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The Traveling Man

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About Me

  • Location
    Texas
  • Interests
    Crossword Puzzles, Model Railroading
  • Favorite Cruise Line(s)
    NCL
  • Favorite Cruise Destination Or Port of Call
    Europe

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Cool Cruiser (2/15)

  1. Knowing that you're from Vancouver, this may be a sacrilege to ask, but have you ever tried Eggs Benedict with smoked salmon in place of the Canadian bacon? YUMM!
  2. Plus two more that you will visit twice. There's lots to see and do in many of these ports. Do you have your tour plans in place, or are you looking for suggestions?
  3. We also stayed there on a one day layover. We chose it because it's next to an entrance to the port, so we figured that we could walk to the cruise terminal with our luggage in tow. Unfortunately, for security reasons the port authority had closed access at that gate, so we had to take a taxi on a two mile roundabout journey to the gate at the other end of the port. Let's hope that they have reopened the gate next to the Holiday Inn by the time you travel. Looking forward to hearing all about your adventure. Bon voyage!
  4. We have sailed to Alaska on four different NCL ships including the Encore. As I recall, the meeting place for most tours was either in the auditorium or on the pier just outside the ship. I think the farthest we had to go for any of them was once in Skagway when we walked about a quarter-mile along the pier, from the Joy past the Bliss, to board the WP&Y Railroad. In Juneau the meeting spot sometimes is in town at the base of the tramway. There usually is a shuttle bus to take you from the ship to that meeting point. In Ketchikan, since NCL shifted their docking location to Ward's Cove, the meeting point for some tours is inside the converted warehouse which NCL uses as a cruise terminal. It's a five minute walk from the ship to your meeting point, then a 15 to 20 minute bus ride into the city center. In Icy Strait, there is a tramway to take you from the pier into the main area of interest. It's about 100 yards or so along the pier from the ship to the cable car station.
  5. Yes, today. Who knows what their plans are for next week, next month, or next year. What do they do if the unthinkable occurs and they find themselves in a hospital in Canada, needing to make other travel arrangements to get back home. A passport may not be an essential requirement, but at a cost of just over $1.00 per month, I think it is a wise investment in an "insurance policy." YMMV, but I won't leave home without mine.
  6. We we able to have breakfast and lunch in Moderno / Cagney's along with those guests who were traveling in a Suite (we had booked a standard balcony stateroom). We received an additional night in a specialty restaurant at no additional cost. This was over and above the number of specialty dinners which we received with Free at Sea and Latitudes benefits. We had coffee with the General Manager one morning and spent an hour or so just chatting with him about a wide variety of subjects, getting to know him, learning about his life growing up in a part of the world we had not previously visited, catching up on what some of our mutual friends, i.e. other ship's officers, were up to, etc. Essentially, we just were made to feel like we were part of the NCL family.
  7. Agreed. A time or two when our cruise covered a birthday or our anniversary, we asked the CN team if it would be possible to arrange our Dinner with the Officers for a different night, but we definitely tried to be as polite about it as possible. We were prepared to forego DWTO if they weren't able to avoid our special day. Several times, though, we have had to change a reservation we already had made for a specialty restaurant in order to accommodate the plans NCL made for our DWTO. The key is to remain flexible, remember that you're on vacation, and that most every bump in the road that you experience is a first world problem. Just roll with the punches.
  8. I'm sure it's that darn AI doing its thing by autocorrecting your spelling, but I just have to ask, did the porter enjoy his breakfast bagels?
  9. One person's waste of money is another person's ace in the hole. My wife and I each had careers which sometimes called on us, especially her, to drop what we were doing at work, jet off to a client's office, and take care of business. That frequently meant overseas travel at the drop of a hat. Maintaining a current passport was essential. We frequently were able to take a few vacation days either before or after the work assignment to travel in foreign countries and receive the benefits of having someone else (our employers) pay for our travel. Frequently when one of us had a work assignment in a foreign country, the other one of us could tag along. The "plus one" had to pay for their own airfare and some meals, but the hotel was covered. We were fortunate to have flexible schedules to permit this. Sometimes we even booked a last minute cruise after the work assignment. The cost of a passport works out to just over one dollar per month, so for us, and for maybe many others, the flexibility of having a current passport is well worth its minimal expense. Naturally, the one time that I did not renew my passport in time to keep it current was the time my wife traveled to Japan on short notice and I wasn't able to join her. Lesson learned.
  10. I agree that Westbound TAs are more relaxed, with their 25 hour days, than Eastbound, with their 23 hour days. OTOH, losing one hour of sleep each night for six or seven days is a lot less stressful for me than losing an entire night's sleep (I never have been able to sleep on a plane) and trying to stay awake for 34 or 35 straight hours. I can manage the flight back from Europe. We get home in time for a late dinner, then it's straight to bed after being awake for about 21 or 22 hours.
  11. The best steak I ever had on a ship was in La Cucina on the Epic. The steaks in Cagney's are OK, I suppose, and those in Le Bistro are spectacular, especially when they still had the Five Pepper Steak on the menu (Boeuf au Cinque Poivre), but that steak in La Cucina topped them all.
  12. My wife used to travel for business. A lot. She is quite the adventurous gourmand, so no room service meals in the hotel room for her. Sometimes she would meet up with colleagues for dinner, but since many of them fell into the rut of Dunkin for breakfast, McDonald's for lunch, and KFC for dinner, she frequently would dine alone. Take a book, ignore the stares, and savor the flavors. Bon appetite!
  13. First, it's always good to inform your stateroom attendant that you will be continuing on your travels for the next leg of the cruise, but that you will be changing rooms. Forewarned is forearmed. I usually turn in a bag of laundry the day before turnaround day. We tag it with our new stateroom number. That clears out some space in our luggage, so we don't have to worry about cramming in everything else. Your laundry will be returned to you in your new room, usually in a day or two. The morning of turnaround, we pack our bags and leave them inside our room, with luggage tags indicating our stateroom number for the second half of our B2B. The stateroom attendant will see to it that the bags get delivered to the new room. Depending upon which port will serve as your turnaround, you may be required to leave your room, you may have to leave the ship, or you may even have to leave and stay off the ship until a certain time later that day. We usually take a tour to fill the hours, but sometimes we just sit in the cruise terminal and take advantage of their free internet connection. As you probably already know, once you return to board the ship, you bypass the check-in line and treat it just like any other intermediate port of call. NCL usually will give you a tag to wear which indicates that you are a returning or continuing passenger. I've never done a B2B where we were allowed to stay on board, but I have read that others have. We have changed rooms on about four different B2Bs and have never had a problem.
  14. My personal preference is for East Walk Off. You don't have to conform to a set departure time, so you can set your own schedule. Unless we have a close connection, as you do for this trip, we usually enjoy a leisurely breakfast, go back to our room to wash up and gather our things, then stroll off the ship among the stragglers. Our primary luggage has wheels, we try to pack light (although my wife's bag usually tops 40 pounds), and our backpacks / camera bags / her purse are fairly light. We don't like to leave our bags in the hallway the night before departure, so we finish packing after breakfast on departure day. Just our preference, YMMV. The baggage claim area in Manhattan is huge and not well lit. It could be an issue finding your bags. Not saying that it will be a problem, just that it could be. The cruise terminal has both escalators and elevators, so you should not have any trouble hauling your bag up or down stairs. Assuming your ship arrives on the advertised schedule and there are no snags clearing Customs, you should have no trouble making it to the curb by 11:00. Bon voyage.
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