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Sabalon

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Posts posted by Sabalon

  1. Our most recent cruise was the first time we bought it.

     

    Where I feel it helped:

    Early getting on board - Yes, maybe only 5-10 minutes ahead of zone 1, but I didn't have to worry about what zone I may have been given or anything, we were some of the earliest people to get our vacation started.

     

    Early room access - we were able to put our carryons in our room right away, change and go have fun on Lido, watching others mill around with their luggage while sipping a mojito in the pool was nice.

     

    Guest Services Priority - we used this several times. Sometimes the regular line was so long I felt bad. We missed an excursion so figuring out what to do, later on working out a refund for the excursion. My daughters used it to find out what a card she won in the arcade was for, and the other to get a deck of cards

     

    Tender Priority - I know you won't be at a tender port, but putting this out there in case others see the thread later. After missing the excursion, this got us on a tender faster to make up for lost time. The other tender port, our excursion had us on the first one regardless.

     

    Where I feel it didn't matter

    Faster disembarkation - We planned on disembarking via FTTF, but the self-disembarkation line was so fast it didn't matter.

     

    Express Luggage - our luggage, even though it had the stickers, still arrived around the same time as the others. No biggie.

     

    Dining Reservations - we had late dining. Went to switch to any-time but did not know FTTF would not help move to your time dining. Wish I had switched to Early, but oh well.

     

    I think the good outweighed the bad to me, and would probably utilized it again but it would not be a deal breaker if I did not get it.

  2. Tendering is 15 minutes or so, ship is 4-5 miles out due to shallow reefs. It can be quite a wait to return to the ship.

     

    I was told it was that far out, but not sure exactly.

     

    This link should be roughly centered on a ship, and it's 4.6 miles out. Amazing how far out it is. They take about 150-200 people per tender, so the lines move fast. Getting back on board doesn't. We sat on top so we were able to get off the tender faster.

     

    https://www.google.com/maps/@17.4491035,-88.1257885,13173m/data=!3m1!1e3

  3. My wife always had her green water bottle with her and at no point did they say anything about it. I was using a gatorade bottle as my makeshift water bottle (forgot mine) and nothing about that either. Only thing the whole trip they stopped us on was she had an almost empty water bottle heading into the port building before checkin which they made her abandon.

     

    She also had fruit chewies with her on shore as well in case blood sugar got low.

  4. Was coming here to recommend Dead Man's Reef as well. My daughters were 14 and 11 at the time and both enjoyed it. The oldest swam a lot and the youngest thought the water was too cold (February) and made friends and climbed on every rock there. Not that it was part of the admission, but we saw an octopus just hanging out near the shore which was neat.

     

    Food was chicken, burger and hot dogs if I remember, but it was good and a fair price. They have a little gift shop, and everyone there was super nice. When my youngest didn't want to snorkel because the cold water, we rented a wet suit for her. She had it on for 10 minutes and said it was still too cold so they refunded the money for that.

  5. We were on main on Glory, in the front. I liked it for two reasons

     

    * we went to lots of activities in the atrium, so it was a short walk down the hall and one flight of stairs to be where we wanted.

     

    * Platinum MDR was the aft of the ship on deck 3, so we walked all the way down the hallway and one flight of stairs and we were right there.

     

    Downside was Lido was a bit further, but other than waiting for an elevator it wasn't an inconvenience.

     

    Sea motion didn't bother me, felt just like Riviera. Being in the front of the ship mean we always knew when the anchor went down or the bow thrusters were on.

     

    Only way I think I'd want to be higher up is if I had a balcony.

  6. I was told by some people on our trip that there was a nice reef and snorkeling right there at Mahogany Bay. Don't know if others could confirm or deny.

     

    We didn't visit the beach there, but it looked very nice from the ship. I'd assume it can get crowded if there are multiple ships in port.

  7. We just traveled with licenses and birth certificates. We brought the marriage documentation (which was 22 years ago), but they said it was no needed. They didn't seem to care that the name of the birth certificate and license did not match up for my wife. They asked the usual random questions (What city were you born in, etc) and felt good enough at that.

     

    Every port we were told to take our sign and sail card and photo id. Even that we would need it at Cozumel. At none of the ports did they do more than wave us into the port after a casual glance at the sign and sail card.

     

    As for passports, we don't have them - was too close to trip date to get them without major cost - but everything you read says if you get left behind in another country, they make returning home easier. I can understand not wanting to lose them while at a beach or something, but at the same time, they are useless if they are locked in your safe on a departing ship. Interesting conundrum!

