearby island of Nevis and do the Nevis Peak Hike if you're really adventurous. It's a steep hike up the side of a volcano, it's muddy from what I can tell.

     

    St. Lucia has great island tours as well. Look up Cosols or Herods. You can see all the places their tours go to and probably find a cab driver that would take you to just one or two if you see something that sounds fun and don't want the longer day. You can also find catamaran tours that take you out to snorkel and such. They have the Pitons which are a great photo opp, and there are a lot of nice lush tropical spots to see.

     

    St Maarten is the only one I've been to, and it seems to be a favorite amongst a lot of people. Best shopping of all the islands. You can choose to hang on the Dutch side and shop and go to beaches, or cross over to the French side for authentic French patisseries, chocolatiers, cafés and clothing optional beaches (orient bay) or go to Maho beach and watch the planes land. There's tons to do on this stop. The Blue Bitch Bar is right by the ship port and is Oceanside and close to shopping.

  11. Do be sure to let RC or your TA know if there are any specific reasons you need an earlier seating. They may be able to bump you up the list.

     

    OF course there is always MTD (My Time Dining). It is possible to reserve the same time every night with them as well and if you go see the MTD head waiter once you get onboard, you may even be able to arrange the same table if you like.

     

    Gotcha, that makes sense. I wonder if you call the customer service number and tell them you want to book early dining but that the website isn't letting you choose if they'll do it for you on their end. Sometimes they save seating for travel agents (from what I've read) and there really is room, it just doesn't show available to people online. Maybe they can override an early dining table for you. I also hear that there is a "my time dining" option in the main dining room and you can show up whenever you want. Perhaps try that route if they won't let you book the seating you want.

  12. I've heard about people saying when they booked later they had to get late dining and be waitlisted for early dining. How early would I need to book to avoid that on Freedom? We will have 6 people coming. With a child, late seating wouldn't work at all, but I'm happy with my time or early seating. I just wasn't sure how early I had to book to be pretty certain to get that. Thanks!

     

    Just a thought, but keep in mind the time zone of the ship vs the time zone of where you're from. I always request 8:30 seating because for me, that is actually 5:30, so the early seating would mean I'm eating dinner at 3 in the afternoon. I realize we acclimate and operate on the ship's time zone, but for me it takes a few days and my stomach doesn't necessarily switch over. The other benefit (I think) of later seating is that you don't have to get back to the ship as early on port days. If you have several people using the shower or a woman who wants to re-wash or straighten her hair and do her makeup, that could take a while and a 6:30 seating after getting back to the ship at 5 could feel rushed. I like 8:30 seating, so if that's what you end up with, it does have it's benefits. You can also eat at the windjammer buffet for a snack beforehand.

  13. It says:

     

    (except on Quantum of the Seas, Anthem of the Seas, Ovation of the Seas and Harmony of the Seas) to take advantage of this offer.

     

    Where does it say Allure doesn't count?

     

    My apologies! I was going off memory and I thought Allure and Oasis were included because I remembered the guy on the phone telling me those ships were on the list, but you're correct, allure does count. So it's probably just the same problem I had where you had to call because the website didn't show up correctly.

  14. Does the website reflect the 50 percent off deposit?

     

    I am looking at a cruise that is 10 days long and for a regular balcony for 2 (on Allure) it says the deposit is $900.... is that correct or is that before the half price?

     

    It seems high to be half off, so wanted to ask.

     

    The Allure isn't eligible as per the fine print at the very bottom of the offer. That being said, I have tried to reserve two cruises that should be eligible and both times the website is charging me the full deposit. I even called and RC told me the deposit would be 50% while the website was charging 100%. Anyway, the new ships aren't eligible for the offer and the cruise has to be 7 days or longer and the room has to be an ocean view or above, but not a suite.

  15. I will be sailing with my girls on Indy in October. In order to save for fun stuff, and since we don't plan on spending any time in our room except to sleep and change, we booked an inside quad (my girls are my teen dd's).

     

    I have heard talk of the tiny bathrooms and just figured they are smaller than hotel bathrooms, which is to be expected. However, I saw a vlog from Indy a few weeks ago and the young woman appeared to be standing in the shower at one point (inside cabin) and it didn't look like she had much room to move in there. I'm a little curious as to how much room there is for a larger than typical person.

     

    They're smaller than any shower you've ever seen. I personally didn't have a problem with it and had enty of room to wash my hair, turn around and rinse etc. But I'm only 5'4" and weigh 110 pounds. I feel like anyone who is tall or overweight may have a very hard time closing the door.

