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Can it be an Escape if you travel w/ your family? Recap 3/24 Escape Cruise


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We drove a rented van (Avis $699/week, 200 miles per day included) from our home in Wisconsin to Hollywood Beach, FL In the van, we piled my niece’s boyfriend and my nephew, both in their late 20s, my husband and myself, and our four rag-tag teens, son, 17, exchange student son, 16, daughter’s friend, 16, and daughter 15.

 

Traveling with teens in a van is like not traveling with them at all: there was enough room for them in the back two rows to spread out a little bit, and they all put on head phones and looked at their little devices or slept the whole way. We barely heard from them.

 

Traveling as an adult in a van for 24+ hours is a level of hell I hope not to go to again. The seats other than the driver and passenger seats had no backrests, so we couldn’t really sleep, we could just get constant whiplash from throwing our heads back whenever we started to doze.

 

We left MSN around 7:30 pm on Thursday. We were in Nashville by 5:00am, and we stopped for breakfast at a Waffle House (had to show the exchange son a Waffle House) in Chattanooga by 8:15. Georgia is a looooooooonnnnnnggggggg state. Florida is longer. We arrived at the Doubletree Inn on Hollywood Beach just before 11:00p.m. That was longer than Google Maps said it would take, but pretty darned impressive for us.

 

At the Doubletree, we met up with my niece (mid 20s) and my mother (88) who had flown Southwest Airlines from MKE to FLL on a 9:15 am flight. They were all rested and relaxed. My teens were all rested and relaxed. The four adults from the van all needed a drink.

 

Bar at the hotel was open until Midnight, and we enjoyed a cocktail or two before it closed. We met Ian the bartender, who gave us very sage advice that came in handy later: gamble the first two days, and then stop. They pay out more on the first days to get everyone happy and hopeful, and then they tighten everything up to squeeze it and more right back out of you the rest of the cruise. Hadn’t heard that before, but it made sense to our sleep-deprived cocktail-enhanced brains, so we took it as gospel.

 

While we had cocktails, the teens walk to the convenience store next door to dine on hot dogs and other gas station fare. I tried to convince them to cross the street and go take a moonlight walk on the beach, but they are more interested in the hotel Wi Fi (our roaming data cut out somewhere halfway through GA). We have three two-queen rooms for the 10 of us, so we divvy up and crash. After all those hours in the car a flat surface feels so very very good. Although the hotel is on the inland waterway, all our rooms are street view, but we really don’t care.

 

Next morning we check out. As a pre-cruise hotel, it worked OK for us. Room rate was reasonable (for the time of year), location was pretty good, valet parking was a little expensive, they charged us for a rollaway, but the internet was free with my Hilton Honors.

 

I am a mess of nerves on sail day: I have a vehicle that is too tall to fit on any floor of the ramps except for the first floor of the C ramp. The Ultra Music festival is just south of the pier, and traffic is expected to be very heavy. I want to get to the port early: but not so early that the people getting off the boats haven’t left to free up a parking spot. And, I want people to see a little bit of the area, because it might be the only time we are in the Miami area. Since we are out by the beaches anyway, we stay on the barrier island and head south on A1A and head down toward Miami Beach. We drive until we get to see some of the old Miami: the art deco one- and two-story buildings and then we head back over to the mainland so we can take the tunnel out to the port and miss the Ultra traffic. We must have timed it perfectly, because we didn’t get stuck in any traffic, and we got to the ramp in time to take the last possible parking spot. It was so narrow we had to unload everything and everybody before we pulled in, but my husband was able to thread the needle and get our rented van parked.

 

On that morning drive, we had 10 passengers in our 12-passenger van and we were cheek to jowl. No way could we have done that cross country. However, we were able to get all our suitcases in the way back and Mom’s wheelchair in by the sliding door, so there is plenty of cargo room for all it lacks in people room.

 

We dragged our luggage from the ramp over to where the longshoreman were taking bags and got rid of all but our personal bags.

 

We all checked in at Terminal C: which is the entrance at the aft of the boat. We got into the terminal about 10:30 and there was essentially no line. Once we were checked in, we were able walk right on the boat. As much as I wanted a cocktail first, we had skipped breakfast at the hotel, so as a party of 10, we headed down to Taste for lunch almost as soon as we boarded. I made a quick stop at Headliners to make reservations for Moderno (they got us as a party of 10 in that night) and Le Bistro for 4 (for Tuesday). Reservations were very easy to make once on board and there was plenty of availability. It was about 11:00 am or just a bit after by the time I got done and got to the restaurant to join the family.