  8. Lets say the ship was ready right at 1PM. You would be boarding after Diamond, Platinum and suite people. While you don't get on any earlier than when the ship is ready, you do get to go ahead of the general masses and your room will be ready.

     

    You may be on board 5 minutes before the start of the general masses. But less lines, and you can go straight to your room.

  9. We just got off Glory yesterday. I did have fun the morning of disembarkation walking down the hall and seeing how many pages (just from a glance walking by) peoples statements were. Some had a LOT more fun than others.

     

    We took $200 in cash for four of us and that wasn't enough - we had to ration it.

     

    Our Sign and Sail card was backed by our bank account so that was separate. We ended up with about $340 in charges - mostly pictures, but a few drinks (10 total?), some coffee shop, kids and the arcade, and some ship souvenirs. $200 of that was covered by an on board credit.

     

    We had prepaid excursions, so some of the cash we had went for tips for guides, and I think we may have undertipped there but cash on hand was limited and we ended up using more at the roadside stalls for purchases than planned. We'd only bring so much on shore each time.

     

    We had lots of ones and used those for tips for drinks. Not every time, but since we knew we weren't going to be getting that many of those, most times.

     

    On one port, we used it for taxi fare, which was not planned.

     

    Early on I had set aside some for the wait staff and room stewards, so I always had that in reserve, so we didn't spend what would have gone to them. I did end up taking some of the left over ones and also adding that on for our sweet steward.

     

    So yeah...half the clothes twice the money makes sense. You can always put it back in the bank when you get home (if there is any left!)

  10. I forgot a few small items

     

    Club O2

    Last trip my oldest was 14. She'd wake up an abandon us for Circle C. This time she's 17 and the younger on is 14 (15 in October) We signed them up for Club O2. Youngest wanted to stay with her sister (they are close). They said she was close enough and let her in O2. 10 minutes after explaining they wanted to stick together, the oldest shows up standing next to me watching the band, abandoning her sister. Go figure.

     

    The oldest didn't do very much with O2, preferring to sleep or hang with us. The youngest came and went with it. If they were doing something she liked she'd go, otherwise (and I think this is kinda the norm) she hung out with a couple of the ones she bonded with. Until she saw someone reading the same book as her and then she tracked her down and they were like two lost souls found each other.

     

    Pixels

    Wife wanted to try and get a formal family shot, but none really came out that good...someone always had an odd look. However that didn't stop her buying a number of random shots of the girls, and a horrible one of me at one of the ports with one of the Carnival girls as a mermaid or something. Wish they had a way of previewing the shots they took, though I suppose that'd take too long.

  11. Sit right back and I'll tell you a tale...(already had to explain that one to my kids).

     

    This is not going to be full of pictures or a blow by blow, as I've been in my own house less than 12 hours since getting back, but wanted to put down some thoughts while they are still fresh. However, I tend to overwrite, so this could be a small book :) This was our third cruise and the first time one something other than Fantasy class or out of a port designed for one ship. It was my wife and my two daughters (14 and 17). We were in room 2221, a porthole room.

     

    Getting there

    We live around Atlanta and had our family of four going on this cruise, so we drove the approx 650 miles to Miami. Even with food, hotel for two nights, etc, it was cheaper than flying. We stayed overnight at a LaQuinta south of Jacksonville (via hotwire) and a Holiday Inn in Coral Cables, just outside of Miami - via ticketsatwork.com - which probably has the same discount as almost any other site). Both were just fine. In Miami, we drove to a park in Coconut Grove and walked around - amazing place. I found a little Cuban pastry shop, and then we went to Wal-mart for the forgotten items. Dinner was at Havana Harry's - good food, but a littler fancier than I had figured on, but oh well. Breakfast was at El Rinconcito El Chele, which I was tempted to go back to the after we got off the ship. Great food.

     

    We didn't listen to google (I-95) and just drove right through downtown Miami to get to the pier - what a beautiful city. I wish we had more time there.

     

    The Port

    Miami port was a bit of a zoo. We got there around 10:15 (checkin time of 10:30) Everything was labeled pretty well, and it wasn't hard to figure out where to go, however with four ships in port, there was a lot of people trying to get in and out, cutting across lanes to get here and there. Just have to be careful and always checking around you. We found our terminal, and I dropped everyone and the luggage off and went to park. That was pretty easy, except I backed in and realized I needed to pop the the rear to get stuff out of the back. Oh well...if that's the worst problem I had...

