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no1talks

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Posts posted by no1talks

  1. 37 minutes ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "For your eyes only" Bond, James Bond

    IMG_3968.jpeg

     

    So, they added a salmon sandwich, took away the chocolate cake, and changed "fruit basket" to "fruit plate."

     

    No dinner entees. BOO!!

     

    It seems those in YC who might want a quiet dinner in their cabin (assuming they have a proper table for meals) will have to make it a pizza night.

     

    Screenshot_20240616_122719_Reddit.thumb.jpg.b2d3de3416366c1cb61bf84d21df5e5f.jpg

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  2. 2 hours ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "Have yet to visit our favorite Loft Cafe."

     

    I'm happy just to see a string group playing in the Atrium a few time during a cruise. On-stage classical music is asking too much these days on mass-market lines.

     

    Even Holland America slashed their classical music availability.

    • Like 1
  3. 1 hour ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "The violinist Paul is mediocre, the good news is this is his last week on board."


    Speaking of violin music, Morpheus, please advise whether or not there is still a smattering of public area string trio/quartet music these days. I suspect live music in MSC ships' thoroughfares will feature less (if any) classical music on the itineraries out of the US. 

  4. 2 hours ago, Georgia_Peaches said:

    "Like liquors in room, in suite dining?  Specialty dining?" 


    One does score more hootch in the top YC suites, but it is just more of the limited selections from the "choose one" options given to the rest of YC. (I have seen the bar set in pictures and videos.) Of course, there is always a chance an ambitious butler would go to bat for you with the head butler and get a bottle swap. It would probably be two "room" bottles in trade for one bottle of a non-premium liquor you might prefer. Being on the cruise for a 20th anniversary may help your case.

    Unlike true luxury cruise lines, MSC limits in-room dining to the room service menu and the butler brings all the food at once, no course-by-course service. As explicit policy, dining room food only shows up at your door if you are confined by illness. Again, your special occasion, a hard-charging butler, and a sympathetic maître d' might get you in-room access to the dining room menu and possibly course-by-course, but I would not bet on it.

    Specialty dining remains either an add-on or something for the Diamonds, regardless of one's suite.


     

    • Like 2
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  5. There are options for observant Catholics who are cruise enthusiasts. The question is: How motivated are those Catholics when the easiest option, that of having a priest always provided by the cruise line, is taken off the table?
     

    • Use the regular cruise lines only for cruises when a priest is still being brought on board.
    • Sail with Catholic travel groups on religious tourism cruises, which have a priest or deacon.
    • Choose 7-day cruises that begin and end in ports where you can attend Mass by arriving a day early or staying a day late.
    • Choose longer cruises with Sunday ports wherein Mass attendance is a viable option. (US military bases may be a way to go, but arraignments in advance are in order.)
    • If there will be an opportunity for Mass in port, but there will also be a good reason it won't work out, see your priest about a dispensation. From the Code of Canon Law: "Without prejudice to the right of diocesan bishops in canon 87, a parish priest, in individual cases, for a just reason and in accordance with the prescriptions of the diocesan bishop (my emphasis), can give a dispensation from the obligation of observing a holy day or day of penance, or commute the obligation into some other pious works (can. 1245)."
    • If, for some good reason, you have still chosen a cruise that doesn't even have one Sunday in a port where you could make a good-faith attempt at Mass attendance, the Code of Canon Law speaks to this as well: "If because of lack of a sacred minister or for other grave cause participation in the celebration of the Eucharist is impossible, it is specially recommended that the faithful take part in the liturgy of the word if it is celebrated in the parish church or in another sacred place according to the prescriptions of the diocesan bishop, or engage in prayer for an appropriate amount of time personally or in a family or, as occasion offers, in groups of families (can. 1248.2)." My personal observation: It should not be overlooked that the use of the phrase, "grave cause," may imply that the cruiser(s) should have actually made an effort to plan for Mass and not just "hand-wave" themselves out of their obligation.

      Individuals will have to decide for themselves how much due diligence they wish to put into remaining an observant Catholic while cruising. Pax vobiscum!
    • Thanks 1
  6. 2 hours ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "I am an old man and have known a great many troubles, but most of them never happened."

    Mark Twain


    On that note...

    "Plato is my friend, but the truth is a better friend."
    - Aristotle 

  7. 3 hours ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "One of the main reasons people are not rich is that they worry too much about things that might never happen."

    Robert Kiyosaki (net worth $100 million) 

    Do you believe in reincarnation?

     

    Yikes!

     

    Robert Kiyosaki of Rich Dad, Poor Dad infamy? I wouldn't accept directions to the nearest KFC, let alone "life lessons" from that guy.

     

    scream-jim-carrey.gif.581b5f736ba9f193f7b47971614e6d1d.gif

     

    • Haha 1
  8. 34 minutes ago, CarolnLarry said:

    "...the real deal breaker for me would be the loss of the butlers and concierge."

     

    These invaluable professionals have been very important to us as well. I am concerned the ever-growing Yacht Club passenger counts will leave butlers stretched particularly thin.

  9. 6 hours ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "We can list now all the things to look out for when booking any cruise ship."


    A very diverse list covering many aspects of a cruise. The question is: What item(s) would be deal breakers with regard to Yacht Club, Morpheus, if altered or eliminated?

    Of course, some listed items are rather unlikely to change. For example, one would not expect MSC to replace the YC's walk-in showers with tubs during a ship's refit. But there are many items that could be changed due to cost savings.

  10. 20 minutes ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    "There is no there there...the proof is in the pudding."

     

    Yes, but if this food expenditure policy actually exists, it would be very useful to know how much money is spent on the pudding from place to place.

    😉

  11. 4 hours ago, morpheusofthesea said:

    That sounds about right.

     

    Mr. Morpheus, your mission, if you choose to accept it, is to utilize your MSC intelligence sources and uncover the food expenditure rankings used throughout their cruise line. 

     

    This message will...

     

    giphy(4).gif.965df4cc5f64d228c7724c9c78e5201a.gif

    • Haha 1
  12. 10 minutes ago, mnocket said:

    The EJ strategy seems to be...  We will become successful if we can win over travel agents.

     

    Perhaps the EJ strategy should be...  We will become successful if we can win over cruisers?

     

    In various interviews and press releases, Explora has been rather clear regarding their desire to capture a new market niche of sophisticated, new-to-cruising families who don't fit the typical mass-market profile.

     

    If one thinks an untapped base that is not yet cruising is out there, getting TAs on one's side would be a smart move.

     

    Personally, I don't think this target exists in America to the extent Explora may suppose. Perhaps it is different among the Europeans to which the Apontes are more accustomed.

     

     

    • Like 2
  13. 24 minutes ago, broberts said:

     

    Other than cost, why not every day? Cruise ships are, after all just large hotels that move.

     

    There is a difference between changing all the sheets when the ship is full of passengers who need attention and changing all the sheets when the passengers are entirely gone.

     

    On cruises with rolling (dis)embarkation, perhaps MSC could do the bedding more often, but choose not to do so.

  14. 53 minutes ago, jcollin said:

    "We had the same servers every night sitting in the same area."

     

    This is a very big deal for us because we like to have longer, old-school cruise dinners.

     

    A cruise line that emphasizes shuffling their passengers from one specialty restaurant to another, even if included in the fare, is not a cruise line for us.

     

    I'm glad MSC has two ways to make this easy: Aurea and Yacht Club.

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