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cwn

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  1. Interesting about eating times….on April 5-16 sailing Hudsons was open for dinner 5-9pm and Commodore open 5:30-9:30. For lunch Surfside grill was open 11:30-5pm, the cafe 11:30-2pm, Local Bar and grill 11am-10pm, Indulge varied usually for about 2 hours between 11 and 3 depending on port time or sea day. The only time we found a crowd at the main restaurants was just as they opened. After about 30 mins or so you could just about walk in. I didn’t make the speciality reservations until we got on and had no trouble getting times we like just had to be flexible on the days. Don’t understand why the times would change so.

     

    Add us to those who really liked the Prima. We checked out the Observation Lounge, loved that with all the nooks and small food station, and all the eating places and bars. We would like to take our young adult grandkids on a week long cruise. Actually we enjoyed the Atrium for people watching.  

    • Like 2
  2. 4 minutes ago, RocketMan275 said:

    On our last cruise, we purchased two additional specialty dinners.  We believe that was a mistake since we found the haven a better choice.

    We booked another 2 week cruise and did not book any extra specialities than we the 3 we got. Felt the same way. I am not much of meat eater so they fixed a lunch shrimp dish for me several times for dinner with 24 hours notice. DH had the lamb minus the ham wrapping and an outside half portion of the prime rib which was wonderful! The quality of the haven food was very good.

    • Like 1
  3. Spent 17 days in Prima Haven 3/29-4/17, 2024. We only had 5 speciality dinners and ate in the Haven for all three meals the rest of the time. These are some of our favorites… 4 lunch items( banana desert, chefs salad, ruben sandwich and lobster bisque) and dinners items (Just the lobster from surf and turf, lobster deviled eggs…we just mixed the plates up IMG_3081.thumb.jpeg.98b6bd772685172f6e81eb42f184ace0.jpegIMG_2475.thumb.jpeg.01a123c40eb0db076f2d2ed3e97ec6f8.jpegIMG_2474.thumb.jpeg.be1ae3e32000aac921f7b2dc0fa7b6ac.jpegIMG_2473.thumb.jpeg.910a5fa80275268018b0690f627a56e3.jpegIMG_3150.thumb.jpeg.fe8bab46ea91caa6381b0cf453b6fe55.jpegIMG_2699.thumb.jpeg.6181161a7e82e7026732619e28a384ba.jpeg

    more sea food mixes at lunch ate serval times and a tuna dish for dinner.It was all very good and served fast and at the right temp.

    IMG_2698.thumb.jpeg.7e39c14bf4ba3b22d948074592dd8a54.jpegIMG_3080.thumb.jpeg.5c9e6e201e652f15dea2719dbbbcc72a.jpeg

     

    • Like 4
  4. 1 hour ago, rlpboy said:

    Hi All!

     

    I have used this board for years but have never contributed.  Now I really need some advice!  My family is currently on the NCL Epic on a transatlantic cruise that originated in Orlando and is ending in Rome.  Although we have done 7 or 8 NCL cruises over the years (plus more on all of the other major lines) this is our first cruise since covid.

     

    This cruise has simply been terrible.  It is so shockingly different from any of the other cruises we have done that I find myself scratching my head trying to figure it all out.  First and foremost, the food is simply gross.  Much of it borders on inedible.  Every meal on this ship we have taken a bite of something that we either had to spit out into our napkin or simply choked the bite down and sent the dish back.  The garden cafe (the buffet) has had the same menu for each of the twelve days we have been on the ship.  I thank God for the pizza because that has been the one consistently ok thing to eat.  The specialty dining has been fine but all of the other meal options have been adequate at absolute best.  In my family's opinion, the meat has significantly declined in quality with steak that is full of tendons and very rubbery chicken.  I would like to add that this low quality meat has been served in all of their restaurants.

