Archive for the ‘Caribbean’ Category

All-Inclusive Cruising Grows in Europe

Canadian Cruises, Caribbean, Costa Cruises, Hapag LLoyd, Louis, MSC, Mediterranean, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
Aug 09 2010

by Mark Tre’ – "The Cruise Examiner"

We all know about how Seabourn, SeaDream and Silversea, more recently followed by Regent Seven Seas, offer all-inclusive fares that include not only the fare but also port charges, gratuities and beverages, including alcoholic drinks, and in the case of Regent, shore excursions.

But there are now other packages out there, available mainly from European lines that while offering splendid service are not necessarily regarded as ultra-luxury and unaffordable. Now that all-inclusive cruising is showing signs of growing in Europe, when will the American lines catch on?

It has been many years now since Silversea and Seabourn introduced the first real "all-inclusive" ships, but many have followed. SeaDream succeeded where Sea Goddess left off under Cunard, and Regent became all-inclusive with the start of 2007, thus making this its fourth season as an all-inclusive line.

However, not all other lines are necessarily like the Caribbean lines that charge a hotel price (no longer duty free, even though the lines buy them duty free) for every drink, and add an automatic 15% service charge each time.

With recent additions, nearly all based in Europe, many lines now offer "all-inclusive" packages that can be purchased either before the cruise or on boarding. These packages, which are mainly attuned to drinks, can change the nature of a cruise from having to "buy one’s way" through the cruise to not having to worry about that huge final bill that comes under the door on the final night.

Thomson Cruises first tried all-inclusive with its Topaz a decade ago, but this was not continued when she retired in 2002. (Coincidentally, this same ship, when Greek Line’s Queen Anna Maria, had offered something called "Bacchus Cruises" from New York that had included all alcoholic beverages in the fare). To-day, however, Thomson has revived an all-inclusive drinks package that includes draught beer, spirits, aperitifs, house wines, soft drinks and a range of cocktails.

Premium drinks such as champagne, malt whiskey, bottled beers and ciders, speciality coffees and bottled water are not included. This is sold as an all-inclusive "upgrade" and sometimes even used by Thomson to generate new bookings at a cheap rate of £49 (about $75) for the week. The usual price, however, is £186 (about $300) per week.

For some time now, Louis Cruise Lines has also offered a drinks package, which can be purchased when boarding and covers bar drinks and wine in the restaurant for the duration of the cruise. The wines tend to remain the same throughout the cruise. In the same general price range as Thomson, Louis charges about 5% less, or £175 (about $275) for a week’s cruise.

Way ahead of the pack, however, is Pullmantur of Spain, who for some time now has been including drinks in its fares. This is also true of affiliate Croisières de France and its Bleu de France. The wines include the line’s choice of a "house" ("ship") red, white and rosé that change each day. Pullmantur calls this its "AI" plan, standing for all inclusive and it includes port charges and gratuties as well, although a ¤65 per person "service charge" is added to each fare.

Elsewhere, last year MSC Cruises launched two unlimited beverage packages. The first unlimited beverage package includes a selection of bottled wines, mineral water, beer and soft drinks at £98 (about $150) for seven days. The second includes just soft drinks and mineral water at £49 (about $75). All beverages are available in an unlimited quantity during main meals (breakfast, lunch and dinner).

The line also offers wine packages. Costa has similar packages but requires purchase at least fourteen days before sailing.

Wine packages are to-day of course offered by several lines and in addition, many lines offer soft drinks packages and bundles. In fact, it is mainly these soft drinks packages that seem to get attention in the hot weather Caribbean market. One Florida-based line, however, seems to be ahead of the pack.

Movement: Celebrity Drinks Packages
In May, Celebrity Cruises announced that it too would be offering a drinks package. These are an addition to its wine packages that have been available for some time.
Celebrity’s Classic Package includes everything in its non-alcoholic package plus beers with a value of up to $5 per serving and spirits, cocktails, and wines by the glass with a value of up to $8 per serving, and costs passengers $44.85 per person, per day.

The Premium Package includes all the premium beverages in the premium non-alcoholic package plus all beers, and spirits, cocktails, and wines by the glass with a value of up to $12 per serving, and costs $56.35 per person, per day. These prices include a standard 15 percent service charge, and on a 7-day cruise come to about $315 and $395, respectively.

Celebrity now has so many different beverage packages that it has introduced a separate web page for them, where they may be purchased up until four days before sailing. This can be found at www.celebritycruises.com/beveragepackages .

One little known fact about Celebrity, however, is that one ship in the fleet, the little Celebrity Xpedition in the Galapagos, already offers an all-inclusive drinks package as part of her fare.

And sister line Azamara Club Cruises, in a move not really related to Celebrity’s packages, but probably more to do with the arrival of Larry Pimentel as president and ceo, now also offers complimentary wines at lunch and dinner, chosen according to the locale the ship is sailing in.

A Winner: Hapag-Lloyd’s "Columbus All-Inclusive Package"
Last week, Hapag-Lloyd joined the movement towards drinks packages with the announcement that the best programme of all would now be available on its 420-berth Columbus, a smaller ship that not only sails around the world each winter but will also cruise the Great Lakes in 2011.
Beginning in 2011, Hapag-Lloyd will offer a new and very attractive price structure for Columbus. With the new package, extras on board will become a thing of the past. For anyone booking a Columbus all-inclusive package all eighty-one drinks on the beverage list, from soft drinks to exotic cocktails, all tips on board and even a package of two to four shore excursions per cruise will be included in the price.
The Columbus AI package can be booked as an option in addition to the regular cruise fare and all Columbus cruises will now include a cruise-only rate, as well as a rate for the package. The package price depends on the length of the cruise and the destination, and will start at $340 per person for a 13-day Great Lakes cruise, providing a value of about $26 per day, better than any others on offer when one remembers that this includes gratuities and some shore excursions as well! By far the best offer of its kind seen yet.