     

    I met up with the family, and we tried to figure out what next. There were some closed doors that said Baggage drop off, but we asked a Carnival employee and they told us where we actually needed to drop our bags off. We went up and gave them to the porter, and proceeded into the terminal.

     

    It is at this point I'll mention we had Faster to the Fun - something we've never done before. So we made it through the x-ray lines and document checking pretty fast. Nothing to report - pretty low-key and easy. We got ourselves checked in, and waited in the port for a bit. It was about 11:30-11:45 when they finally started boarding. We made our way through the anxious masses of zone boarders and up the escalator for horrible pictures, and then on board. We were on deck 2 so it was one flight of stairs down to our room.

     

    Of course the doors to the rooms were closed, and my wife was telling me the announcement said 1pm for rooms. I explained again FTTF and we went on through to our room. I've read where FTTF people were not sure they were supposed to open the door to go in before, so just mentioning that. The sign does say it. On the way to our room, our steward Chaiyo met us in the hallway, asked if we were the Newcombe and showed us our room, introduced herself, etc. We went in, took pictures, changed into bathing suits and went up to Lido

     

    Faster To The Fun

    So, as I mentioned, we had faster to the fun. I know that is a debate on here as to the value. That is a decision you have to make for yourself. I'll say that at 12:10 I was in the main Lido pool with a Mojito in my hand watching people roaming around with all their carry-ons. That, combined with a few other things on this trip made it worth while to me.

     

    On-Board / Leaving Port

    Just a little more play-by-play and then I'll get into general stuff. Once on board, we went up to Lido. There were lines for the food as expected, so we just hung around the pool, did the water slide, and let those lines die down a tiny bit. We found plenty of time to get some fun in, get some food, and still be ready for muster. This was the easiest muster I've done - you just go to your stations...in the past ones, you met up in a club or lounge and then were escorted to the stations. Our muster post A was in front of some large fans blowing out some cool air, so that was a win as well.

     

    We dropped a couple things in the room, grabbed the camera, and went to deck 6 for leaving port - if you go all the way forward, there are doors out to the balconies right below the bridge - not the easiest to find and not crowded. The pull forward, turn around and then head out was pretty neat to see. At this point we headed out to see, felt the nice breeze, and then let the fun begin.

     

    So at this point, more general pieces instead of hour-by-hour.

     

    The Ship

    This was a much larger ship, however with nearly double the capacity of the Fantasy, it didn't feel that crowded. Every so often an event would bring masses of people together and it would get busy for a little bit, but other than ports, it didn't seem as bad as I expected it would be.

     

    During the sea days, the pools would be pretty full. We thought we'd be smart and go to the aft adult only pool - I think that was worse than the ones with all the kids.

     

    Food lines on Lido moved pretty quick - even the ever popular Guy's Burgers didn't seem any worse really than the All American Grill lines on the other ships.

     

    The ship itself felt pretty nice. It's about 13 years old, but doesn't look that bad at all. I didn't go into any of the clubs but what I saw of them, they looked neat. I also didn't go in the casino at all, but you could tell from the smoke when you were near it, but it didn't seem that bad.

     

    One thing that was really different is they used the lobby a lot more for trivia, bands, etc. On the Fantasy, all that was done on the Promenade deck, right outside the casino. The lobby worked much better for this as you didn't have people trying to traverse the ship having to push through the entertainment.

     

    The Food

    First off - Lido Deck.

     

    As I said, Guy's Burgers was hugely popular. This was the first time I'd tried them and while I don't think they're the best burgers ever, they were good and are a lot better than the general American Grill on the ships without them. The brown sugar BBQ sauce was real good. The fries were the main item for me. They were great! And I finally found out what the "patty made of bacon" for the Pig Patty burger was. It was three pieces of bacon roughly in a circle to act as a "patty" of bacon. So in essence, a bacon cheeseburger.

     

    The Blue Iguana was better than Guy's...if you're into burritos and street tacos. And there was usually a shorter line. Plus they had a salsa and hot sauce bar.

     

    The main Lido buffet (lunch/dinner) seemed okay. I only had something from it on the last day and no real complaints. The hours can sometimes seem odd, so make sure you know when parts are open. Had some good deserts from there as well.