     

    The other thing that has really surprised us is how rude the staff is!  Once again, something that I never thought that I would write.  The crew on cruise ships has always been shockingly polite.  In fact, I have always found that they are almost too polite as I have seen guests treat staff members poorly.  I feel like the staff is trying to get revenge on this particular trip!  The staff is shockingly rude to a point that some members are looking at guests with disdain.  For example, I went to the front desk to ask a question about the food and I simply asked the girl working "has the quality of the food gone down a bit since covid".  The only reason I asked was because we were trying to figure out if we wanted to purchase more of the "cruise next" vouchers and if the food was like this on all of the cruises we really aren't interested.  The young lady working looked so irritated and rudely replied, "ask them at the restaurants".  This and several other issues have actually had me questioning whether I should leave the "service charge" or contest it.  I have never not left the full amount.  In fact, I have always left additional money for particular employees that I felt went above and beyond. 

     

    All in all, the food sucks.  This is the dirtiest ship we've ever been on.  The gentleman that cleans our room has left dirty dishes in our room more times than I can count.  The staff is rude.  Oh, and 3 times I've been told someone will call me back from the front desk and no one ever has.  There is so much more I could add, but in the interest of brevity, I will leave it at that. Is this what cruising post covid is like?  

     

    Thank you all for any advice you can offer. 

    Don’t waste your time on the front desk or complaining on CC. Go to the GM on the ship with your concerns

    • Like 3
  5. After this trial in the Haven, I love the private elevator, the halls, lounge areas, bar, dinning room sun decks and pool that are all self contained in the Haven area. We have no interest in having to wonder all over a large ship. We also like the Prima class features. It is definitely nice to sail on a Brand new ship with a reasonable bathroom also. There has not been a photographer in the Haven period not when we got on. Or at the ports at the Haven gangway. WE have been able to settle our bar bill when we leave the bar or restaurant so it have not been an issue. If this is not the case in other Havens,we will pass except the new ships.

  6. As we are getting close to the end of our btob sailing on the Prima in the Haven Galveston to Miami I will add my feeling about the Haven and the Prima. In a word GREAT. The first 7 days RT Galveston was filled with children and large three generational family groups as was excepted since this was Easter Holiday. If you don’t want kids (many of them) don’t cruise over school holidays or in the summer period. You will have kids and lots of them on cruises of 7 days or less, not so many on longer cruises but still enough to be seen and heard. This second part Galveston to Miami is 11 days and there are almost no children, a much different vie. 

     

    First off we have been cruising since the early1980’s and have spent over 700 days on various ships trying lots of itineraries around the world. We always try to do cruises of at least 2 weeks to really relax and enjoy the vacation, then we add a week or two of land vacations to that to make a month …as that is the vacation time we had working and with kids in school.. When our chrildern were home we cruised on princess, HAL and X. When NCL came to Galveston in the 90’s we tried them for a few cruises. It is so easy to hop an boat in Galveston for us. After the Grands came along (7 in 6 years) we did Carnival and RCCL out of Galveston with them because it was easy and they loved it. We also did longe cruises on various lines. But since 2009 we have cruised on SS, Seabourn and the Cunard Queens in the Grill. In 2011 we did a Grand Voyage on the Regent Mariner around SA for 63 days and fell in love with the informal life style, crew and small Regent ships. It was a plus that there was fixed price and no surprises at the end of the Regent cruise. Since retirement we have done 2 world cruises putting together segments of Princess, Seabourn and The Queens World Cruises to get around the would in 4-5 months using the ships a rest stops and transportation between continents and we did a true WC on the Regent Navigator in 2018…fabulous. We like cabins with a balcony and about 300sq feet. We generally do not like big ships, unless it is a ship within a ship concept. The Prima is the largest ship we have been on, but the entry level Haven suite is perfect for us..

     

    We are blown away with the service we are receiving in the Haven. The food is great, right temperture and the service is fast. The Haven lounge, bar and the sun deck/pool are pleasant and not crowded (nor empty). I like the walk in feature of the Haven pool. It is shoulder deep for the average person. Our Butler and room steward are very detail oriented and are remembering the little things we like without asking. For a mass market cruise line we are impressed.