 

We ordered a round of cocktails and we all got different appetizers and entrees: the leg of lamb was very good and not nearly as heavy as it sounded. The bacon wrapped meatloaf was a big hit and something we looked in vain for on other days. The peanut butter cup cheese cake was peanut butter cup cheesecake…so I don’t think I need to say anything more about that.

 

By the time our three course meal was done, and we reluctantly pushed ourselves back from the table, our rooms were ready.

 

We had two adjoining mini suites with large balconies on deck 8. One for the 4 teens (booked in my mom’s name) and one for my mom my husband and myself (booked in my name). My niece and her boyfriend were in an inside cabin close to ours. My nephew was in a studio up on deck 12. My mom, my niece and I are all Gold latitudes, so we each had a bottle of sparkling wine in our rooms.

 

I had to head to the ticket office to reserve our shows, and then head to Splash Academy to get my kids signed up for Entourage (the teen club). So while mom rested quietly in our room, my husband, niece, nephew and niece boyfriend hung out on the waterfront at 5:00 somewhere, I ran all over the ship. Sigh. Finally got all my paperwork done and joined them for a quick cocktail.

 

We had to go to our muster drill, and with mom in a wheel chair, we needed to use the elevator to do it, so we headed down a little early. Wheel chairs are parked in the back of the theatre, and our muster station was down in a ways, so I left mom up top, walked down, scanned her and my card, and then just sat down below with the rest of my family. Muster drill was pretty perfunctory, but I was surprised by the number of people who talked through it despite being told not to about a hundred times. Mom and dear husband slept through it…so it is a good thing we didn’t need to use any of the information provided.

 

After the muster drill is the worst time on any of these big ships. We tried to wait it out, and we did wait until everyone else left the theatre, but we still had to wait about 20 elevators before we got one we could fit the wheel chair in. I had sailed on the Escape before, so I told everyone that the first day is awful, but after that, people just seem to find somewhere to go. Niece was showing her brother and boyfriend all around the ship, mom, husband and I headed back to our room to watch sail away from our balcony. I went to the Cellars on the waterfront for a couple of cocktails to go so we could enjoy them as we sailed.

 

We met our balcony neighbors from Tampa…a very nice couple. He asked if we minded if he smoked on his deck. I appreciated him asking, but I told him it is not up to us. Smoking is not allowed on the balconies not because it might irritate your neighbors but because it is a fire hazard. I pointed out the little window in the floor of the bridge that was right above us, and told him that there are consequences to breaking the rules. I don’t know if he took my advice or not. I did find a burnt match on our balcony one day, so I suspect he did not.

 

Our luggage had actually started to arrive before the muster drill, so I finished unpacking for my mom, my husband and myself. I had brought collapsible bins from the dollar store for our closets to corral our undergarments, and they were invaluable. I brought an over the door shoe holder to hang on the open divider doors in the kids cabin for all the detritus that teen girls seem to require: creams, lotions; lash curlers, straighteners; curlers; heat protecting spray; etc. For our cabin, the bathroom had plenty of storage.

 

Hey: there is a trash can in the bathroom behind one of the cupboard doors. Discovered that on day 5 of our cruise, after 4 days of carrying every used tissue, cotton ball and q-tip from the bathroom to the trash can under the desk.

 

There were plenty of wooden hangers for the three adults in our room, and I think the teens made do, although it was a little tighter for them. I think two of them gave up on unpacking and just slid their suitcase out from under the bed to access their clothes.

 

Our balcony was absolutely lovely except it was sometimes too windy to use it. We tried to lounge and read magazines out there one day and it was everything we could do to hold the magazine open. For my teen girls, however, it was a great place to tan and they didn’t mind the breeze that kept them from getting too hot. Two lounge chairs, to upright chairs, a table big enough to eat breakfast on, and a small table for between the lounge chairs and there was still room on the balcony. Yes, everyone above you can see you, but who cares? I loved these cabins: their location on deck 8 was perfect for us: access to the waterfront, stores, and tons of bars/restaurants without having to use the elevators. For those of us (everyone except mom) who could do stairs, we were just a flight above O’Shehans (which we used a LOT).