     

    As for breakfast, the Lido buffet did not disappoint, however the lines tended to be long but moved pretty fast. The omelette station proved popular, and they had one at the buffet lines, and then usually one opened on the side, which you could also get pancakes, french toast, bacon, and potatoes at. Those had shorter lines because people didn't notice them. Also, the omelette line at the buffet was separate from the buffet line, so if that's all you wanted you could bypass the main line.

     

    Main take-away from the Lido buffets is to look around quickly to see what is where, and pick the best line, and then wonder why all the other lines seem to be moving faster :)

     

    I did not have anything from the deli or the pizza pirate, but my picky daughter seemed to live off the pizza.

     

    Main Dining Room

    With the exception of Thursday, we did our dinners in the MDR. We were in the Platinum dining room, on deck 3 aft. Most of the nights, the vibrations from the engines were very annoying. Don't know how people on decks 1 and 2 dealt with it. This was the American Table, which I don't know exactly what the differences were. It roughly seemed to be about what I remembered from before. Some nights I would find several items that looked good, some nights I almost opted for going to get pizza. The food was good, and I don't remember anything being bad. My daughters may argue differently. But what I tried of the stuff they didn't like, it seemed good to me. They also had food tailored to the port of call, such as empanadas for appetizers in Miami.

     

    I forgot to take pictures of the menus, so don't recall exactly what I had. Most of the portions were on the smaller side, which was fine with me with all the over-eating. I remember having Chili Rellanos, an amazing Lasagna, something which was basically a pumpkin-pot-pie, pork chops, and my wife of course had lobster tail. Desserts were also hit-and-miss as far as finding something (other than Chocolate Melting Cake). Some days you wanted it all, some you just wanted the CMC!

     

    Grand Cayman

    We booked the Turtle Farm here. I looked at the tickets - be at Amber Palace at 9:45am. No problem. Next morning I looked again and realized that was for the next port - the excursion tickets were not in the order of the days of the ports. So, we missed the excursion because by the time I realized this it was too late. Here is where the Faster to the Fun helped - I was able to go to Guest Services and be helped right away (which was to be told that yup...I missed it). We then used FTTF and got priority tender boarding to get on shore to make up for missed time.

     

    Once on shore, we found Discount Excursions LTD who had a booth right at the port. It was maybe $5pp cheaper than Carnival, but they booked us for the 9:30 departure. My watch said it was 9:35 when they did that....and that is where local-time vs ship time came in. So we did a little shopping at the port while we waited an hour. But they got us out there just fine - not a talkative van driver, but he dropped us off, gave us our wrist bands, asked when the last tender was and told us when he'd pick us up.

     

    As for the excursion, you get to see some of the turtles in their tanks or lagoons. Then at another part, you can hold, pet and wade into a tank with them. My wife loves sea turtles so this was great for her. Then you have an option of a water-park area or snorkeling. We were there for the snorkeling with the turtles. They have a lagoon you snorkel around in, lots of fish and a number of smaller turtles (1 foot across, not the giant 4' ones) This was a lot of fun. There is an area where you can swim up to plexiglass which has a nurse shark on the other side. They feed the fish there, so you get quite the encounter. Someone forgot to tell the turtles to swim with us, so your encounters with them tended to be chasing them. Occasionally one would swim by you. While they preferred to be left alone, you could encounter them if you were smart about it. It's not like we never saw them or anything that bad.

     

    After tiring ourselves out, we met our driver right when and where he said he'd be. He had to swing by and pick up another group on a distillery tour, which I wish he'd told us ahead of time, because as he started turning down some back roads, I was getting a bit nervous. But made it back in plenty of time. Tender lines were long but moved fast.

     

    Roatan

    After triple checking the times, we had no problem meeting our excursion here. We did the clear kayak, snorkel and gumbalimba park trip. This was a 30 minute ride to the park. Outside the port and park, Roatan is a depressing place. But the excursion was good. The snorkeling wasn't the greatest reef, but the guide would find items to point out like giant conch's or lobsters. The kayaking was fun - a quick trip down the shore and back. The clear bottoms were okay, but you'd see as much looking over the side. The park trip was a walk in the park (see what I did). You'd see large iguana, walk over a swaying cable bridge, see toucans (which they would put on your shoulder for pictures), and then see the monkeys, who they would coax onto you with food. I guess depending on the mood of the monkeys, sometimes they are more likely to come up and climb on you randomly. As this was getting later in the afternoon, they had to "convince" them to come out and play. My daughter had one use her as a climbing post to get back to a tree. Return bus ride, and some pier runners from a late returning excursion and we were off.