     

    Our days of long flights overseas are over but i think we have found a home on the Prima class ships in the Haven. Hope NCL will continue with US coastal ports…would like to do the Galveston to Miami to NY run next spring or one though the Canal. The cruise is very fairly priced. We didn’t get the drink package as at 2 drinks at the most a night it was not worth it. We did Add the unlimited internet for two devices for $300 for t and did keep the two specially meals per person per cruise. It is costing about half what a similar cruise we did in 2023 on the Regent Splendor, many of the same ports including the service charge and the extra tips due in the Haven…the service is worth it though.

     

    The French press coffee in the Haven is great as is the coffee maker coffee in the room.  We had no problem getting our two dinner reservation after we boarded. We didn’t buy any extra internet for the first 7 days but did do the unlimited for two devices for the last 11 days…more sea days. All in all for our getaways now the Haven suits us fine. We only have to give them the key card when we are ready to leave the venue…not for every pour which is not a big deal…just like eating out at home. I have not seen a photographer except at a distance and no body has tried to get us to buy something. We are not night people but what I have seen of the entertainment….there is plenty, if one place is too crowded go somewhere else. 

     

    Cruising is what you make it make it fun….you can always find something to complain about if you look hard enough. 

     

     

    • Like 7
  7. On 3/21/2024 at 6:29 PM, PandaBear62 said:

    Day 6 Cozumel

    Hurrah! A good nights sleep. I was up and about by 9 and finally made it to the Haven breakfast. I had the country bread with poached egg. It was all right….it had a kind of brown gravy that didn’t do much for me. But I sure love that French press coffee. We went up to the pool area. I thought about going into Cozumel  but there were apparently about 7 ships in port and I changed my mind. We stayed at the pool until about 1 and then headed to lunch at the Indulge Food Hall, which I had been wanting to try. It didn’t open until 1 today, which I assume they were allowing for people to return from Cozumel. I had a noodle dish and tomato soup, which was quite good. The food was delivered quite fast. My sister ate here the night we went to Los Lobos and she said the menu is different for lunch and dinner, which is nice. 

     

    We ended up back in the room as I had some work to do and honestly, the longer the cruise goes, I seem to be accumulating fatigue. 

     

    We went out to the lounge, played cards before dinner and then went into dinner. I’ve been surprised how uncrowded the Haven dining room is…..on the Escape it seemed crowded all the time. 

     

    After dinner we ventured out for some music. There was a band playing “one  hit wonders”. But either they didn’t know what “one hit wonders” are or they changed the show, because here are some of the songs played:

    Living on a Prayer.

    Ring of Fire

    Hallelujah 

    Old Time Rock and Roll

    Not really “one hit wonders” in my book, lol!

    We played cards while listening and actually stayed out the latest we have the entire cruise. But eventually we made it back to the room. Reading this, I am realizing what a boring day we had!!!

    Enjoyed your report. Hope you found your mother doing well.

     

    One more question please. I am trying to plan a tour we have done before for April 7, 1 till 6. Is the ship on Cozumel time or an hour different? I am assuming all aboard was the usual 30 mins ahead. Our port time is 11 to 7.

  8. Loving your report. Had to laugh at your comment about the long ride to get to the port gates. Did you take a tour. We did a city highlights it made several good stops and drove sone interesting sites. The last drive by spot was the old British Colonial Hotel, Gala Face on the water. I collect stops for the night or at least a meal at those hotels like others collect magnets. Anyway the driver let us off and we went in for lunch. Had a delightful tour and history lesson from the hotel manager and he got us a taxi to the port. and then the fun began. We were told there was shuttle bus running to the ship and back, but it wasn’t. At least to the Navigator,..there was another ship in port that had service. After waiting, watching other leave for their ship and getting a little worried, someone at the gate called someone else and a bus showed up for us. Adventures in traveling, but enjoyed the day. Hope you did too.