 

Nephew went off to explore the casino while we unpacked, and by the time he joined us at 7:45 for our reservation at Moderno’s, he was $1,000 richer thanks to an Australian dice thrower at the craps table who kept throwing good dice. This was my nephew’s first cruise, and he had quite a day: unlimited beverage package, great luck at the casino, and a dinner that consisted of people just bringing you meat until you pop.

 

Moderno’s is one of my favorite of the specialty dining options, and since our exchange student was from Brazil, we couldn’t help but eat here. Unlike Moderno’s on the Dawn and the Star, the Escape’s Moderno actually has some Brazilian servers to lend some authenticity to the experience (not that I mind getting meat from Philippine women dressed as Gauchos…it just seems a little bit more forced). All of the meat was excellent, but the pork was about the best. And the grilled pineapple should be required eating for everyone. I was a little sad that they had swapped out the side of plantains for fried yucca…I missed the plantains. 4 of us had the specialty dining package on our cards (my mom, my exchange son, my husband and myself). My newly rich nephew was paying for himself, his sister and her boyfriend. I was paying for my son and daughter. It took three times for the server to get our bills right, but we did manage.

 

Mom was more than ready for bed by then. The teens were off doing whatever it is they do, nephew was back in the casino, so there were 4 of us who went off looking for something to do.

 

My niece and I had been on this same ship in May…with a different cruise director. I don’t know if it is the cruise director or if it is the demographics (spring break more families traveling together?) but the night scene on this boat was not the same. Spice H2O back in May was hopping every single night. We headed up there and there was nothing going on. A different night we went up to dance and carry on and they were showing a movie (Dunkirk) on deck. So, we headed down to headliners to catch the opening night of dueling pianos, which was very good, but again, not as much audience participation as there had been in May. At least not until we got there, because there are some songs I can just not NOT sing along to.

 

Next day was a sea day: three of us got up and had breakfast at Savor (hey…you know how you can tell the difference between Savor and Taste: SavOR is on the pORt side, and has yellOw bottles as decoration. TaSTe is on the STarboard side and has…well..blue bottles as decoration). Mom had an omelet, I had eggs benedict, and husband had French Toast.

 

My four teens did not stir for the longest time…and I didn’t see niece or nephew until past noon. So we were definitely not conquering the boat. Biggest problem with my teens is they stayed up so late, they wanted to sleep in in the morning, which made it hard for the steward to do their cabin.

 

OK…now things are just going to get ugly. My note taking stopped about half way through our first sea day: I blame it on the beverage package. A lot of things happened, but I don’t know if I have the right days or right order. So below are just a random list of things that happened:

 

 

Nephew joined a poker tournament ($80.00 buy in), and “won. ” He and first place player agreed to split first and second place and he was $2000.00 richer…this is on top of his $1000.00 craps win. He took Bartender Ian’s advice from the Doubletree and did not go back to the casino after the second day. His cruise was more than paid for, and he bought himself an overpriced pair of Ray Bans on board as celebration.

 

Niece, husband and niece boyfriend and I went up to Spice H2O for a few frozen cocktails and some kid free time We had no problem finding 4 chairs together late in the afternoon of a sea day.

 

We dined at the Manhattan twice: never had a reservation, never had to wait for a table.

 

We dined at Savor and Taste for breakfasts and some dinners…they are our favorite restaurants: the staff gets to know you and the size of the restaurants means they are not too loud or chaotic.

 

Nephew treated niece and niece boyfriend to meal at Margaritaville: they were the only table there. New cover charge is NOT a hit.

 

Niece’s and my favorite bartenders were not on the ship: Papi up in Spice H2O and the Cowboy from the Waterfront were both on breaks. Sad faces. But we did make friends with some new bartenders in both the Atrium and O’Shehans. We tip a $1.00 a drink. We never had to wait long to be served, we never had a bad pour.

 

Nephew liked the bar all the way on the top of the ship, where he was able to sit in the shade. It was a bit too smoky for me, even with the wind.

 

We played trivia about 10 times, and we always came in second place. Always.

 

We did the Escape room, and even though niece and I had already done it once we STILL couldn’t escape.