Disney Prepares for the Dream

Alaska Cruises, Atlantic Crossing, Caribbean, Disney Cruise Lines, Mediterranean, Positioning Voyages | Posted by cruisepeople
Aug 04 2010

by Mark Tre’ – "The Cruise Examiner"

As a result of the delivery of its third ship, Disney Dream, from Meyer Werft in January 2011, Disney will be expanding its horizons to include new destinations. It has cruised from California and from Europe in the past, but now will also be extending into the Alaska trade from Vancouver.

The line held an open house for a number of guests on board its Disney Magic in Dover last Friday. So where from here? We will have a look at Disney Cruise Line from an adult’s point of view.

Disney Magic at Dover

Most people have never heard of the Magical Cruise Co Ltd of Burbank, California, London, but in fact it is this company that operates  Disney Magic and Disney Wonder from its base in Florida. The company, trading as Disney Cruise Line, invited a large number of guests to view its 83,000-ton Disney Magic on her last call at Dover for the 2010 season last Friday.

The first impression one gets when boarding is a very high quality finish and public spaces that show great attention to detail. Although the hands that indicate what deck the lift or elevator is at include a little white glove a la Mickey Mouse, this is tastefully done, as in fact are all the children’s areas as well.

Small maritime touches such as the use of brass, white ropes to hold back shower curtains and windows (and even the shape of verandas) that give the appearance of the promenade deck of an old ocean liner. This is not to mention the ship’s very fine lines, and the black hull and two red and black funnel colours that echo those of North Atlantic liners such as RMS Queen Elizabeth, RMS Queen Mary and Normandie.

The feeling in the public areas on board is also quite different from the normal cruise ship, in that the finish shows high quality and attention to detail and the ship tends to exude an air of theatricality about it.

Disney also operates its own cruise terminal at Port Canaveral, Florida, not far from Disney World at Orlando, and its own Bahamian private island called Castaway Cay. The company likes to control as much of its own operation as it can and has done so since introducing Disney Magic in 1998 and  Disney Fantasy a year later. When  Disney Dream is delivered Disney Wonder will transfer to the west coast.

 

New Horizons

While Disney has cruised to other areas in the past, the delivery of the 128,000-ton Disney Dream in January and sister ship Disney Fantasy a year later will give the company a fleet of four large cruise ships with which to trade. The result will be more European itineraries in 2011, a first season to Alaska and more cruises to the Mexican Riviera. It is rather interesting how the per person fares work out for these different areas, and this may indicate where cruise lines, or at least Disney, think they will make the best money on 7-night cruises, depending on season:

Alaska – From $1,359
Mediterranean – From $ 979
Caribbean – From $ 839
Mexican Riviera – From $ 729
Alaska, Mexico and Caribbean 7-night minimum fares go up to $1,909 per person while Mediterranean cruises include 7, 10 and 11-night departures and range up to a minimum of $2,609 per person. At the other end the two Disney suites run as follows:
Alaska – From $6,819
Mediterranean – From $5,909
Caribbean – From $5,609
Mexican Riviera – From $5,179
Again, the suites run up to $7,929 per person to Alaska, the Caribbean and Mexico and up to $11,199 each in the Mediterranean.

Disney Magic itineraries in 2011 will offer Mediterranean cruises from Barcelona that include either Nice, La Spezia, Naples and Palma or Cannes, La Spezia, Civitavecchia, Naples and Palma (7 nights) and Malta, Tunis, Naples, Civitavecchia, La Spezia, Ajaccio and Nice (10 and 11 nights).
Caribbean cruises from Port Canaveral will go either east to St Maarten, St Thomas and Castaway Cay or west to Key West, Grand Cayman, Cozumel and Castaway Cay. The new Disney Dream will meanwhile take over the line’s stock 3, 4 and 5-night Bahamas cruises that are usually combined with a stay at Disney World.
Disney Wonder’s Alaska cruises from Vancouver will include Tracy Arm, Skagway, Juneau and Ketchikan while Mexican Riviera cruises from Los Angeles will go to Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlan and Cabo San Lucas.
Other voyages will be offered in positioning season, for example, both Trans-Panama (to position Disney Wonder to Los Angeles) and Trans-Atlantic, as well as 6 nights Los Angeles to Vancouver and 5 nights Vancouver to Los Angeles by Disney Wonder before and after the Alaska season.

 

Can Adult Couples Cruise with Disney?

Two things are of interest for adults on these ships. First, much of the forward part of the ship is dedicated to adults only (only those of age 18 and above are allowed) and overlooking the stern there is the Palo adults only alternative dining room. There is also a large spa area where adults may relax and this includes couples areas and the Cove Cafe is an adults only coffee bar.
The adult only areas are decorated in a stylish manner and show no real evidence of being on a ship that was designed for families and children, so it may be possible for an adult couple to cruise on a Disney ship comfortably and without being overly influenced by all the children’s activities, which are kept to their own areas and divided largely by age group, while also allowing a family of children of different ages to play together.
The large cinema is also rather grand and does show films other then Disney. And even the Disney character appearances are scheduled and announced to that adult can steer clear of them if they wish.
Finally, some tips for adults:
1. When booking your stateroom, choose one well away from the children’s areas.
2. Ask for late dinner sitting as most younger children will be on the first sitting.
3. Take advantage of the adults only Palo as much as you can.
4. Use the adults only pool on Deck 9, with its own bar and coffee lounge.
5. Relax with a couples treatment in the spa.
It is worth remembering that Disney also welcomes adults so much thought has gone into the ships’ layout for this category of passenger too.