    • Like 3
  9. Yes. once inside of the terminal building there is a glass door separating the area for disembarking passengers and the embarking passengers.
    But the entrance doors were still locked when we arrived.around 9:30 and terminal staff kept us out side. Once we were let inside it was still a little wait to start the actual check in. I don’t think you will be let in the terminal door as early as before 5am…..if you go straight to the dock.
    YMMV

     

    1 hour ago, BirdTravels said:

    We have been sitting, waiting in the Miami terminal many times while the prior cruise is still disembarking (In photo, lines of people coming off the ship and heading to immigration on the other side of the glass partition). 

    image.png.c7b6b645106a7b53ee89a2e7bab0182c.png

     

    1 hour ago, hallux said:

    My experience, twice, differs from this explanation.  As pictured by @BirdTravels there's a glass wall separating the debarking passengers from the post check-in waiting area.  Twice now I've been allowed inside the terminal while the previous cruise was still parading off the ship.

     

  10. When we were in Miami, you could not enter the port terminal building until after the disembarking passengers had left. That was some before 10. They had the door locked for a few minutes after we arrived at about 9:30…we sat on a cement bench waiting. They opened the main doors before check in started. We then waited in the entrance hall until they  started letting people go though the actual check in process. Bottom line is you need a place to wait from arrival ant 4am until probably 9:30 because the port terminal will not be open to boarding passenagers.

     

    Would suggest two things…1. you get something to eat at the airport and wait there for a while before taking a taxi to the port. The airport was about 45 minutes away as I remember.

     

    Or 2. Taxi to a nice hotel near the port area…there are several. Wait in their lobby, have nice breakfast then taxi to the port.

  11. We always have filled out the mid cruise survey and mentioned the most helpful staff. Any problems have usually been addressed by then.  

     

    The end of cruise survey was pencil and paper pre covid, can’t remember when it changed, but we also have problem getting the post do on line before we leave. Last two times when it didn’t work I just wrote a letter to the GM to praise the staff that had treated us so well. Put it in an envelope addressed to the GM and left  it at the desk. Think that works since we heard from our waiter about our compliment on the next cruise. Agree, this is a bad way to get information. It leaves a bit of a bad taste after such a nice time.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 2
  12. 9 hours ago, papaflamingo said:

    Since Regent is owned by NCLH then it's a pretty good bet that they will be using the same tour companies as Norwegian Cruise Lines.  In many ports it's very easy to find the exact tour on websites like TripAdvisor, etc.  Very often the answers you seek as well as videos and pictures are available.  The problem comes with ports rarely visited.  Now all they can do is go with the descriptions that the company provides to Regent.  I love snorkeling too.  I grew up near the beach in San Diego and "lived" in the ocean as a youth.  But sadly I'm at the age when I am finding (not gracefully) my limits.  My days of boosting my self on to a swim step are over (ugly story how I found that out, but rolling a dead whale onto a boat comes to mind).  So now I have to seriously look at the descriptions.  I do NOT expect the Destination Teams to really be able to give me too much more than I can get on line.  They don't go on these tours. And there are 700 people on a Regent ship, all with differing needs.  Imagine trying to get very specific info on an excursion that they've never gone on so that one can tell if their limitations will be exceeded.  Sadly at our age and health we simply have to do the best we can and, in my opinion only, be the only one's responsible for our decisions.  If I have a concern about the difficulty of an excursion, I look at other options or decide I will go and if I can't do it I'll sit on the bus and watch. But I won't blame anyone other than myself for that decision.  Again, only my opinion. 

    A voice of reason!!!! I total agree with you about finding out about tours. I usually am able to make a good choices for me, but in the last few years…especially on our WC in ‘18, I sat on the bus some because even though it seem doable on paper/picture/talk it wasn’t, but I was glad to see and do what I could of the tour! And if I got over my head I made arrangements needed for me and the tour continued for the rest. No one else’s fault.

     

    I can relate to the dead whale….2007 we wanted to go to Antarctica, picked a 100 passenger expedition ship, HD was very fit. Did two zodiac landings or zodiac cruises a day. Fabulous trip!! I knew I could stay on the ship, but wanted to do as much as I could. At the time I was using just a cane or walking sticks. The first landing was going fine, Deception Island, until we had to get back into the zodiac in about a foot of water😬…..well I leaned over the zodiac edge and the guide just flipped me over by my legs and I went siding in to the craft😂 looked like a whale rolling in!!  HD has pictures…we all laughed and the guide said it wasn’t his first time…..and I did many more landings the next few days the same way…one on the actual continent and south of the Circle….priceless. I couldn’t do the hikes, but I could reach the shore and sit on a rock, there was so much beauty all around. Only you know what you can do safely, but do venture out as much as you can, even if you sit on the bus at times…just take a good book! And enjoy traveling!   

