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kochleffel

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Everything posted by kochleffel

  1. I probably don't have as much experience on HAL as you do, but this was not at all my experience. No funerary music whatsoever. And not all old people -- the cruise had an unusual number (for HAL) of young couples and many of them came to the concerts, every one of which was SRO.
  2. I noticed that Lincoln Center Stage is described as "on select cruises," but I didn't know whether that was a change. It's still listed for the fall TATL on the Oosterdam that I have booked, and I really hope that it stays, because it's the main reason I chose HAL over other cruises lines for an itinerary with lots of sea days.
  3. I haven't yet taken a cruise longer than seven or eight days, because of a job that limits when I can travel. After June of this year, that won't be a concern, but I'm still not likely to book very long cruises -- a TATL this fall, 14 days on the ship plus a week before embarkation, will be the longest so far. I chose HAL for that, and the amenities offered on other lines' megaships are negatives as far as I'm concerned, but if HAL shifts entirely to cruise that are a lot longer than that, I probably won't be booking. The Junior Cat wouldn't let me.
  4. I especially remember the complaints from residents of Venice that cruise-ship passengers didn't spend money on shore and yet managed to make a mess. Specifically, passengers on day calls bought nothing but trinkets probably made in China, and didn't eat in restaurants, just picked up McD's and then threw the wrappers into the canals. Passengers embarking from Venice would have been likely to stay on land before, after, or both, which is what I had planned, but in the end I concluded that travelers like me weren't really welcome in Venice, even if no cruise was involved. Although I would certainly eat in real restaurants, I wouldn't spend a fortune in shops. I'd rather put money into travel than into shopping. When the embarkation port was changed to Ravenna, I switched to a cruise embarking from Athens.
  5. Thanks. I'm not trying to book any fixed-price restaurants, and the SPD offer is just one dinner in a five-day cruise. However, at this point Cagney's can't be booked online on any evening earlier than 9:00 p.m., so I'm leaving one open and will try to book it on board.
  6. This is just a 5-day sailing to Bermuda on the Getaway, which doesn't sound like it would attract many passengers at the highest tiers, but yes, it would be considerate for high-tier members who had been automatically signed up to take themselves off the list if they're not going to attend. But I envision heading first to Cruise Next, then to booking for specialty dining if I don't have it arranged in advance. (Is it correct that dinners using Platinum certificates can't be booked online?) Right now I'm not finding any show booking available, and I'm not sure that there is anything that I would want to see.
  7. I'm interested in this because the Sun and the Sky are scheduled to sail from Baltimore in the fall. Anyone have recent experience on the Sky, too?
  8. Plenty of ships have doors that open outward, into a tiny recess, not directly into the corridor. You would put your luggage beside the recess, not in front of the door.
  9. It's a four-course menu: appetizer/soup/salad, pasta/pizza, main, dessert. Once I had a new server, just switched from another restaurant, who didn't understand that and tried to serve the pasta (first plate in Italian logic) simultaneously with the main (second).
  10. In honor of Bird Day, I retrieved and refilled a feeder that had blown down. Thai curry soup would be OK with me, as would Roy's alternative, but I'm actually make a red lentil soup. Red lentils are often used in curries but the recipe I'm following is Greek-influenced. I had peanut butter this morning before I knew that it was George Washington Carver Day. In other CC forums, HAL passengers have the reputation of lining up for dinner at 4:00 p.m. and going to bed at 8:00 p.m., and it is starting to sound as if HAL wants it that way. My only HAL cruise so far did not have what people claim are the typical demographics; it was the first week in January in 2020. The TATL that I have booked will be my first cruise longer than 7 or 8 days, and it is interesting to read how people prepare for world and other very long cruises. I remember one blog, not from the current season, that described taking actual furniture (a shelf unit, to be assembled on board, and an inflatable ottoman, iirc), which felt a bit over the top to me, and then there's the one already discussed where they purchased many cases of soft drinks at a warehouse store right before boarding. In the NCL forum, there used to be posts about being unable to survive without Coca-Cola, even in short cruises, because NCL served only Pepsi products, but NCL has recently changed to Coke. I spent part of the afternoon setting up a website to offer marriage and lifecycle officiation, because four synagogues--the local one and three others in the region--are looking for new rabbis and this will be a problem for anyone planning a summer wedding. I suppose I will have to buy a respectable new suit, because everything I have is decades old (I stopped wearing that sort of thing for work in 1996). To be realistic, I get more calls for funerals than for weddings.
  11. I feel the same way, after having it in Le Bistro before the upcharge began.
  12. My next NCL cruise will be my first at Latitudes Platinum. According to the website, the benefits include a wine tasting and a behind-the-scenes tour. Are these currently being offered? Is the capacity so limited that it's necessary to get the earliest possible check-in time and then run straight to the cruise next desk to book them?