     

    Belize

    Here we did the Xunatumich Mayan ruins. This was a first off the ship and our of the port for a 2 hour bus ride. The exposition given by the guide was great. I learned a lot about Belize on that ride. The ruins were fun. There is a road-side stand with locals selling stuff when they get you off the bus. The tour-guide says after you get back you need to shop fast. You take a hand-cranked ferry across a river (30 feet maybe) and then minivans 1 mile up a hill. They have a gift shop there as well. It's then a short STEEP walk to the site. Because it looked like rain, our guide hurried us to the temple first to climb it and then did the talk after (reverse or normal order). Great views, amazing experience, hard work. As we were getting ready to head back down, the sky opened up on us, but it felt good. We went straight to the bus to head to lunch - my wife and daughters did some VERY fast shopping. They eyed what they wanted on the way up and just bought and paid on the way out (they went buying, not shopping!) The lunch was pretty close by and was very good - bbq chicken, rice and plantains. Local beer was good as well, then a long quiet bus ride back to the port, and we had just a few minutes to do any looking around there before catching the tender. I think the tour company must get paid extra if they get back before the last tender, because that bus passed everything else on the road getting back.

     

    Cozumel

    This port we did not have any excursions - with plans just to go to the beach. I did no research on Cozumel before leaving so finding a beach was fun. It involved quick searching facebook/twitter for someplace as that's where the social media wifi package let me get to. We ended up going to Paradise Beach. It's a resort open to the public. It's $3 for a chair, $18 for all the water activities (pool, all sorts of blow up water things - climbing walls, etc, kayaks and paddleboards) and a minimum $10 food/drink purchase per person. We chose it based on just seeing $18/pp for everything but oh well. It was worth it. GREAT food, nice location. FUN! However, when we first got there, the guy told us they had a small problem - they were trying to catch a crocodile hanging around the rocks in the ocean. So they didn't charge us for all that until they did. It was about a 5-6' long croc. Cool to see...thankfully mother was not around! Googling it shows this happens from time to time. Anyway, we hung out, had a good lunch, and made it back in time to do a little looking at places across the street from the port. Even though we were supposed to depart at 5p, there was an excursion that got back at 4:50 or so, and then there was a delay followed by what looked like a port worker walking with a baggage trolley and a lady from the ship to the port. Neither ever came back so hopefully all is well in the end. We finally left at 5:45.

     

    Back at Miami

    We arrived back at around 5am (bow thrusters are loud). We were off the ship and in our car by 7:15am (self-debarkation). Customs was a breeze. It was a long trip home, but with rain, food, and traffic stops, 10pm and we were home.

     

    On Board Activities

    We did some of the trivia, which was fun. Came in 2nd and got a medal for one of them.

     

    The production shows were good. I saw Epic Rock and Divas. Had seen Motor City Madness before and didn't care to see it again. Missed Latin Nights, but family says it was real good.

     

    The band (Resting Beach Face) was very good. They did different sets on different nights (classic rock, disco/70s, 80s) and usually a set of just random stuff from any time. I watched them a lot, as they were that enjoyable.

     

    4th of July deck party - yeah...that was a zoo...didn't stick around long

     

    80s deck party - this was pretty cool - the band played it, so it was live 80s music and just a real good time.

     

    Dive in movies - was too tired most of the time, but did watch a bit of Deadpool. Really cool setup.

     

    Magic show - this was fun to watch - Cruise Director Eric is a good entertainer

     

    Carnival Quest - the adult game show - this was a highlight of the cruise. Holy cow this is funny.

     

    Comedians - never made it up there to see any. Hadn't heard too many good things so didn't make it a priority

     

    The Staff

    I can't say enough good stuff about the staff in every department. They are so friendly. Our housekeeping staff were great, knew us by name. I wish I could have set down and talked more with Chaiyo. Here is, from what I gathered, a single mom with a 14, 12 and 7 year-old kids at home, who she is away from for 7 months. Actually, sometimes the more you talk with the crew it's depressing. Similar story from Kris, our head waiter. Two kids at home, sees them when he can.