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  13. Just now, wcsdkqh said:

    Not sure why anyone would think the on board staff of 3 or 4 would be able to answer these sorts of very specific questions on each excursion when there are  literally hundreds of ports with many hundreds of excursions. I suspect more times than not all they have are the same descriptions that are available to everyone. IMHO.

    Many times they have either pictures or have called or emailed about my concerns such as what kind of steps are used to get in and out of the snorkel boat or on beach landing. 

     

    If you haven’t asked you don’t know what the ships DD staff can find out. I have had special help from the ship’s DD staff a number of times.   

  14. 1 hour ago, GMIAC said:

     

     

    I'm not afraid to do touring and trains on my own, but I do want to see Osaka Castle, so I might just have to suck it up and stick to the tour that's offered. 

    We travel on our own without a guide usually, just using trains, taxis arranged from hotel, port or street corner even then on Regent…they just don’t always have a tour to what we want to eat.

     

    The trains in Japan are really easy to navigate by yourself. But we have also used local guides in Japan and other places when on a cruise. Osaka castle is very nice but is new, built to look old. Himeji is a wonderful old small town, the castle is as original as it can be for its age and within sight and walking distance of the train station..… so you can’t get lost. When we went we were on at tight schedule Ship to ship about 3-4 hours. We were at the castle when it opened (ship was docked in Osaka). On the way back I was hungry so I bought an egg salad sandwich at the Himeji train station to my husband’s horror!  Best sandwich I have ever eaten so ftasty and fresh, good bread!!! And I lived to tell about it! If you want to do something different than the ship’s Osaka tour, look on line for Tours by Locals or the Japanese version. These groups are a great way to see the special things and safely. We have used them in Japan and Korea.

    Have fun. Japan is a great country to visit so much to see and so different for us!!!

    • Like 1
  15. Osaka was destroyed basically and has been rebuilt. Either do a second tour to Kyoto and see something different, there is so much to see… we spent 5 days and didn’t see all we wanted to. If they offer a trip to Himeji castle in Himeji, do it. It is a fabulous wooden castle. It is an easy short rain ride a little south and is wonderfully restored. It is easy to take the trains in Japan and you could do this on your own in part of a day. All signage is in Japanese and English. It is very easy to buy tickets at the station you can see schedules on line and the rains run on time!

    • Like 1
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  16. 1 hour ago, edgee said:

    Well, we join Splendor in less than 2 weeks for the TA. We will see first hand if toilets are cranky 😆. On a more serious note, we have spent 27 nights on Oceania's new Vista in the last 4 months. Never again! "Thin wall" noise between cabin issue is a big problem. Concern that Grandeur suffers from reported same issue and was built in same ship yard, raises concern that will keep me away from her.

    The Splendor was very comfortable ship (even if the toilet was a bit slow sometimes😁). It was the larger passenger load that was noticeable to us, the effect that had on the special small ship feeling and the ship was a bit shinny for our taste. We like the Mariner and the Navigator better  We don’t miss the speciality restaurants. We just special order things we like  from Compass Rose. Have a good cruise!

    • Like 3
  17. Great report, love the pictures.  Sounds like a fun tour. We went for a dolphin encounter two years ago. That was fun also. Was the glass bottom boat/sub something you could do alone with just a taxi or private car and driver.

     

    We want to go to Hassuki, love that kind of eatery. I couldn’t get reservations for any time/day on either the 3/29 cruise or the next one. Will try when we board… we should be at the port early.


    Sorry you are having a hard time sleeping, we have the opposite problem when the ship is moving. Hope you sleep better tonight.

