Jump to content

LeeW

Members
  • Posts

    5,047
  • Joined

Everything posted by LeeW

  1. Actually they sometimes don't catch the violation on booking and then cancel one of the cruises months later due to the violation.
  2. Correct. And you have to pay extra in cash (no account available on the lifeboat) if you are Standard.
  3. Actually entering the lifeboat will be considered as booking a new cruise. And eating the rations on that lifeboat will be considered casual dining.
  4. A few more points: Area left as you go ashore has more shade trees. Still have umbrellas every 2/4 chairs and tends to be fairly quiet. Not much shade at shallow end of lagoon. Most of the beach beds are out in the sun and have flimsy curtains - we had one booked but found that trees gave better shade and don't cost $200. Take your own snorkeling gear (they will loan a vest if you need one for free). Take your own inflatable noodles - the mats run around $19 for the day each. Some people bring water chairs but we take this one on every trip because it is large with lots of flotation and easy to roll up: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07BNV32GK/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&th=1 Cuban sandwiches in buffets are pretty good. And a ton of fruit if you don't want meat. Free water/juices at buffets, as well as soft serve ice cream. Watch out for the seagulls - they will steal your lunch. Funnel cakes star at snack shacks. We usually go in ocean in morning, eat, visit pool to wash off salt, exchange towels (wet ones are heavy to take back to ship), head back to ship. Zero cost.
  5. The airport transfers are scheduled departure groups so normally you will get the tags for the early or late group as determined by your flight times (they have you do a survey on the app about 3 days before departure). That said, buses depart when they fill. If lots of people do walk-offs buses will start leaving even before the first scheduled group gets out of the terminal. Really depends on when you want to head for the airport. Also, if in Miami or Fort Lauderdale you can sign up to have the cruise line give you your boarding passes and airline tag your luggage (again a survey, around $25pp). Luggage is put out the night before and the next you see it is at your final airport.
  6. One reason we dislike Sky Sanctuary is the lack of shade - more cabanas and fewer loungers. Amount of shade in cabanas depends strongly on which way the ship is traveling.
  7. I got both for cruise in August but in the future can only get one. Wife will file for stockholder in the future and I have military. If your original question is can you use a credit card, cancel onboard (more than 48 hours before excursion), and then rebook with OBC the answer is yes, but you will pay onboard price for the excursion if space is available, and will get the credit card charge refunded onboard as Refundable OBC. If you have a large amount of this and you don't use it onboard it will take weeks after the cruise to get it back as a check.
  8. Best ships are not there this year - Coral and Island. Smaller, with glass-enclosed adult pool. Sapphire, Diamond, Star, Grand and Golden are larger ships that also have indoor pools. We always liked Coral and Island because you can sit in padded lounger in shorts and watch scenery and step outside for photos. Last trip we didn't bother with a balcony because we were in the enclosed area all day. However, avoid the area above a lounge - the off-key singer was terrible at night. Sail B2B from Vancouver and do the 26 glacier Phillips trip on turnaround day. Did that last time on Island. All ships do Inside Passage in Alaska but Princess Royal class (and larger other lines) can't go between Vancouver Island and the mainland. Seawalk might be worth 10 minutes of your time, nothing more. You might also want to look into Celebrity. They tend to longer port stays and have mostly musical entertainment rather than big shows and water slides. But they don't hit Glacier Bay. Viewing of Hubbard Glacier is from farther away unless you take the Glacier Explorer excursion (around $400pp). Son is currently on 11 night Oceana Regatta cruise. A bit more expensive but hits other ports than normal and is sailing roundtrip from Seattle. Much smaller ship,
  9. Lots of folks here recommend West Quay, so I am booked with them (haven't traveled yet). There app won't download in US and web site won't take your booking. I booked mine via email. They send you a payment link (from a taxi processing service) that is good for 36 hours, or 3 tries. First two times the credit card companies bounced the payment but after I told them it was me and got a new link from West Quay it processed with no problem. Around $180 US for car for 2/3, so if you can take the National Bus you might want to look into that.
  10. Log in to the cruise personalizer and look at the payments tab. Mine shows both military and stockholder credit. Under new rules you can't get both but since stock is in both our names I can get military and DW can get stock OBC.
  11. Little Mermaid reminds me of when we saw Plymouth Rock. Houses around here have bigger rocks in their front yards. If you are 100 feet away from the statue you really can't see it.