     

    Fun Staff - The cruise director Eric was great. I'd go on a ship just because he's the cruise director. He had a knack for making everyone feel involved. As a random proof - wife an I were sitting in the lobby in chairs side by side. The cast of the stage show was getting ready to come out for pictures, so one of the staff asked if we could move our chairs apart so they could funnel them through there - no problem. Eric comes from across the room, points at my wife, looks at me and says "Wife?" I said yes. He said "you're separated" and then went back to what he was doing. His second in command Lee was just as good. One of the last people on the pier at Cozumel, Lee ran out the pier to him and then raced him to the ship. Little touches like that from the whole Fun Staff.

     

    Guest Services - As said many paragraphs ago, we missed our excursion. Went to guest services after the fact, explained what happened and they refunded it with out any questions. Don't know if this is normal, but I was not expecting it as the fault was in no way on Carnival.

     

    The Bad Stuff

    So, aside from things like I'm sitting in my office chair right now and my brain still thinks my equilibrium needs to be in sloshy ship mode, there were some issues, albeit not major.

     

    On lido, the port side seemed to have a noticeable sewage smell mid-ship. It wasn't overwhelming, but you noticed it.

     

    A couple times the main lido pool was closed and roped off mid day - don't know if a kid did something in it, or what the deal was. The water did look a bit murky - don't know why it couldn't be emptied and refilled. Also, even though the slide was supposed to be open until sunset, that didn't always happen.

     

    The MDR service seemed slow. We'd be there well over an hour most nights. That wouldn't have been so bad if the constant vibration from the engine wasn't there. Also, we would run out of water a lot, and they'd be very slow to get more. You have people in hot environments out in the sun most of the day...water should be a priority!

     

    Other General Thoughts

    I'm still not 100% sold on the bigger ships. Ports seemed to be a mess, where with the Fantasy before there were never any lines to get back on board (that I recall).

     

    I don't care about the elegant nights that much, but I did at least bring some decent clothes for them. And cruise casual nights I'd put on a clean button up shirt and nice "dress" shorts. Some of the people that would show up in something I wouldn't even wear for McDonalds did seem odd.

     

    The majority of the cruisers were great. However, there were some who seemed to think the ship was their just for them...lines didn't matter to get back on the ship...same people that stay in a right turn lane til the end and then try to merge left! There were lots of towels on the chairs on Lido which never had anyone in them. That wasn't that big of a problem as there were always some open, but the people that would leave their stuff on the hammock on Serenity while they went in the hot tub pissed me off.

     

    There was one table of 10 - three ladies and 7 kids, part of a larger group. Every night she had raffle tickets for what I am assuming were grandkids (though she didn't look that old!) They would draw for gifts she brought. One of them had a birthday and everyone got something that night. The kids loved the ladies as well. On the last night I told her how great it was to watch them during the week.

     

    There was one lady on board who stopped my SJCAM/GoPro from dropping off the suspension bridge at Gumbalimba park. If you see this, THANK YOU. She had a similar one and said she would have felt the same way. Her quick reaction saved it when it popped off from snagging a cable. Didn't catch her name, so I'll just call her my Detroit Angel.

     

    To the seven black gentlemen walking around in your robes, and one with a Luche Libre mask on, you guys were awesome. Such style.

  12. Just checked my email and I have one from Carnival saying 3 days til my cruise, that my cruise operates with a scheduled check-in, a whole paragraph explaining why I need to select one, arrive then etc... and a button to check boarding time.

     

    Thing is, I selected a check-in time when we booked the cruise two months ago. Trying to finish up some things at work to head out and see this and panic. Login, and nope...it's all still there.

     

    They really need to get their automated mailings a bit more organized. I hate when you get automated communications which should have up to the minute information and it's generic...what's the point.

     

    Minor rant over.

  13. My first trip I found the hard way that Fantasy didn't have Guys. So I am SOOOO looking forward to this, and that pic means I'll be drooling til Saturday. Go to cabin, drop stuff off, change into swim trunks, guys, and pool.

     

    The water at Grand Cayman looks amazing. I suggested the encounter, but my wife's previous encounter with one in the wild (and the emergency room trip) had her veto pretty quick.

  14. I whacked my head on this pull down bed once..if it happened again I was going to sleep with my feet by the wall...it didn't. But this next cruise I made sure my room doesn't have those pull down beds.

     

    Our first cruise had that above our bed, and then another one on the other side of the room. And they were both in use, so you had to be careful getting up and then you had to do a contortionist routine to get in and out, get something from the front of the bed, etc.

     

    They HURT!!!

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