     

    Thanks for sharing

  18. 3 hours ago, edgee said:

    Based on the noisy cabin/" thin walls" issue I am hearing about on Grandeur, I may limit myself to just Explorer and Splendor.

    Well when we were on the Splendor our toilet almost daily  at least one time didn’t flush. Most of the time it flushed in a little while in its own but once or twice we had a surprise……. Guess this means the Splendor is a no go too!


    Since the Navigator and the Mariner are old, the Navigator and the Voyager vibrate at some speeds, Grandeur has noisy rooms, the toilets on the Splendor and Mariner have problems…..so all that leaves is the Explorer…. Surely someone can find some problem with her too…. Chair hogs, vibrations, noise, cranky  toilers….anything?🤣

     

     

     

    Sorry, not sure there that came from

    9 hours ago, UUNetBill said:
  19. 8 hours ago, UUNetBill said:

    Yep.  A quick search of our TA's site and a few other travel sites tell me there are a lot of luggage restrictions that seem to get tighter the deeper into the country you travel.  I'm thinking if you're doing the safari pre-cruise you'd almost need to ship a bag or two via Luggage Free or something that would kind of offset any cost savings.  We're already booked for Europe next summer so a trip to Africa would probably be a '26 trip - unless we really get the safari jones and move things around a little.  🙂

     

    We just came back from a South America/Antarctica cruise last week, and we did the five-day extension to Iguazu Falls on both the Argentinian and Brazilian sides, and it definitely was nice just leaving our bags in our hotel rooms in Buenos Aires while we took our smaller bags on the flight to Iguazu.  There's a lot to be said for that convenience - and the accommodations in Brazil were top-notch, too.

     

    I think there are compelling reasons to book either way (via Regent or independently) so we'll need to start looking into the options.

     

    Again, thanks for all the input!

    Luggage can be a problem traveling in SAfrica. Pre Covid LF would not ship into/of out of SAfrica. This may have changed since we were there in 2018. They will drink wrap it at the airport or in some hotels for you. Helps prevent tampering (petty airport theft is a problem there), Took all our cruise luggage and arranged with the J’burg Hotel to store it, wrapped it before we left the airport, easy to do and felt better with the extra effort. You will most likely fly in/out of J’burg for a safari camp in the north/east. Then fly or be driven to camps in Kruger area, but you can make storage arrangements between arrival and transfer….or drive yourself…fabulous part of the country.
     

    This far out you have time to research lodges/camps in your choice area…1.check out Regent package camps as if you were putting the trip to it by yourself…know the good ones will make private transfers to the camp from airport as easy as possible. We had done other Regent add ins and they were nice, but doing it yourself gives so many more options.

    2.check size of the group for safari vehicles and type or vehicle and a must for us ability to go off road to get close as possible  plus extra chances to explore outside of planned am/pm drives

    3. Check if there is land for animals to roam freely in and out of lodge property especially into Kruger NP. Or like area. This will make less zoo/theme park like  

    4. Most important to us the first time we went was a place that offered the chance to see the big five roaming freely… not lions or Leopards fenced off somewhere. We thought it would be a one time experience, but as so many have done before us we figured out how to do it again and again. 

    SAfrica is a beautiful country, outside of the big cities the people are friendly and love to tell you about their area and want to learn about you. The roads and rent cars are very good with little traffic and all signs are in English, everyone speaks English and maybe another language plus. Whatever Safari plan you pick don’t skimp on the time in country, you will fall in love with it. Don’t be afraid to go out on your own if you want.

    • Like 1
  20. 59 minutes ago, Pcardad said:

    Part of said benefit is prefered cabin location on the ship.

    Isn’t there still a Wi-Fi related benefit  for cruisers with less SSS days? Of course it doesn’t matter at this point but isn’t there dinning and tour benefits for early booking at that level? At least the website has caught up with the reality of the current situation. 

  21. Agree with all above posts! Arrange it yourself direct with provider or a TA, not with Regent given the problems with their providers right now and you will also spend much more for less.
     