One way for adults to try a Disney ship might be on the 5-night positioning cruise from Vancouver to Los Angeles on September 20, 2011, with calls at Victoria BC and Ensenada, Mexico.

New Passenger Freighter Voyages for Up to 80 Year Olds

Asia, Caribbean, News, Panama Canal, Passenger Freighters, World | Posted by cruisepeople
Jul 30 2010

Columbus Loop – Short World Voyage – From Seattle or Vancouver to the
east coast or from the east coast to Seattle or Vancouver.
Weekly sailings – 15 vessels in the service – 16 ports on a full round
voyage of 105 days.
Proposed port list (subject to change) – Seattle, Vancouver, Yokohama,
Shanghai, Ningbo, Hong Kong, Yantian, Tanjung Pelepas, Mediterranean Sea
and Suez Canal passage, New York, Norfolk, Savannah, Mediterranean Sea
and Suez Canal passage, Tanjung Pelepas, Hong Kong, Yantian, Shanghai,
Pusan, Seattle.

India America Express – Weekly liner service between the east coast and
India, Pakistan and the Suez Canal area. Eight vessels sailing 56 days
for a complete round voyage of 10 ports. Port List (subject to change) –
New York, Norfolk, Savannah, Charleston, Mediterranean Sea passage, Port
Said, Suez Canad Passage, Jeddah, Muhammad Bin Qasim Karachi, Nhava
Sheva Jawaharlal Nehru, Mundra, Damietta, New York.

Pacific East Coast 2 – From Ensenada (Mexico) through the Panama Canal
and the Caribbean, the Far East and back to Ensenada. Weekly service
with 11 ships in the service and 15 ports of call with a complete round
voyage length of 77 days. Port List (subject to change) – Ensenada,
Manzanillo (Mexico), Punta Manzanillo (Panama), Panama Canal transit,
Cartagena, Kingston, Caucedo, Puerto Cabello, Port of Spain, Chiwan,
Hong Kong, Kaohsiung, Ningbo, Shanghai, Qingdao, Pusan, Ensenada.

Pacific Express 3 – Around the World in 77 days including passages of
the Panama Canal, Suez Canal and the Mediterranean Sea. Weekly service
with 11 ships and 15 ports.
Port List (subject to change) – Houston, Mobile, Miami, Jacksonville,
Savannah, Charleston, Tanger Med, Jebel Ali, Singapore, Hong Kong,
Chiwan, Shanghai, Pusan, Balboa, Punta Manzanillo (Panama), Houston.

The French-flag passenger freighter M.V. CMA-CGM ROSSINI will sail
a 21-day itinerary every 47 days, starting 22 October, 2010. The
itinerary is Charleston, Savannah, Freeport(Bahamas), Veracruz (Mexico),
Altamira (Mexico), Houston, New Orleans, Freeport, Savannah and back to Charleston.
The ship has five cabins, each with a double bed or twin beds. All
cabins have two wide windows in front, private bathroom with shower, wash
basin and toilet, private lounge, refrigerator (handy for your
duty-free beverages available on board), desk and locker.
Dining is in the officers’ mess with the senior officers. Other
amenities include a small gym with ping pong, and rowing machine. There
is also a small outdoor pool, and you will find deck chairs on the sun deck.
The passenger lounge on E deck includes sofa, easy chairs, tea table,
game table, small library, TV and DVD player, Hi Fi set and a refrigerator.
Also on E deck is the laundry with washer and dryer. This ship is
equipped with an elevator. Please note that passengers must be mobile
as elevators do not work in rough seas or emergencies.

REQUIRED – Valid passport which expires a minimum of 6 months after the
conclusion of the voyage. Passengers carrying passports, other than
American or Canadian, must obtain a US visa.

The fares for these voyages including port taxes/bank transfer fees,
and deviation insurance are:
Doubles – each of two – Euro 2170
Single use of a double cabin – Euro 2380

All passengers are required to carry emergency hospital/medical
insurance including emergency evacuation (sometimes called air
ambulance) coverage. Not required but strongly recommended is
cancellation insurance to protect your fare in the event of illness,
accident or bereavement of yourself, your travelling companion or
immediate family members. We are happy to quote on this insurance for
Canadian residents. We will supply a source for American residents if
they so wish. There will be a medical form for your doctor to
complete indicating you are in satisfactory health to sail in a ship
with no medical facilities or doctor on board. Age limit is 75 (now 80
with 2 good medical reports from your doctor – one with deposit and one
within a month of sailing)!

Booking requirements:
Cabins are held for one week at no obligation. At the end of that time,
completed booking form is required and a 25% deposit is due. Balance is
due 10 weeks prior to scheduled sailing. Payments are in EUROS and may
be sent to us by bank draft, money order or wire transfer. Please note that banks
charge both you and us service charges for wire transfers. Bookings
closer in than 10 weeks require full payment with acceptance of the
option. Medical certificate and proof of insurance should be submitted
closer to sailing date (see top of medical form).