 

We ended up seeing the Company Men at the Supper Club even though we missed the night we had reserved. We were able to get front row seats the night we showed up and went in on standby. I don’t recommend front row seats for the Company Men. Although it was nice when one of them knelt down and serenaded me, it was a little much when they ground in sync to “Let’s Get it On” and what they are grinding is right at your eye level. Just saying.

 

We missed the show I really wanted my mom to see (the jazz Cotton Club one) because I forgot to go to it. Darn! Other things we missed: Latitudes cocktail party, bag of laundry special day, levity comedy show at the main theatre and the meet and greet. I had some health issues this year, and my ability to keep track of things has really taken a hit. Well, and we were kind of busy getting free cocktails and eating. We ate and drank a lot.

 

We didn’t click with too many of the cruise directors staff: TT was so cloyingly sweet, a little of him want a long way. Aris was a little bit creepy somehow. And Scott? Was that his name? He was not nearly the “presence” that a lot of other cruise directors on our other cruises have been.

 

We had a wonderful meal at Le Bistro, which was only marred by the extremely loud party of 10 we were seated next to that insisted on talking to each other at a volume that everyone at their table (and the restaurant) could hear.

 

I went up to the garden café only a few times: loved the “English” bacon and the potatoes that were shaped like hockey pucks. Never had a hard time finding a table. Didn’t love the chaos of the experience, but I loved the songs the Washy Washy guy sang.

 

We hit O’Shehans a LOT: for a cocktail and an appetizer (love me the nachos with bacon) for a late breakfast or a first dinner.

 

On our last night, niece called to see if they could get 8 of us into Cagney’s at 8 (and they could) and we had a wonderful dinner. Our server proposed to my mother and gave her a rose. She will never forget that dinner.

 

We went to the internet café and upgraded our 250 minute plan to an unlimited data plan and then played Hunger Games to kick anyone off it when you wanted to use it. One unlimited plan, 8 devices. We made it work. We did not pay the full price, we were credited the amount of the 250 minute plan. The I Concierge texting feature required each of us to pay $10.00 and I didn’t want to spend the money. I wish I would have made that decision before I paid for it on one device though. That is $10.00 I’ll never see again.

 

For my mom, who usually uses a walker, a wheelchair was a must on this boat. The distances you need to travel are so vast, she would need lunch by the time she got from our forward cabin to the aft restaurants for breakfast. We did not have a handicapped accessible state room, so we brought a long a silver walker for my mom to use to help her navigate the step up into the bathroom or out onto our balcony.

 

We had pretty good weather, but the boat is so big it makes its own wind, and the wind was pretty strong on our open air balcony.

 

Nephew who celebrated his casino wins by using his beverage package ended up having to spend an entire day in his cabin “sea sick”. He ordered in two bowls of chicken soup and some peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and that was his day.

 

I discovered a new drink: our waitress in the atrium brought us Green Tea shots, which were so good I started to order them on the rocks as a drink. It is lime juice, Jamison and something else…very refreshing.

 

My mother, who used to drink Gin Martinis and Gin and Tonics loved the Funky Monks at the brew pub UNTIL I introduced her to Mudslides and other frozen concoctions. She kept asking me if I was sure they had alcohol in them and I kept assuring her they did. Another good reason to have a wheel chair if you are taking your 88 year old mother our bar hopping.

 

The movie choices on the atrium and h2o screen have no rhyme or reason: they’ll play Lincoln in the middle of the day and the Incredibles at 11:00 at night. They’ll play a movie that requires attention (like Dunkirk) and play it 11:00 when there a million people milling about the atrium.

 

 

PORTS:

 

We missed Great Stirrup Cay. I knew we would when I was on deck the night before for the Glow party, the wind was blowing and the ship was a rocking. I was sad because this was the day I was looking forward to the most: I had rented a large cabana, bought two extra armbands so all 10 of us could use it and had visions of me falling asleep on my floating mat at sea while my mom sat quietly in the cabana reading a book in her newly purchased sun hat.

 

However, by the time the ship refunded my cabana, my two arm bands, and a $15.00 credit per passenger (I had 7 between our two cabins) my on board account was essentially a wash. My onboard credit and the refund covered the per day tip for all 7 of us, the few taxes we had on the drinks in port, the dinner at Moderno, the drinks I had purchased for my mother and the few sodas my son bought.

 

They issued new free style dailies for our newly added at sea day, and we were able to take advantage of a little extra at shore time in Nassau where we docked over night. It was kind of nice to be docked one night as the seas were a little choppy for some of my novice sailors.