  13. I forgot to mention yesterday that the posts about the Dominican Republic and the photos caused me to think differently about visiting there. It appears in many cruise itineraries but I hadn't been much interested -- now, it would increase the likelihood that I'd book a cruise including it, especially if the same itinerary didn't included any of my "once is enough" ports. When I got home from D.C., the pile of mail included a very large, flat envelope with a return address of GODDARD SPACE CENTER. It took me a while to realize that it's from an online discussion group that NASA scientists to communicate with writers, artists, and teachers, and it was a prize from the December meeting, where instead of discussing science, we played word games. I didn't do well, but everyone who got at least one point received something. It's the 2023 NASA science calendar.
  14. I would like spaghetti but won't be having any. Turkey meatballs are OK, shredded coconut is not, but coconut milk as an ingredient in curry is OK. An organization that I am obligated to support is having a trivia night this weekend, but I'm not going -- I'm very good at general trivia, not at all on music or film trivia. I'd probably like the St. Emilion. A while ago I worked with someone who was blind and took meeting notes in Braille. Her hiring coincided with a shift from typewriters and paper to computers, and she had hers fitted with a voice synthesizer. Attending a funeral at 11:30. Graveside only, but the forecast is for rain not to resume until later. It's the burial of a man who was on the board of my organization until he moved to Florida two years ago, at the age of 94. I knew that he was failing because he stopped emailing me (mostly bad) jokes.
  15. Thanks. Time to plan, yes, but also six months of fending off demands to help find my replacement. On my birthday I gave some thought to want I want to do after retiring, but not about the time from now until then. I just know that that's not it.
  16. With the exception of this thread, everyone on the Internet seems to be quarreling with everyone else today. Is it just because of diets, gym visits, and Dry January, or is something else going on?
  17. The worst I've experienced was between NYC and Halifax. The first morning out, every conversation I overheard included the word Dramamine. Every one. Later that day, there was a loud noise, more a crack than a crash, as the bow pitched down so sharply that water washed over deck 14. I'm not prone to motion sickness, but at times I was afraid of falling. More recently, on one of the Alaska state ferries, the purser announced that everyone should go immediately to wherever they wanted to be on the ship and stay there for the next hour, and take motion-sickness medication if they typically needed it. I was already comfortable in a lounge and stayed where I was seated.
  18. I just signed the letter making my retirement official. It doesn't take effect until June 30; I had to do it now to prevent an automatic renewal of my contract.
  19. I had this happen once on another cruise line, when sharing a large table, but it developed partly because some people ordered two starters and one person ordered two mains. A dining manager confirmed that their service protocol was not to serve anyone the next course until every dish from the previous course has been cleared away, and to serve double orders sequentially, not together. He also said that servers are supposed to ask if anyone wants to get to a show, and are allowed to expedite service for that. If ours did, they only asked one person and assumed that the response was for the whole table. I suggested that at tables for more than about four, the question be asked all the way around (or along).
  20. I agree completely. Bacon anything isn't going to work for me unless it can be made with turkey bacon. Kosher turkey bacon is completely feasible, but does not exist here -- the kosher providers are afraid of the public reaction (i.e., boycotts) that would be assured if they were to make it. I'll skip the cocktail but the champagne would be welcome. I may have celebrated an early Festival of Sleep last week: my first night at the hotel in Arlington, I slept for more than 12 hours. So Humiliation Day is really Humility Day? Rabbinic literature praises Moses from the Book of Exodus for meekness, which is close to humility, and young students have a problem with it -- they don't consider meekness a virtue. Yesterday I set up a spreadsheet for the Spanish Farewell. Unfortunately, I set the security wrong and the first person who tried to add to it had to request permission. I don't know how well it will be utilized, because most of the roll call activity is in a thread for the combined Ancient Empires and Spanish Farewell itinerary, and people who have booked that way may not acknowledge that the Spanish Farewell is also bookable by itself. In that thread, people keep saying that they need a spreadsheet, but no one has actually created one. I almost invited one or two other solo passengers on the NCL Bermuda cruise to by my guest for my Platinum dinners, but then it occurred to me that the offer might be accepted by someone I would find obnoxious.
  21. That seems likely. Or they search after the fact for places to leave negative comments. I've never gone on a cruise without learning about the ship and cruise line, but I'm the sort of person who prepares, or overprepares, for things.
  22. Wow. On other cruise lines where I've had a beverage package, the room card had no indication; it just rang up as $0.00.
  23. BTW, discussions of how light or heavy to pack often go astray with defensive posts arguing in favor of one or the other. It is not a matter of personal virtue to pack light, nor is it a virtue to pack heavy. It's only a matter of convenience and preferred style. Unless you are on a Rick Steves tour, whatever way you choose to pack is the right way for you. For a 14-day cruise this fall, I will probably take a 28-inch rolling duffel, which has to be checked for air travel, an international-size carry-on that can ride on the rolling bag, and a personal item with a shoulder strap. The itinerary doesn't involve any extremes of climate and I could manage with less, but I don't really want to.
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