Please note that this is a working cargo vessel and the cargo takes
priority. There is always the possibility of a night port call or a short
stay in port if cargo requirements are light.

Christmas in 2011

Asia, Caribbean, Holland America Line, New Brochure, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
Jul 16 2010

We all know how hard it is to get a family get together planned.

We are pleased that Holland America Line has delivered its Holiday Sailings brochure for Christmas 2011.

Just contact us at 1-800-961-5536 or cruise@thecruisepeople.ca to receive yours.

OASIS OF THE SEAS Review

Caribbean, Royal Caribbean, Ship Reviews | Posted by cruisepeople
Jul 14 2010

Cruise was great for everyone – kids ALL had a great time together :-)   Better than even hoped for.
Flights were fine.  Check in was very easy.smooth and efficient.

Entertainment was the best – ice show was absolutely awesome (how do they do that on a ship that’s rocking in rough seas???), the water show was spectacular (a little “artsy” or abstract for *****’s liking) and the big production show was great.  Only the headliner act was embarrassingly awful. (… found him totally entertaining – must be something about teenage boys’ random sense of humour; he was so bad, ******quite enjoyed it!) 

Food was good – it was however disappointing that the standard “ship-board” coffee was totally awfully undrinkable; any alternatives were provided by Seattle’s Best Coffee and cost real money.  I found it rather cheap that one could not get a latte or even a decent cup of coffee anywhere on the ship without paying.  Pasties and doughnuts were free at all the specialty outlets – but you want a cuppa to go with the treat!  and that costs…  If you ordered a cappucino after dinner (in the dining room), you had to hand over your Seapass card to your waiter and pay your $3.95!  In that regard I preferred Voyager of the Seas, which had some of the boutiques and shops and specialty eating places, but kids could still make their sundaes for free (ice cream shop on the Boardwalk is $$) and one could always get a goodie and a great cup of coffee anytime, at no charge.

She’s a beautiful ship, and an amazing feat, but for me, the step up to Voyager was more spectacular/impressive.  Oasis just felt like “more” or “bigger” (and more commercial), whereas Voyager really broke some kind of barrier for me.  I also found Voyager more beautiful (attention to little details, flowers in nooks, artwork); my kids disagree.  Certainly the Central Park on Oasis is incredible and the whole ship is truly mind-boggling (I mean it’s a floating village), but if it were just ****** and me, I would prefer a smaller, more intimate, elegant and all-inclusive (!) ship.  For a family or multi-generational vacation, however, this was awesome.

Yes, the kids made it to the Atlantis water park in the Bahamas – booking the hotel next door worked great – but in the end they weren’t impressed – lots of hoopla, but short on delivery.  Meanwhile ******, ****** and I went to swim with the dolphins.  This was also available at Atlantis, but we chose the Blue Lagoon – and it was amazing. Certainly if you have clients wanting this kind of experience, I don’t think they’ll be disappointed at Blue Lagoon.  The staff were really awesome and took their time to make sure everyone had a great experience.  The reviews I’d read when comparing the two locations said exactly that, and that the Atlantis location tended to be more commercial, activities were cut short and people felt “ripped off” – kind of like the water park.

Parasailing in St. Thomas was spectacular :-)   As they’d booked an odd number of participants, ******, ****** & I (and ****** as videographer) ended up with our own boat and crew – what a blast!  Sapphire Beach (also St. Thomas) was great afternoon – kids wanted to stay longer.  We took a cab independently, as it seemed the tour cost was high, but if you want a lounge chair and you expect to rent snorkel equipment (even just for an hour), you will pay within a couple of bucks of the excursion rate, and it’s hassle-free.  Not nearly as inflated as the web reports had me believe!  But we just spread out towels and shared the snorkel equipment as there were 5 of us, so we were still ahead of the game, but not by much.  Oh, and of course the Oasis excursion appeared just after we’d marked our little spot in the sand – the loungers were set out in lines (right in front of us) and we were surrounded by our shipmates anyway!

St. Maarten was blazingly, unusually hot (August-type weather we were told!)  Majo Beach (the one right next to the airport) was a highlight for the teenagers.  They were a little panicked about getting back to the ship on time (it was a squeeze), but they took tons of pictures and loved playing in the high surf!  The SeaTrek helmet dive was fun; I found it hard on my ears (I’ve had ear surgery, so that was a given possibility) and ****** was hungover (ooops).  But I did find the quality of the coral, the clarity of the water and the number of fish somewhat disappointing – in St Thomas, too.  I remember when I first snorkelled, just how stunningly brilliant everything was; it’s apparent that we haven’t been very kind to our environment in the past 25 years, and what I saw was not the fault of any tour operator but just representative of over use and lack of respect by tourists for all these decades.  Sad…

So all in all, a full week – lots of great adventures, lots of good memories, and a much more functional family :-)   A well-spent vacation, I’d say.  And one of the most entertaining evenings we had, was when we all headed over to “Smiles”, the kids’ portrait studio on the Boardwalk, and spent an hour trying on weird costumes and wild wigs and having a series of family photos taken.  Our favourite will go out with the annual Christmas letter this year as our new “family photo”.  The photographer played along, and we all had a lot of fun.