  12. Since you are from Europe, your phone likely works. Would think that you can get Uber rides there. Also, you can get the taxi driver's phone number to call when you are ready to go back to the ship. In many ports this is very common.
  13. Most of the time you are sailing is at night, but we do use our balcony on Alaska cruises. We also like smaller ships like Radiance, which has a glassed-in swimming pool. Waves in pool can be impressive.
  14. Book a ship with decent public viewing areas - the Oasis class RCI ships have almost zero viewing from Promenade deck. Also, smaller is better getting on and off ships. In six trips, best was Island/Coral Princess going to Glacier Bay. Radiance of the Seas was pretty good going only to Hubbard, but fogged out one trip. We have another on that ship booked for next year with family, although ship has fewer kid-type activities. Expect very expensive excursions and food onshore in Alaska. Seaplanes and copters tend to be $400pp but are great for glaciers and bears. Even taking a bus to Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau is now around $50pp - the park service requires the operators to buy park admission for each passenger even if you have a national park pass. And we have heard that the operators are running out of passes this year. We weren't impressed with Icy Straight as a port. Note that if you sail from Seattle you will most likely have to stop in Victoria. Nice city to visit (parliament tour is great and free) but you lose an Alaska day doing this. If you have time (and cash) book roundtrip from Vancouver. Then you can book either the Kenai Fjords boat trip or the 26 glacier boat trip on turnaround day. Both excellent. Booking back to back avoids the hassle and cost of flights to Alaska.
  15. In the past I remember them doing scuba courses in the Aqua pool but when I took the refresher course on Harmony it was in the 4' deep sport pool. Really tough doing depth control and swims in that shallow a pool.
  16. Problem I had was that my old Princess password wasn't valid on app because of new requirement for a special symbol. Once I went through nonsense of resetting password and adding special symbol in both places I haven't had a problem. Still prefer the web-based app to the phone one, though.
  17. Once you are logged on and on your cruise page list, refresh the page - browser may be getting old cruise out of cache. Note that it isn't all that unusual for cruise updates to take a few days. Another thing you can try is to add the cruise again.
  18. The Copenhagen Card was a good deal for us - all buses, rail and canal boats plus entry to most museums. Got it at a tourist office just north of Tivoli, but there are many around town. Little Mermaid is a joke! Fort adjacent to it was fun and palaces were great.
  19. Typically you note any special celebrations (and the date you want to celebrate it) in the app profile. Used to be about a 45 day window around the cruise but never enforced. You will get a card in your cabin that you give to your waiter for small cake at dinner. Cake isn't bad, but heavy dark chocolate.
  20. Turn left once you get on the island. Walk across the bridge with the photographers. When concrete path veers right, go straight. Merchandise kiosks will be on right, bar and scuba shop on left. You will see several hundred chairs with umbrellas under the palm trees. One of the main buffets is just beyond, nearest Snack Shack is a bit farther on the sand path. If you walk through the buffet you will hit the fresh water pool.
  21. When we were there surf wasn't bad, although you couldn't see your feet in knee deep water. Food pretty good. You do get chairs and umbrellas free, although no shade in that area. Pretty similar to beach clubs in the Eastern Caribbean. On the whole we preferred going to West End (Tabyana) because you can snorkel there and lots more shade. We got this place on a sale for around $35pp so ok just for transportation and beach access. Don't think it is worth more than that.
  22. Princess shouldn't have a problem with this (can't do online) but you CAN book one adult in each cabin online. Then switch cabins onboard.
  23. If you are booked with a TA then Princess won't talk to you. Your TA will handle both lodging and transfers. Note that for lodging you will pay the rack rate for each passenger (double advertised hotel rate). This does cover transfer to hotel and hotel to ship.
  24. The big problem with McKinley lodge is the 40 minute drive into Talkeetna. Buses don't run all that often and your stay includes only one bus there and one back - you pay if you want to waste another 1 1/2 hours in transit. Mountain looks great if it is out (and for us was on both trips). But really no activities near the lodge. Most require a trip back into Talkeetna. Food is ok, although expensive like all Alaska food. If you are taking the train, be aware that there is a LOT of standing around waiting for it. They will bus everyone to the train stop kiosk around an hour before the train is due. Nothing there, although some folks walked into town while waiting.
  25. It was available (at the $400+ price) for both north and southbound Radiance last September. Northbound got cancelled since fog/rain blocked all glacier viewing that day - we didn't even get to the boat boarding location.
×
×
  • Create New...

If you are already a Cruise Critic member, please log in with your existing account information or your email address and password.