  16. I'll do a longer trip report on the trip itself, but wanted to share my thoughts on the drink package while fresh of Liberty 5-day last week (3/23). At first I hedged on the deluxe package ($49/day) but my wife and I enjoy good wine, and I like beer during the day. In fact, I was pretty sure I’d get my value out of it on beer alone, but the 20% discount on wine sealed the deal. “Life’s too short to drink cheap wine” so the opportunity to get a discount on some of the better options made it worthwhile. I purchased the deluxe package for myself on boarding, and we figured we'd buy my wife's drinks separately as she's typically drinks a lot less. :)

     

    HOWEVER... I think this is still something of a work in progress, and is likely having unintended consequences for RCL and cruisers – both good and bad.

    On boarding day, we headed out to the poolside, found a table, and to kick off our vacation, I ordered a beer on my drink card, my wife a tropical drink of the day on hers. On our very first drink order, the waiter (to be clear, not us) immediately suggested, “just give me his card. I get them both on his (package). I’ll take care of you, no problem. Just don’t tell anyone, right?” What was I supposed to do, argue? So right out to the gate, you can see problems. Clearly the waiter knew his way around the chaos of first day and perhaps figured his way to a potentially bigger tip by using the same card. This happened several other times as well – generally around the pool.

     

    Interestingly, though, there were scenarios when the opposite would occur- when I wanted to order one drink for myself, and purchase one for my wife (on my card), and the bartenders/waiters in other cases would not let me get 2 drinks without two sea passes – even though I was perfectly happy to purchase one. I don’t know if this was an age-check thing, or something to do with the package, but I don’t recall this limit on previous cruises. Regardless, this process of double-ringing separately is clearly more labor intensive for the bartenders and really slows down the process. Still at other times, I started noticing bartenders simply not ringing my beers at all, but just handing them to me, which I suspect isn’t figuring into RCL’s inventory. Not to mention, not giving me an opportunity to tip additionally. And so about that tipping...

     

    Despite the included tip, I still felt compelled to add $1 to most purchases. That's just me. But honestly, I didn’t get a sense that it mattered a bit and felt kind of dumb afterwards - tipping what amounts to 35% for someone to open a beer bottle. But I still did it anyway...

     

    As I mentioned, overall I found bar service quite slow. All the bars I frequented during the day (solarium, pool bar, sky bar, squeezes) required waits for every drink – often waiting for 3 or 4 other folks per bartender. In addition to the physical bars in the area, most sea days had two separate temporary bars set up often without registers, which required the bartender to write down the folio numbers on a pad of paper, and left them with no opportunity to earn an additional tip. Conceptually I thought this was a good idea to supplement the slow bar service, but without registers and an additional tip opportunity I felt service here was even more painfully slow.

     

    Sadly my guess is it’s only going to get worse. At the risk of being a bit cynical, the reality is once they have you purchasing a drink package, it’s economically not in their interest to provide you with the product and service, it just isn’t. Looking at it historically, I suspect bar service is going very much the way of the MDR/Windjammer/Specialty restaurants. For right now, the selection and brands included are impressive – like the MDR was in the 80’s (or Chops was when it was introduced). But if drink packages become almost compulsory, as I think they eventually will, cuts will become inevitable, items will be removed and you’ll get a very basic package and service, or you’ll pay an up fee for something better. (you could argue you're seeing hints of it already with Select/Deluxe) So while overall I liked the having the package and felt I got use out of it, I’m not really sure it bodes well longer term.

     

    Of course this is just one small part of a great vacation, and as I mentioned I'm still glad I got it. But I know the folks on CC love to banter about the drink package... so have at it. :)

     

    That's an interesting perspective. Most people felt that bar service was slow because bartenders were disgruntled at not getting as many tips. However your insight likely has a lot to do with it; RC has no incentive to keep as many bartenders because they don't care if service is slow, in fact it's better for them if it is slow because they get more money for less drinks served. I have always liked all inclusive resorts for the fact that I can drink more without feeling like I'm paying so much money, but I have never bought the drink package on the ship because the cost is a high that I would never drink that much. It would be worth it for a day or two, but I've never drank $400 worth of alcohol on any vacation, even the all inclusives where alcohol was covered. The stories of slow service have discouraged me from buying one even moreso, and I think you're right on the reasons for the slow service.