But a note re: disembarkation… Upon leaving Oasis, any airport-bound people are “herded” out to the taxi stands (ok, there are thousands of us, I get it.)  There are two options: ordinary taxis to the left and vans for larger parties to the right, oh and a shuttle service which is exorbitant around the corner.   I don’t remember the exact rate, but I think the taxis/vans work out to about $10/person.  Shuttle was $100 or something stupid for the 10 minute ride – so skip that option.  Advise anyone going on Oasis to AVOID the vans.  Originally we were going to take 2 cabs to the airport, but for the same price (since it’s per head) we opted to go by van so we could travel together and then hang out for the extra couple of hours we had to kill before our flights home.  Well, it turns out 95% of the vans won’t take 6 people, and the few that do, are somehow “spoken for”.  And there are 20 cabs for every van.  So if you take an ordinary taxi, you can be away from the peer in relatively short order, despite the masses of people pouring from the ship and the lack of any crowd control mechanisms.  If you wait for a van (for 6) you will stand there for likely 2 hours or more (in the blazing heat) and then still only get one because you literally hijack it while still in motion, and muscle your way insistently past the big burly black driver and his even more belligerent dispatcher.  No amount of sweet talking, elbowing, bribing, bold-faced waving cash around, or even sitting on a curb in a near-diabetic-coma (Richard) will get you a van any earlier.  The dispatcher, who had promised us a 6-person van an hour earlier, then ran up and actually told us we could not have that vehicle – told us to get out of it! – and when I simply refused (to my children’s great embarrassment), he banged on the side of the van and ran after us to collect his tip….  Welcome back to the real world!

Well, speaking of “real world” I guess I can’t avoid the boxes any longer – better get back to my unpacking.

 

Thanks to a repeat client of The Cruise People who took her time to share her thoughts with us and allowed us to share with you.

New or Returning Passenger Freighter Programmes

Asia, Caribbean, Mediterranean, News, Passenger Freighters | Posted by cruisepeople
Jul 09 2010

As you may be aware, the financial situation combined with vastly increased security has decimated the passenger freighter availability to/from Canada and the USA over the last few years.

I have just learned about four new or returning products headed our way. I thought you’d like a peek at what’s coming, especially since they will accommodate passengers up to age 80!

Eagerly awaiting more details such as rates and sailing dates.

Drop us an e-mail fcherney@thecruisepeople.ca or a 1-888759-2990  if you’d like more information or to request availability. Don’t forget full names and birth dates of passengers as in passports, Nationality of passports, desired month of sailing and desired ports of embarkation and disembarkation.

 

Columbus Loop – Short World Voyage – From Seattle or Vancouver to the east coast or from the east coast to Seattle or Vancouver.

Weekly sailings – 15 vessels in the service – 16 ports on a full round voyage of 105 days.
Proposed port list (subject to change) – Seattle, Vancouver, Yokohama, Shanghai, Ningbo, Hong Kong, Yantian, Tanjung Pelepas, Mediterranean Sea and Suez Canal passage, New York, Norfolk, Savannah, Mediterranean Sea and Suez Canal passage, Tanjung Pelepas, Hong Kong, Yantian, Shanghai, Pusan, Seattle.

India America Express – Weekly liner service between the east coast and India, Pakistan and the Suez Canal area.

Eight vessels sailing 56 days for a complete round voyage of 10 ports. Port List (subject to change) – New York, Norfolk, Savannah, Charleston, Mediterranean Sea passage, Port Said, Suez Canad Passage, Jeddah, Muhammad Bin Qasim Karachi, Nhava Sheva Jawaharlal Nehru, Mundra, Damietta, New York.
Pacific East Coast 2 – From Ensenada (Mexico) through the Panama Canal and the Caribbean, the Far East and back to Ensenada. Weekly service with 11 ships in the service and 15 ports of call with a complete round voyage length of 77 days. Port List (subject to change) – Ensenada, Manzanillo (Mexico), Punta Manzanillo (Panama), Panama Canal transit, Cartagena, Kingston, Caucedo, Puerto Cabello, Port of Spain, Chiwan, Hong Kong, Kaohsiung, Ningbo, Shanghai, Qingdao, Pusan, Ensenada.

 

Pacific Express 3 – Around the World in 77 days including passages of the Panama Canal, Suez Canal and the Mediterranean Sea.

Weekly service with 11 ships and 15 ports.
Port List (subject to change) – Houston, Mobile, Miami, Jacksonville, Savannah, Charleston, Tanger Med, Jebel Ali, Singapore, Hong Kong, Chiwan, Shanghai, Pusan, Balboa, Punta Manzanillo (Panama), Houston.

Fans Can Stretch the Baseball Season With MSC Cruises

Caribbean, MSC, Theme Cruises | Posted by cruisepeople
Jul 07 2010

Former Major League Baseball Players Featured on Select 2010-2011 Caribbean Cruises

 

Fans looking to stretch the baseball season into the winter months can enjoy the warmth of the Caribbean with some of their favourite former Major League Baseball stars with MSC’s "Baseball Greats" cruises onboard MSC Poesia.

Interact with former Major Leaguers who played and were stars on several recognizable teams. "Baseball Greats" cruises offer free guest/player activities including a player-hosted trivia game, a question-and-answer session, a guest pitching contest, and a lively story-telling session.

Baseball players host pitching, hitting, fielding, and base running clinics. One of the most popular aspects of the experience includes a free autograph session.