    Be sure and go with a group that provides off road drives with 6-8 people (best) and go to the greater Kruger area or do a self drive and stay in Kruger Nat Park. This area is more diverse than the Eastern Cape, We have been to both areas.
     

    We have done self drives twice in Kruger NP. We flew to J’burg rented a SUV and drove to the park. The accommodations are good and located in various places in the park. Fabulous trip! Safe easy trip in spite of what you might hear  We did Addo Elephant NP this way also as we drove from Kruger to Cape Town though the Eastern Cape.  
     

    We have also stayed at a game lodges with drives twice a day. If you really want to go whole hog go to the Serengeti and do a private Safari. We did this and then caught a cruise. It was a wonderful week long Safari….beautiful animals and country side, really a life changing experience!.
    I will try to find the link to our blog.

     

    Safaris are expensive, do some reading about the various options, decide what you want to see and how you want to see it….fancy lodge or closer to nature but comfortable, large area to explore large variety of animals or happy with smaller camp. Trucks with built up bench seats for a large group or small and personal in a large jeep. We lean toward more nature/less fancy, we can get all the high end stuff on the ship or at a resort. The Safari is for the animal experience and a comfortable lodging not so much the fine resort m, at least for us. We have done 5 - 3 to 7 day and 2 - 1 day safaris. I think the min time is two full days/ three nights, but more is better!
     

    At lodges there are usually a game dive in the AM and PM. The rest of the time is at the lodge relaxing. On a self drive in the NP you can stay out all day. There are protected rest spots you can picnic and relax watch the annimals and visit with the SAfricans who will ask all kinds of questions about how you found this place !!!

    3 hours ago, UUNetBill said:

    As stated in the title, I'm trying to gather information on people's experiences with pre- or post-cruise safaris in South Africa.  We're in the early stages of planning a cruise somewhere down there and I'm looking at some of the posted options for safari packages, and I'm seeing a LOT of different choices.  I've seen a few shorter one-stop safaris at the $3,000/pp range and weeklong multiple-reserve choices that knock close to $8,000 or so per person.

     

    For those who have done any of these, what are the main things to look for in a safari program?  Specifically wondering about ease of access, accommodations, availability of animal viewing, service, etc.

     

    Some of the options I've seen are listed below - has anyone been on any of these who might care to enlighten me?  Pros, cons, things to look for, any 'must-dos', etc?  Thanks in advance!!

     

    Bill

    ===============================================================

    PRE - KRUGER AND SABI SABI BUSH LODGE - 5-day and 2 nights at lodge, $4-4,600/pp
    PRE - KRUGER COMBO SAFARI - 7-day, 2 locations, $7,700/pp
    PRE - BOTSWANA AND MASHATU LODGE - 6-day, lots of travel, ~$8,000/pp
    PRE - EASTERN CAPE DOUBLE SAFARI: GORAH & LONG LEE - 6-day, 2 locations, $5-6,000/pp

     

    • Like 1
  22. 33 minutes ago, PandaBear62 said:


    We didnt need to wait long. For Donna Summer, doors open 30 minutes before. We were told to arrive 35 minutes ahead of time and there was a dedicated entrance on deck 6 on the left when facing the theatre. 
     

    we did the comedy show and arrived about 35-40 minutes before  with doors opening 30 minutes ahead. The one place with issues is Sid Norman’s. We arrived 40 minutes ahead and it was totally full. 

    Thanks for taking the time to answer about the show info. With a dedicated entrance I might try for the Donna Summer show, probably not DHs cup of tea, but I can go alone with my walker. However he does like comedy shows so we may try for that….are they different each time.
     

    We don’t usually do any tours anymore, maybe just walk ashore and we are not night owls. We would just as soon read in the room ir enjoy the balcony. Our age has caught up with us so now we mostly just enjoy what the ship has to offer…..some of the docks are really hard for us to get to the taxi stand or even the shop/food area at the end of the pier. You are only three years older than our oldest….just a spring chicken😀

     

    That is a beautiful picture of the Costa Mays coast….sounds like a wonder cruise day! 
     

    Thanks for sharing….this time two weeks from now we will be on the ship!!!

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