  17. I have been away from Royal for a few years. We thinking about sailing them again but I very confused with all of these "sales". I have been vaguely watching prices for next January. How can I tell what is a good price? Every day there seems to be a new promotion but are any of them actually any good?

     

    I started looking last fall (2014) at prices for January 2016 and was finding inside rooms for 2 people on Freedom of the Seas for around $1200 total. It seems like the price has gone way up since then, but that seemed to be a standard pricing for a year or more ahead of time on that ship. If I see something now that's too far over that I would think I was paying too much.

     

    My current cruise is for this summer and the cost was double, different ship and southern route, but I felt that for a busy season cruise that was a fair price. Especially since most summer cruises are around $3500 or $4000 (for two people inside cabin).

  18. Hi, does anyone know if there is a minimum age limit for spa services? We're sailing in September on Freedom and it's our friends little girls birthday we were thinking about treating her and our daughter to a little pamper party but don't know if there is a minimum age. Any help appreciated.

     

    I got my daughter a facial on the Mariner when she was 10. Not sure about other services but my guess is nail services and non-body services are fine. If they have to remove their clothes (massage, salt scrub, wraps etc)'it's probably a no go.

  19. So the OP is the "bad guy" because he wants to follow the "rules" as told to him by RCL? Do I have that right?

     

    How many of those criticizing the OP also complain when people wear shorts in the MDR? "RCL tells you 'no shorts', you should listen to them!"

     

    She's the bad guy because she's acting like she's too good to sleep in it herself.

  20. Oh for crying out loud, grow up already! Sorry, I don't usually get name-cally on threads here, but this "rant" is absolutely ridiculous.

     

    The OP was PERFECTLY FINE with their 5yo sleeping on the Pullman when they originally made the reservation, but NOW they have a problem with it????

     

    And don't give me that "it's not safe if they hit rough seas" baloney -- a small child is NOT going to be thrown out of a Pullman bed unless the ship turns over like the Concordia, plain and simple. At that point, it's not going to matter who was sleeping on which bed -- you'll all be underwater and swimming for the door.

     

    This is simply sour grapes on the part of the OP -- they want something for nothing, at least that's my opinion. The only reason that the cut-off for sleeping in the Pullman is 6yo is because some pencil-pusher in the Risk Management department of the cruise line's insurance company chose that number.

     

    THERE IS NOTHING MAGICAL ABOUT THE AGE OF SIX! :rolleyes:

     

    I know kids who can sleep safely in a Pullman at age three, and I know kids whose judgment I wouldn't trust to not do something stupid (like jump out instead of using the ladder) at age twelve. The age of six is nothing more than a number.

     

    And before anyone asks, my own son slept in the Pullman at age three and age four (two different cruises on two different lines) -- he loved his "special bunk bed"!

     

    And the room was set up such that the Pullman was above the double bed anyway, so if he did intentionally make himself fall out of bed (the only way he was going to "fall out" -- there is a railing on those things, you know!), he would have landed on the double bed right underneath him.

     

    OP, just grow up. If your kid is afraid to sleep in a Pullman, you shouldn't have booked one. If you're afraid to have your kid sleep in a Pullman, you shouldn't have booked one. Otherwise, put your kid wherever you want (the kid can even sleep on the floor -- kids can and will sleep anywhere, with or without a sheet / blanket / pillow!) and simply enjoy your cruise!

     

    Exactly!

  21. I am so disatisfied with rcl at this time..i booked months ago through them not using a ta for an oceanview room.during the booking process i stated my kids age being 5.then months passed and i found out via cruise critic(never via rcl) that my kid can not use the pullman on the cabin and that one of the adults must use the pullman instead..when i found that i emailed rcl and told them that i can not accept that.i dont want to sleep on a pullman bed and neither does my wife..i told them at the time of booking there was never stated that there would be this restriction.as well as that there was nothing written on the rcl site about this..then their reply was sorry but sleep on the pullman yourself...its my first rcl cruise and probable my last..i feel tgey mislead me and their reply was totally unacceptable..if i was outside cancellation period then i would have cancelled and never ever book again with them...i didnt pay so much money just to sleep on a pullman bed..thats not WOW RCL that totally RIDICULOUS

     

     

    Sent from my iPhone using Forums

     

    Ok so here's my 2 cents. Royal has to do this for liability purposes. Put your 5 year old in the Pullman and chill out. If he falls, you can't sue, but quit freaking out over something so minor. Have a good vacation and let your kid sleep where you want.

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