These Caribbean cruises are roundtrip from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and feature the following itineraries and former Major League Baseball players:

  • 7-night Eastern Caribbean cruise on November 14 with Indians’ Hall-of-Famer Bob Feller, Tommy Davis (Dodgers’ two-time batting champion), Glenn Beckert (Cubs’ All-Star, Gold Glove second-baseman), Clarence Jones (player and hitting coach for 20 years with the Braves and Indians) and Stan Bahnsen (a star pitcher for the Yankees). 
  • 7-night Western Caribbean cruise on December 5 with Graig Nettles (All-Star, Gold Glove third-baseman for the Yankees), Amos Otis (All-Star, Gold Glove centre-fielder for the KC Royals), Dave Campbell (infielder for the Tigers and Padres, and award-winning broadcaster for ESPN), Stan Bahnsen, and one more (to be named);
  • 7-night Eastern Caribbean cruise on January 9 with Andre Dawson (Cubs & Expos 2010 Hall-of-Fame inductee), Greg Luzinski (All-Star slugger for the Phillies and White Sox), Art Shamsky (outfielder and first-baseman for the 1969 "Miracle Mets"), Pete Mackanin (infielder for the Rangers and Expos, manager for the Pirates and Reds, and current bench coach for the Philadelphia Phillies), and Stan Bahnsen;
  • 7-night Eastern Caribbean cruise on January 23 with Rick Burleson (Angels and Red Sox All-Star shortstop and appeared in the 1975 Red Sox versus Reds World Series), Rick Wise (No-hitter with the Phillies; and with the Red Sox, was the winning pitcher in game six of the 1975 World Series), Jim Fregosi (All-Star shortstop and managed the Phillies to the 1983 World Series), Stan Bahnsen, and one more (to be named). 
  • 7-night Eastern Caribbean cruise on February 6 with Randy Hundley (the Cubs All-Star, Gold Glove catcher), Roland Hemond (Baseball guru and two-time MLB General Manager of the year in 1972 with the White Sox and 1989 with the Orioles), Stan Bahnsen, and two players (to be named)

Caribbean cruise-only rates begin at $US529 per person, double occupancy (government fees/taxes additional).

For more information about MSC Cruises, call The Cruise People on 1-800-961-5536.

Edward Van Zaane Named Captain of NIEUW AMSTERDAM

Atlantic Crossing, Caribbean, Holland America Line, Mediterranean, News | Posted by cruisepeople
Jun 19 2010
Hollandamericalogo

Image via Wikipedia

 

 

Captain Edward G. van Zaane will be master of Holland America Line’s newest ship, ms Nieuw Amsterdam, currently under construction at Fincantieri shipyard in Italy. The 29-year Holland America Line veteran brought ms Amsterdam into service in 2001 and served at her helm on the line’s Grand World Voyages for nine years. He recently arrived at the shipyard in Marghera, Italy to oversee the completion of the ship including the arrival and training of crew, testing various ship’s systems and participating in sea trials.

“It’s invaluable to have an experienced seaman leading the introduction of the Nieuw Amsterdam,” said Stein Kruse, president and CEO of Holland America Line. “We are eagerly anticipating the arrival of our newest Signature-class ship and know that Captain van Zaane’s leadership will help ensure a successful launch and inaugural cruise season.”

“It’s a unique experience and the dream of any captain to bring out a new ship,” said Capt. van Zaane. “I’ve had the great fortune twice within 10 years, and I’m eagerly looking forward to launching this beautiful new vessel.”

Born in The Hague, Netherlands, Capt. van Zaane went to sea in 1977, first sailing in heavy-lift cargo ships and then a deep-sea research vessel before graduating with honours from the Maritime Academy in Den Helder, Netherlands.

He joined Holland America Line in 1981 as fourth officer in ms Statendam IV. Quickly working his way up the ranks, he served in many Holland America ships and was promoted to captain of Rotterdam V in 1994. Since then Capt. van Zaane has sailed on numerous grand and world voyages.

When not at sea, he resides in The Hague, Netherlands with his wife, actress and model Apollonia van Ravenstein.

Built at Fincantieri’s Marghera yard near Venice, Italy, the 2,106-passenger Nieuw Amsterdam — the 15th ship in Holland America’s fleet — will sail on maiden voyage July 4, 2010. After several 12-day Mediterranean cruises, Nieuw Amsterdam will embark on an autumn Atlantic crossing and will then sail seven-day eastern and western Caribbean itineraries from November through March of the next year. Her Royal Highness Princess Máxima of the Netherlands will christen the ship.

Enhanced by Zemanta

118 New Ships Since 2000 – Ship Sizes – The New Panama Canal

Atlantic Crossing, Caribbean, Carnival Cruise Lines, Celebrity Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cruise West, Crystal Cruises, Cunard Line, Disney Cruise Lines, Fred Olsen, Hapag LLoyd, Holland America Line, MSC, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, P&O, Panama Canal, Royal Caribbean, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
Jun 18 2010

by Mark Tre’

The recent announcement by CLIA that 118 new cruise ships had been delivered since 2000 has led us to have a look at how the world cruise fleet is now made up and how it has changed in the last decade. The findings, along with progress now being made on a new Panama Canal, are rather interesting. Large ships, nay huge ships, have now become the norm. And like the trade of the world, the type of passenger attracted to each size of ship is surely quite different.


118 New Cruise Ships Since 2000
In January, Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) published an interesting statistic. It said that 118 new cruise ships had been introduced to the world fleet since 2000. That is very close to one ship a month, every month, year round for a decade. While there has been a slowdown during the recession, orders are starting again and it is worthwhile to have a look at how this massive new fleet is composed. To do this, in order to give the fleet a different perspective, we are going to look at how the fleet is divided in the same terms used for cargo ships, working from the largest down.

