Your interpretation of supplement is flawed. That has always been one of my pet peeves when people discuss this. OP specifically stated 150% supplement. That intimates a fare plus an additional 150%. A supplement is an amount in addition to the originally set price, so his assessment of a 150% supplement is correct. The charge is 250% of the original fare. If the charges were 200% of the fare it would be a 100% supplement.
Yes. When I did this in Miami we were told that if we wanted to do any thing ashore while in port we had to leave with all other passengers. If we chose to stay aboard we did not have the option to go ashore later. Of course this was 9 years ago and things may well have changed during this time. My bad if it has.
From my understanding once the ship has been zeroed out on arrival there are no departures allowed. Why not just drop off your luggage and then go for lunch? Come back and check in later when you are done.
I am well aware of the previously included gratuities and the option to increase my fare by going refundable. I was just commenting on the fact that the reason they removed it was a way to increase their bottom line.
Deck 11 is quite long. Was this forward, midship, aft, port, starboard? It would be nice to know which cabin you were. I have one booked on 11 coming up.
As of some time last year they made their non-refundable just that, non-refundable. Had you just changed the sail date/ship (keeping your original booking number) instead of canceling you most likely would only have had a $100pp fee to do so.
When I look a the Solstice deck plan it does not show an upper. It only shows as a connecting room to 7200. 7192 and 7196 show an upper.
Yes, the room steward will set up and take down daily.
Yes you can, the due date is by midnight EST. But why not pay today as most transactions will go into pending and not be added to your account for a day or two. Should you run into any hiccups in the payment process tomorrow you could end up with a cancelled cruise.
Each card only transmits one code to the lock. Each lock has it's own code plus the master code used by the room attendant. Your 'key' can only operate one door.