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Thank you for sharing: I love the Ventura and always like to read a report š
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I'm looking forward to your opinions as we are going on our first Princess soon (albeit on a different ship).
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I think everytime I've seen a George Michael or Robbie Williams on a cruise I've never lasted more than 5 minutes. People seem to really over-perform them, and George Michael music especially is destroyed by the characature style. I think in general I mostly prefer people just singing songs as themselves, rather than the whole tribute style.
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Oh, different one - same star. Yzzy was very good and personable too. We had Ariana Grande on Ventura last and she was brilliant and great with the kids and did a brilliant One Last Time performance, quite emotional actually.
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We saw Paloma (well, Yzzy as Paloma) on the Ventura a few yeara ago and thought she was incredible. I wish they would do a few more modern tributes, just to add a bit of variety. I agree, there seemed to be no variety when we were on Britannia: it was all older, despite it being a very multi-generational vibe on the ship. They need a good mix to get the party going so to speak. Having said that, the first time we went on Ventura 10+ years ago it was very "old" music, but the last few times I have found it much more diverse in music years and genre.
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It was pretty bad the whole cruise to be honest. Even the tributes were uninspiring (Rod Stewart or someone like that), and the newest lively music they played was awful 70s disco. No-one really danced and the bars were pretty quiet: there was a great woman singing ballads, but there's only so much romance/heartbreak I can cope with š There was one formal night when it was a bit more lively, but it was like a ghost town by 10pm most nights. It's funny because on the Ventura and Iona we've always been quite lucky with them having some diversity in their entertainment and music choices, so maybe we just had a bad lull on Britannia: it was a covid-cruise so maybe they didn't want everyone bopping and breathing germs all over each other š
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Picture exchange cards which are sometimes used by those with communication difficulties, and sometimes for those with difficulties with reading or learning difficulties. In the instance I saw them used it was just icons for family members, and open and shut doors, and a image of a key.
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As a Brit, I find the whole door decorating thing mind-blowing š On P&O (which is mainly British passengers) I have seen the odd āHappy Birthdayā banner, and once saw a PECs sign on the door, but thatās about it. When we cruised out of NYC with NCL I felt like I was in a modern art gallery walking down the corridor to our cabin with some of the elaborate designs and decorations.
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I like new music (rap, EDM, a bit of a part-time Swiftie etc) but when we last went on the Britannia it was Elvis and Doris Day š It wasnāt even decent old āretroā - just old. I think my exact phrase was āeven my Nan would have thought the music was old fashioned, and sheād be 120 if she was alive nowā. Maybe they took my feedback too far š
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I agree with you: we had a great trip on the Ventura last year and are going again this year. My son chose it above any other ship š
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Kids club is great: itās my sonās favourite š He prefers it to the Iona and Britannia - in fact itās his favourite ship. Heās been on from being 2 and now 7. There is an arcade, which I canāt remember being there when I first went on it 10+ years ago. Itās quite reasonably priced as arcades go and has a good selection of games. The entertainment is relatively family-friendly too, and the indoor pool is usually open and useable a bit later in to the evening (which can be handy if you have children if there isnāt anything on in the evening that you want to do: there is also a bar in there and itās near the buffet so you can have a drink and some food while the children swim (depending on their ages and abilities etc) š
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I donāt really think itās all that much different: we booked last May for a June cruise and it was a bargain. If I book now for the same week itās about Ā£300 more on the mock booking Iāve done, but per person thatās Ā£100 each so relatively low for a week. I have noticed land-based holidays have gone up a lot. Our last one for the same time of year, booked around the same time, at the same hotel, is now coming up at Ā£5,500 for bed and breakfast with coach transfers - it was Ā£3000 two years ago for half board and private transfers.
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You might not need to, and thatās great, but some people do need modificationās making due to the nature and impact of their allergens (especially if they are multiple and also co-exist with other food or dietary restrictions). Itās also why I said some allergies are easier to avoid than others, and therefore the need to advance notify depends on the specific allergy, or type of allergy, in question. For our dairy allergy it requires more effort as they often put butter on the veggies/potatoes, so we do ask they provide some without butter as itās an easy thing to amend if they know in advance as it isnāt easy to do on the night. Plus itās an ige allergy and therefore we couldnāt risk just eating around food containing dairy. However, he also has a non-ige allergy to beef, and therefore itās really easy to just take the beef off a plate, or order a non-beef product. Not everyone with an allergy needs to notify them if they can generally work around their allergies, but some people do need to pre-order and modify menus to be able to eat anything at all. Especially when on a ship, at sea, where medical help isnāt as readily available.
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By advising them before you go they ensure that they have the resources to accommodate any specific requirements/replacements. Also they ensure that you can discuss your needs with someone who does know the ingredients etc. Itās different for land based restaurants: they tend to be smaller venues, not serving several thousand customers on one night in a closed-environment. So we go to restaurants which have generally the same menu every day, with a full book indicating all the allergens and which items can be modified etc. On a cruise ship they make a few hundred dishes, prepped in advance, and often the specific substitutions/alterations need advance notice as they canāt just quickly whip up a dish without risk of cross contamination etc. But I appreciate it varies depending on the severity and type of allergen: we have varying allergen requirements, and for one itās very easy to avoid/substitute, for the other itās very difficult and therefore we need to advise everyone and closely asses options.
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Iona: change promenade deck booking or not?
Cloudyrain replied to SwedishRyeBread's topic in P&O Cruises ( UK )
We were on deck 9 directly above a hot tub and to be honest the noise didnāt bother us at all, and the reviews of this cabin donāt seem to reference it. It looks like the person who I responded to (who is not the OP of the thread) has booked Select Fare, but then chosen (possibly inadvertently) the āLet P&O chooseā option - or itās one of the quirks where they allow a Select booking but not room selection unless you āupgradeā (which happened to me last time I booked direct - hence I use a TA now). The person I am responding to has spoken to P&O and they have said they canāt change the cabin - they can only cancel it.