The Capesize Ships
In cargo ship terms, Capesize ships are the next size up from Suezmax, the latter being ships that are too wide or deep for the Panama Canal but can still use the Suez. Capesize ships, however, always have to navigate via the Cape of Good Hope or Cape Horn. Length and beam are not a problem in the Suez Canal, but draught is limited to 62 feet.

As cruise ships carry passengers and not heavy cargoes, this is not a problem for them, as even RMS Queen Mary 2 has only a draught of 32 feet 10 inches, which means that there is really no such thing as a "Suezmax" cruise ship. In the container trades these ships tend to be known as "post-Panamax" (a Panamax ship can carry up to 5,000 twenty-foot equivalent containers while a post-Panamax can carry up to 12,000 (although there is also now a design for a 20,000-unit vessel).

Capesize cargo ships ten to carry large cargoes of low-value goods such as coal and iron ore, of ports they can serve is severely restricted by their size. The same is of course true of Capesize cruise ships that cannot enter many cruise ports because of their own size, but the huge advantage they offer is that they can bring down rates because of economies of scale. Indeed, the same applies to Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas, which carry 6,000 passengers each but limit themselves to the same more on board activities such as ziplines and high diving and their ports, which they visit on a repetitive basis all the year round, feature things such as roller coaster rides and chair lifts. Despite the fact that they offer huge loft suites, these ships must cater to the mass market with their low unit costs in order to stay full.

Where Capesize cargo ships are typically above 150,000 tons deadweight, or about 100,000 gross tons measurement, Capesize cruise ships are of basically the same size, The first Capesize cruise ships were actually built in the 1930s, with the delivery of  Normandie for the French Lines and Cunard Line’s Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth. These three North Atlantic express passenger ships were all too long and to wide to be able to use the Panama Canal, and were the largest ships to have been built to that time.

To-day’s Capesize cruise fleet thus numbers forty-seven ships either in service or on order. Starting with the 5,400 lower berth Oasis and Allure of the Seas, they work down through a quintet (the largest cruise ship order ever placed) of the 2,850-berth Celebrity Solstice class, a quartet of 3,100-passenger ships consisting of the Voyager of the Seas class, and three trios, the 3,600-passenger Freedom of the Seas class, 3,500-guest MSC Fantasia class and the 3,100-berth Carnival Dream class.

Then follow another pair, Disney Dream and sister, and the one-off 4,200-berth Norwegian Epic (which was to have been part of a pair until her sister ship was cancelled), to be introduced next week, and Queen Mary 2, another one-off, and one with a lot more space with only 2,620 lower berths. These ships are all above 1,000 feet in overall length and only one, Voyager of the Seas of 1999, was delivered before the year 2000.

To be added to these are twenty-two more. The eleven ships of the Carnival Conquest (six) and Costa Concordia (five) classes, all 952 by 116 feet in overall dimensions, are ten feet too wide for the present Panama Canal. Eleven more ships, of the Grand Princess class, including P&O’s Azura and Ventura, all 951 x 118 feet, also fall into this category. These twenty-two Carnival Corp & PLC ships were built to a short and stout design that precludes them from passing through the present Panama Canal, and they are all products of the Fincantieri shipyards in Italy. Only one of this lot, Grand Princess of 1998, was delivered before the year 2000.

So of the 118 cruise ships delivered since 2000 sixty-seven, or more than half, are too big to transit the Panama Canal.

The Panamax Ships
The next category down is Panamax, which is the maximum size ship that can use the Panama Canal (although new locks are due to open in 2015). Cargoes carried by Panamax ships are generally a little higher value and include grain, steel and minerals as well as thermal coal and iron ore. And Panamax cruise ships are more likely to feature alternative restaurants and big shows than ziplines and roller coasters. In fact, many offer more than just a repetitive 7-day itinerary and are more likely to be found on alternating 10-day circuits in the Mediterranean as just one example.
These ships have a maximum length overall of 965 feet and a beam of 106 feet and are able to squeeze through the present locks. This size is ideal for World Cruises as well, and can reposition easily between Alaska and the Caribbean. For example, where Queen Victoria and the new Queen Elizabeth can offer world cruises that transit both Panama and Suez, Queen Mary 2 is forced to sail all the way around the tip of South America to get from the Atlantic to the Pacific as she is too big for the Panama Canal.

The Panamax cruise fleet numbers eighty ships. Owners such as Norwegian Cruise Line (and its once-parent Star Cruises) made sure they did not build wider than Panamax and so this fleet includes half a dozen Meyer-built vessels of dimensions of 965 by 106 feet, while Celebrity Cruises has four St Nazaire-built ships of the same dimensions in the Celebrity Constellation class and Princess Cruises two St Nazaire-built ships of the Coral Princess class. To these can be added Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria, all of maximum Panamax dimensions.

