worldtraveller99 Posted March 12 #1 Share Posted March 12 I am considering a Japan cruise. Looking at the Cunard offering there appears to be fewer ports than others and too many sea days. Is their ship just slower to get to the next place to visit? Have you tried one of these cruises and what was it like please? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
godfreyb Posted March 12 #2 Share Posted March 12 Japan is just wonderful and worth the extra sea days. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare NE John Posted March 12 #3 Share Posted March 12 Never been to Japan but have done Cunard cruises and transatlantic crossings. Remember that Cunard’s long time slogan is “Getting there is half the fun!” Cunard provides a very busy daily schedule and not just seminars trying to sell you something like on other lines. Being onboard is actually a very nice experience. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
worldtraveller99 Posted March 12 Author #4 Share Posted March 12 Thank you both. More to think about! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChrisMV Posted March 12 #5 Share Posted March 12 3 or 4 consecutive sea days is enough for me at least. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MCC retired Posted March 12 #6 Share Posted March 12 Not just Cunard , but all cruises and crossings activities come alive on sea days. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare WantedOnVoyage Posted March 12 #7 Share Posted March 12 Is there really such a thing as "too many sea days"??? I cannot even fathom the idea... Ports are just ports, days at sea are magic. 19 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2Oldpeopleinlove Posted March 13 #8 Share Posted March 13 Agree with the above, but everyone’s different. We choose transatlantic both to avoid flying both ways and for the ultimate relaxation and fun of sea days. My sister, on the other hand, would never do a TA because she requires ports most days. Just depends on your personal preferences, but yes, there ARE tons of fun things to do on Cunard sea days. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare david,Mississauga Posted March 13 #9 Share Posted March 13 1 hour ago, WantedOnVoyage said: Is there really such a thing as "too many sea days"??? I cannot even fathom the idea... Ports are just ports, days at sea are magic. Many years ago when we were members of the P&O Line's P.O.S.H. Club there was a letter published by a regular passenger. She said: "Ports are an unnecessary interruption to my sea-going experience." Well said, I thought. 9 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LittleFish1976 Posted March 13 #10 Share Posted March 13 18 hours ago, worldtraveller99 said: I am considering a Japan cruise. Looking at the Cunard offering there appears to be fewer ports than others and too many sea days. Is their ship just slower to get to the next place to visit? Have you tried one of these cruises and what was it like please? If you can wait a few weeks I'll be able to give you a first-hand report. I'll be on board QE for 18 nights circumnavigating Japan and more. We will have four sea days in the first nine days, two of which are consecutive (one involves 'scenic cruising' which usually involves cruising by geographical features) and three non-consecutive sea days in the second nine night segment. Lots of port time it seems to me. If you want to be on a Cunard vessel to see Japan you only have this year and next; they have removed Japan from their regular programming as per the rest of Australasia. Anyway, I'm happy to let you know what the experience is like if you're interested. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
worldtraveller99 Posted March 13 Author #11 Share Posted March 13 Thank you very much LittleFish1976, I look forward to seeing your report. Oh no! It is in a few years time we will be able to go (after husband retires, as is too long away before then). So no Japan and no Australia? Maybe they will reconsider nearer the time? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoveto Posted March 13 #12 Share Posted March 13 For me the more sea days the better. I would never go on a cruise when there is a port each day with maybe one sea day. No way can that be described as a cruise. 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ronpes Posted March 13 #13 Share Posted March 13 4 hours ago, Hoveto said: For me the more sea days the better. I would never go on a cruise when there is a port each day with maybe one sea day. No way can that be described as a cruise. Agreed. We have booked Southampton to Sydney for Jan 2026 (QM2) and in the 51-night trip there are 35-sea days! We have done numerous transatlantic crossings and are about to do our 2nd Transpacific later this year (not with Cunard). For us now at our age, (mid 60's) its more about the journey and the ship and an opportunity to totally relax at sea. However, I understand that does not suit everyone, so each to their own etc. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
worldtraveller99 Posted March 13 Author #14 Share Posted March 13 Just a PS - do you know how to print out the itinerary of a cruise? I cannot see that on the cruise page. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catchum Posted March 14 #15 Share Posted March 14 On 3/13/2024 at 11:09 AM, Hoveto said: For me the more sea days the better. I would never go on a cruise when there is a port each day with maybe one sea day. No way can that be described as a cruise. A cruise is a voyage taken for pleasure. If you sleep on the water then life is good. Have done 10+ sea days in a row which was wonderful and a port every day which was equally wonderful. My preference is that the final day is a sea day as I get stressed about packing. My next cruise is on our canal boat for a few nights no sea days. FYI you don't have to get off the ship. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare 2BACRUISER Posted March 14 #16 Share Posted March 14 I love sea days my DH hates them with venom and some lol 😆 so we have to have a compromise, our next cruise has only one sea day, haven't told him yet the one after has 4 🙈🙈 but he'll have to get over it🤷♀️🤷♀️ after working flat out he's finding this retirement thing hard. I really can see why women get rid of men of a certain age lol 😆 😂 pass the frying pan 😜🙄🤣🤪 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
worldtraveller99 Posted March 14 Author #17 Share Posted March 14 We have decided to take the QA Spain cruise in 2026. It has 2 sea days - and Brittany Ferries also has a sea day going out and one coming back - and I know there will be a lot more fun things to do than on the ferry! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
exlondoner Posted March 15 #18 Share Posted March 15 I love sea days, but it does depend on the weather. If the weather is too cold and windy to go outside that greatly reduces the pleasure, even more so if it is rough. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare WantedOnVoyage Posted March 15 #19 Share Posted March 15 I like all weather.... we had a proper Mistral in the Western Med on QE so it was still sunny but really blowy and throwing spray. Positively delightful. And why I insist on that proper promenade deck to savour it. I was delighted I was not alone, either. Fortunately we did not have a nervous nanny Captain to restrict access to the decks, either. Like most Mistrals it only occupied an afternoon but it remains a highight to be remembered. I insist on a ship that has that immediate access to the real sea, spray and salt that makes an ocean holiday unique. QE and QV are better in this regard than QM2 as their promenade deck is quite low. QA.... no way. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now