 

Jamaica:

 

 

In Jamaica, I had contracted with Cool Dave Tours for a private driver. We got Cool Dave himself, and he was most excellent. He stopped to get us a few beers and waters at a small sore and stopped to get some local produce from a food stand. He took us to the other side of Ocho Rios and we went to Blue Hole ($10 per person). There are two entrances to Blue Hole and two different experiences depending on which one your tour uses. We started out lower in the waterfalls, jumped off some cliffs, swung off a rope, swam into a small cave (supposedly where a James Bond movie scene was shot) and then walked up a fairly long path to another set of falls. Here, there are other tours waiting to jump off some falls and off a cliff. We had two guides, both were absolutely excellent and helped my poor bag of bones up a few steep spots. They even took my daredevil son to a 40 foot drop cliff jump (he was the only one who wanted to try that). Two of us had to buy water socks at the falls ($6.00 to rent, $10 to buy). At the end, they tried to sell us pictures (we can print them for $30.00 a piece or give you the disk for $70). We were on our way to talk them down to $40.00 for the disk when my son said he would pay $50.00 for it (he must have thought we were going to be too cheap to buy it and he wanted photographic proof of his flips and dives). We stopped at Scotchies for the obligatory tourist lunch (all of us ate for about 70 with tip). We had originally planned on stopping at a beach, but all of us were pretty warn out and opted to head back to port.

 

Total: driver for day for up to 10 passengers: 300 plus 50 tip.

Entrance to Blue Hole: $80.00

Tips for guides at falls (25 per guide, 50).

Water socks and pictures (70).

Lunch (70).

 

Total: $620.00

 

Not cheap, but a great day and cheaper than a ship excursion for the 8 of us.

 

Back at port, we spent a bit of time doing a little shopping. There were two NCL ships in port (Jade and Escape) and the wind tunnel they made at port was strong enough you had to lean in to walk. I bought a beautiful hand carved bowl, and my husband bought a Harley Davidson t-shirt.

 

 

Grand Cayman:

 

We had no plans for this island, so we packed our beach bag with our snorkels and our towels, got off the boat, and found someone who was offering rides to the beach. We said we wanted to go snorkeling, and they said there was good snorkeling by the Tiki Hut end of the beach they were taking us too. $5.00 per person for a ride to the beach. We rented 4 chairs and 2 umbrellas and had a great beach day. Snorkeling was not great, but there were some fish, the water was crystal clear and it was a gorgeous day. We bought and shared some $10.00 chicken dinners from a vendor on the beach. When we were ready to head back to the boat, there were queues of cab-vans waiting to take us back to the port for $5.00 again.

 

For six of us:

 

Transportation: $60.00 round trip

Chair Umbrella rental: $40

Chicken dinners: $30.00

 

My niece, nephew and niece boyfriend did the Turtles Turtles Turtles through NCL, and had a great day.

 

Grand Cayman is a tender port, and the queue for the tender back to the ship was long but fast moving. NCL handed out freezy pops, jello, and waters to us while we waited, which helped a lot.

 

 

Nassau:

 

I honestly thought I didn’t like the Bahamas. I was soooo wrong.

 

Packed our beach bag again and asked at information desk for a beach we could snorkel from the shore at: they recommended Cabbage Beach, the far right side.

 

Took a shared cab ($4.00 or $5.00 per person) to Cabbage Beach. This is on Paradise Island past the Atlantis Resort. When you first get out to the beach, there are a bunch of vendors queued up to offer you jet skis, chairs, etc. We marched through them all and headed down the beach. We used the shade of the hill behind us as our umbrella and sat on our towels in the shade. The sea was way too rough to snorkel, but we all had fun playing the waves.

 

We were essentially on a private beach with no one around us, and the beach the water were absolutely gorgeous. We did walk down to the far right end of the beach (a long walk) but the seas were too rough to snorkel…the visibility was bad and you risked getting scraped on the rocks. We played in the water, looked for shells, and had a wonderful morning. Nephew did rent a Jet Ski for $50.00. When we lost our shade we headed back to where we had been dropped off and there was a whole queue of cabs waiting to take us back to port.