Following closely behind are the four ships of the MSC Musica class, all just a foot shorter than Panamax, and the four Royal Caribbean ships of the Radiance of the Seas class, three feet shorter. Following at 960 feet are the four Carnival Spirit class and two ships each of the Costa Atlantica and Costa Luminosa classes. At 936 feet, or 29 feet short of Panamax are half a dozen Holland America ships, from the 2002-built Zuiderdam to this year’s Nieuw Amsterdam. Royal Caribbean’s five 915-foot "Vision" class ships (not including the now-lengthened Enchantment of the Seas) and the 921-foot Pride of America, complete the Panamax class above 900 feet.
Fully another forty ships follow at between 800 and 900 feet and Panamax beam, representing Carnival, Celebrity, Costa, NCL, P&O, TUI Cruises and at the lower end in terms of length, the ships of Aida Cruises (half a dozen at 817 feet), P&O Australia (three at 805-810 feet) and the Crystal Serenity at 820 feet.
There have been one or two exceptions to the maximum Panamax length of 965 feet. The laid-up s.s. United States, for example, was constructed in 1952 to be able to transit the Panama in an emergency, but her overall length is 990 feet. A couple of other ships to-day, the 990-foot Enchantment of the Seas, which was lengthened in 2005, gets around this as her bow was redesigned when she was lengthened to that it can be hinged up to bring her overall length down to 965 feet. The 970-foot Utopia, to be delivered in 2013, is the other.

The New Panama Canal
However ships may be classified today, the present Panamax definition will become redundant in five years when a third lane of locks is opened on the Panama. These new locks will allow ships of up to 1200 feet length overall by 167 feet in beam and up to 49.9 feet in draft to transit the canal. Essentially, this will allow most of the world cruise ship fleet to transit Panama.

There are sure to be some exceptions, however, as with the five largest units of the Royal Caribbean fleet their maximum width at the level of the bridge wings is 226 feet for the Oasis and Allure of the Seas and 184 feet for the Freedom class ships. This could leave the five Royal Caribbean ships as the last of the Capesize cruise ships, unable to use the new locks. How many other cruise ships might be affected is not yet clear.

 
Meanwhile, Cunard’s Queen Mary 2 may be able to conduct her world cruises using the Panama Canal after 2015, although that is not yet clear. One factor, that might also affect other cruise ships, is the height of the Bridge of the Americas at the Pacific end of the canal, which has a clearance under the main span of 201 feet at high tide. By comparison, the clearance under the Verrazano Narrows Bridge at the approach to New York is 228 feet, and Queen Mary 2 clears this bridge by only 13 feet.
This means she could be about fourteen feet too tall for the Panama Canal unless some height can be obtained from masts or her funnel, which was specifically designed to the maximum height to pass under the Verrazano Narrows Bridge. By comparison the maximum height of the Queen Victoria is 179 feet from keel to top of the highest mast.

Handysize Ships
The next designation of cargo ships, called Handysize, carries all sorts of cargoes to and from ports all over the world, and again usually cargoes with higher values than either the Capesize or Panamax ships, including the likes of steel, project cargoes, copper, zinc and other valuable metals. Such ships are designed to maximum dimensions and maximum capacity to allow them to serve the vast majority of the world’s ports.

Within this grouping will be found all the traditional style cruise ships that we were used to until just a decade ago plus some new ships. Some examples of ships in this category, mostly ranging in the 600 and 700-foot overall length brackets, include the fleets of Azamara Cruises, Fred Olsen Cruises, Oceania Cruises, Phoenix Reisen, Regent Seven Seas Cruises, plus the most recent newbuildings of Seabourn and Silversea.

One point about all these fleets is that none of them do repetitive 7-day itineraries, which is the wont of the larger ships, and they offer itineraries worldwide that change according to the season, many of them never repeating an itinerary in a year.
A mixture of traditional and upmarket ships, the more traditional ones do not include many balconies but the newer middle-range ships such as the eight former Renaissance ships (now with Azamara, Oceania and Princess, with one to go to P&O soon as Adonia) offer a more discerning product. The new ships of Seabourn and Silversea, however, together with Hapag-Lloyd Cruises’ Europa, serve the most discerning market of all with not only balconies but the best of on-board facilities.

These are indeed the finest cruise ships in the world, paying attention to every detail of service. They also cost more and attract a different clientele.

Small Ships
As well as the larger ships, there is a wide variety of small ships, ranging from the myriad of new river ships to the daily mail boat from Bergen to the North Cape to ships such as Cruise West’s Spirit of Oceanus, which now completes a globe-spanning world cruise of 335 days every year and a large fleet of expedition ships sailing to the Antarctic, the Amazon to Peru and the Northwest Passage, not to mention Alaska, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands.
But that, as they say, is another story for another day.

New Carnival Ship to be Named CARNIVAL BREEZE

Caribbean, Carnival Cruise Lines, East Coast Cruises, Mediterranean, Mexico, News | Posted by cruisepeople
May 10 2010


Carnival has announced that the Carnival Breeze has been selected as the name for its brand-new ship which will join the fleet in spring 2012.

The 3,690-passenger cruise ship will be constructed by Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri, the current builder of  Carnival Magic (debuting in Europe May 1, 2011).

As the third ship in the Dream-class, passengers can expect all the amenities in Carnival Breeze that they’ve come to have in Carnival Dream. Features include expansive, modern facilities for children and teens, a 23,750-square-foot Cloud 9 Spa, and The Lanai, an outdoor promenade featuring cantilevered whirlpools that extend over the ship’s sides.

Other features will include the popular WaterWorks aqua park with a 300-foot-long corkscrew water slide, and an indoor/outdoor café and live entertainment venue called Ocean Plaza. Of course, Carnival will offer a wide range of accommodation to match  tastes and budgets, including deluxe ocean views with two-bathrooms and some family-friendly accommodations that feature five berths.

Carnival Breeze will be the 24th vessel in Carnival Cruise Lines’ fleet, which operates three- to 15-day voyages to the Bahamas, Caribbean, Mexican Riviera, Alaska, Hawaii, Panama Canal, Canada, New England and Europe.

 

del.icio.us Tags: