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GORDONCHICK

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Posts posted by GORDONCHICK

  1. 18 minutes ago, cruiserbear55 said:

       If you check in, let's say, at 9:30 and boarding doesn't commence until noon, you'll be the first group to board but will still have had a 2 1/2 hour wait. OTOH, if you arrive and check in at 1:00PM and boarding started at noon, you should go straight from check-in to boarding with no wait.

    If you're in the Haven, it's a different ballgame.  

  2. Honestly, the Med is one place where I place less importance on the cruise line since the experience is more off the ship.  I place more emphasis on the itinerary - not only the ports but also the amount of time in each.  The ship is a place to sleep and to grab a quick bite before venturing out.

    I'm not a HAL fan but in a place line the Med, I would absolutely do it if the itinerary and price was right!

     

     

  3. They sail VERY full - over 100%.  (100% is 2 per cabin)  Hundreds of kids.  Decorations have varied on ships but there's always been a gingerbread house.  Carols on Christmas Eve usually in the atrium and Christmas foods served on Christmas Day (ham, turkey, etc).  Pre-covid, I remember being in Belize (also pre Harvest Caye) for cave tubing, zip lining and atving.  It definitely didn't feel like Christmas on that day.

  4. 3 hours ago, FluffyCat123 said:

    I will definitely report back. It's stated in my conference app that I must report to the boat for check in by 5PM but may enjoy the city until all aboard which is 10PM, with an 11PM sail away. It matches what my higher ups got from the event planner the other day. I will most certainly verify all of this when I check in and drop my luggage off because I won't let that boat leave without me!

    FYI - it's a ship, not a boat.  A boat can fit on a ship, but a ship cannot fit on a boat.

    • Thanks 1
  5. I can't speak about the port today, but almost 20 years ago, it was a very industrial port but we docked right at a warehouse with tons of booths and the locals were selling things.  Back then, hand made molas were very common.  There were also dancers.  Other than that, there was nothing in walking distance.  There were taxis you could hire but you'd have to know where you were going.  I have no idea what the area is like now.

  6. If it's like the one we did many moons ago, you stay on the ship unless you book an excursion that will leave from the ship using lifeboats as tenders.  If you do that. you will meet the ship when it docks at Colon.  If you don't, the ship floats around in Gatun Lake for a while until it's turn to transit back out the Gatun locks, then will dock at Colon.  You can get off the ship there if you wish.  But you will want to be up really early if you need to get a spot for viewing in the public areas.  The most crowded will the the ones facing the front - and it's worth it if you've never been through locks before.  Even if you have a balcony, I would stake out a public place with forward viewing early in the morning.  It's cool to see all the ships lined up to wait their turn.  Then go to your balcony for the afternoon transit.

    • Thanks 2
  7. This is a 9 night cruise with only one "sea" day.  The quotes are because on that one day, we will be traveling from Corner Brook, NF to Quebec City, across the Gulf of St Lawrence, then up the river.  We will have a port side balcony, so we will be able to take in the scenery the whole time but will probably check out public viewing areas as well.  The Observation Lounge definitely sounds like a place we will check out - especially for tea sandwiches (seems like a good place to grab a nibble before going for lobster in Boston).

    • Like 1
  8. 16 hours ago, hallux said:

    Hint - at the main forum list (one level up from reading this thread) at the top is a drop-down.  Select the ship from the drop-down and get a pre-formatted search for all threads where the Joy is mentioned.

    Completely familiar with this - but it pulled wayyyyyy too much that wasn't applicable.  Hence the post.

  9. Will be on the Joy 9/4.  I need the scoop on the ship - the great places away from crowds, favorite public viewing areas, fave MDR, etc.

     

    Any other things I need to know?  It's almost like I'm a new cruiser, not having been on NCL since 2017.  I know many things have changed, service reportedly has declined.

  10. I'm a scenery hound, so I don't care how cold it is.  I was out on the balcony on the glacier days (the coldest days of an AK cruise) with a deck blanket taking pics!

     

    I will say, if you're cruising RT out of NYC, it won't be as scenic as ours will be as we will sail from NYC to Quebec, so up the river!  And we got a port balcony, so as to get as much land viewing as possible.

    • Like 1
  11. On 6/18/2023 at 8:12 PM, Nitemare said:

    I can point you to great, if you want

    They may not need/want great, but I LOVE and appreciate great so point me in the right direction!  I'm a bit of a foodie.  I've had good, really good and not so good lobster rolls, so great would be greatly appreciated!

  12. 1 hour ago, minabruuke said:

    It is not at all uncommon in the cruise industry for the cost to book 5 people into two cabins to be about the same or often even less than booking everyone into one cabin that holds 5 people. You'll often see this when the demand is high for the very limited number of cabins that hold 5 and there are still loads of 2-3 person cabins available. 

     

    I recently helped a friend book a cruise.  She didn't care about the room and was going to just book an inside for four because she assumed that would be her cheapest option.  When I priced it out, she was able to save several hundred dollars by booking two insides rooms for two people each rather than one inside room for four.  There were still loads of 2-3 person cabins available and very few 4 person rooms left.

    Yes, this is very common.  IMO, it's also helpful to have the extra bathrooms!  However, I could also see if you had several young children, you may not want them to be in their own cabin (especially if they are escape artists!) - even if the rooms are connecting.  And some parents don't wish to split up to have one of each of them in each cabin.  I can definitely see pluses and minuses to both.

    • Like 1
  13. Your port choice for diembarkation may not be set up for that.  A lot of things have changed since covid, and while this was available a few years ago in many places, that may not be a thing anymore.  Not only would you have to be processed through immigration, you would have to be cashed out on the ship.  And there may be more things along those lines.

     

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