 

Back at port, we divided up: nephew took our beach bag back on board. Teens went to straw market to practice their bargaining skills. My husband and I went to find a driver to take us the other way away from the port. This ride was $30.00 out, $30 back, but our driver was excellent. We were headed for Rock Point, another James Bond featured location (the Largo’s estate Palmyra from Thunderball). We stopped to take some pictures and peak through the fence. No sign of sharks in the pool. The drive there was beautiful and, had we but known, there was a MUCH better snorkeling beach (Love’s beach) just past Rock Point according to our driver. Next time I go back I will definitely head this way, the island has a whole different feel when you get past Junkanoo Beach and the Fish Fry area.

 

 

On our last day, we were able to disembark, claim our luggage and load back up in the van and be out of the parking lot before 9:30a.m. We had pink luggage tags, the first readily available color, and there was no queue to get off aft and only a small queue to get off forward. Customs was a breeze. And the car was parked right across the road once we got out of the port building. We dropped my niece and mother off (this time at the Courtyard by Marriott in Weston) for their overnight stay before their Sunday flight home and we headed back north in our trusty rental van.

 

Things I learned on this cruise:

 

I wish I had brought a piece of paper with seven sections on it that I could have posted in the room and written down when we were supposed to do what. You make your dinner reservations at one place, your show reservations at another, and you get slips of paper telling you about some events. Until the NCL IConcierge App can keep track of what I have reserved, I need to go back to paper and pencil.

 

I wish I had finally tried the waterslides: two cruises on this ship and I still haven’t. Only one of my teens tried the ropes course, and only one tried the water slides. Only two went to entourage regularly. I guess what I learned is that teens don’t need a big ship: they need beds, a sport court, and a teens club to hang out with other teens until all hours of the morning.

 

Cruising with a large group is not for me: it it too hard to herd that many cats. I can cruise with my mom or my kids, but not my mom and my kids. I can cruise with my niece or my husband, but not my niece and my husband. I could tell everyone we wanted to get off the boat by 9:00 or we had tender reservations for 8:30 but by the time I got back from Savor or Taste breakfast with my mother, invariably, some of my group would still be in bed. I needed to be there to crack the whip…I can’t rely on them to move otherwise. We spent more time looking for each other in different bars than we spent sitting in a bar drinking: especially late at night.

 

I did not sleep well on this cruise. I was almost always up until 1:00 to make sure I had accounted for all my teens, and I was up before 6:00 most mornings. I loved my morning walks around the waterfront watching the sun rise. I waked with my daughter a few days, and she loved making tea at the stations on the waterfront and sipping it while I did a lap without her.

 

We only were able to do breakfast on our deck one morning: wind kept us in Savor or Taste the rest of the time. I was really looking forward to those breakfasts because the free room service breakfast menu has everything I want: croissants, chocolate croissants, coffee and juice, and my mom's chocolate croissant.

 

If you do have to travel with teens, it is a great idea to put them in their own room. That way if the steward can't make it up because they didn't get out of bed, you still have clean towels and a made up bed.

 

I love my family. Maybe just not ALL of my family together at one time.

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Fantastic review, thank you so much for taking the time to write it! It seems like there's never enough time to do all the things the ship has to offer, so I guess we just need to keep going back! :)

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Oh my goodness! I loved reading your review, it has been a great one! Sounds like to me you guys did a great job planning a wonderful vacation for your group. We also have hosted an exchange student. Our girl was from Germany, and it was such an experience. I would have loved to taken her on a cruise with us, to see the Caribbean.

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Loved your review! Thanks for taking the time to post it. The Escape is one of our favorite NCL ships.

 

And hello from FL! I grew up on the east side Madison and lived my entire life there, until two years ago when my DH and I had the opportunity to move to Florida. We're in our 30s, so thought we'd try it out for a few years. I miss home and come back often (my family all still lives in Madison and my in-laws are near Wausau), but do love the sunshine and warmth year-round here.

 

Heard you're getting a bit of a snowstorm today, so stay warm and plan another cruise. :-)

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Thanks for the great review! We are going on Escape 5/6 to Bermuda. I have a question-is smoking allowed at Spice H2O? I know it was on Breakaway and it was a great place to smoke and not bother anyone that wasn't smoking..

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I have a question-is smoking allowed at Spice H2O? I know it was on Breakaway and it was a great place to smoke and not bother anyone that wasn't smoking..

 

There is a smoking area on Spice H2O by the bar. You can't smoke on the loungers/sun deck area.

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