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alithecat

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Posts posted by alithecat

  1. It depends on the restaurant manager. Some strictly enforce the dress code and will turn you away, some seat you and put a spare jacket on the back of your chair, some don't question how anyone dresses. I wouldn't chance it. Take a blazer to add to your slacks and shirt.

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  2. Try emailing the hotel. If I recall when we stayed there before our Galapagos trip several years ago they arranged for a limo. to pick us up, and added the cost to our hotel bill. 

  3. The boutiques on the expedition ships don't have much. Not like the ones on the classic ships. No, there are no duty free shops onboard but I think the boutique is supposed to be tax free because it is not open when the ship is in port.
    I agree the suggestion of buying special wines.
    Have you booked a dinner in La Dame?

    If you don't get free laundry, you can use the OBC for the laundry service.

    You can also use your OBC to book a private car to the airport at the end of the cruise, if you are not D2D.

    Please note that the suggestion of using OBC for the crew fund is wrong. That doesn't work.

  4. You never need to reserve a shuttle bus. Just show up and wait for the next one.
    Silversea doesn't have shuttles in every port. Sometimes the local regulations/unions don't allow it, as it reduces taxi revenue. I have never been to Valencia so can't answer your question about that.

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  5. Expedition cruises do not have any formal nights. There will be a few informal nights, where a jacket but no tie is required for men, and the rest will be casual. We found that Silversea does not enforce the jacket rule on expedition ships, so it's up to you whether or not you want to bring a jacket/blazer. Your wife does not need evening dresses. For the informal nights, either a regular dress, or black pants with a nice dressy top is fine.

  6. Lunch starts at noon in all restaurants. It closes at 1:30pm in the main dining room, Atlantide. Later in the others. The Grill stays open the longest, i think until around 3 or 3:30pm. No reservations are required anywhere at lunch.
    Dinner starts at 7pm everywhere except Silver Note, which starts at 8pm. Dinner closes at 9:30pm in most of the restaurants. Later in Silver Note.

    Go to the reception area when you board to ask about SALT lab sign-ups. They will have the menus and times. It is a cooking class with stations for each participant. You can eat what you have prepared.
    Not sure how you sign up for SALT Chefs Table. Haven't done it.
    There is no class system on Silversea. Boarding usually starts at 2pm for everyone, sometimes earlier. The earlier you go to reception the better your chances are to sign-up.
    Also, the restaurant manager is usually at a desk in the reception area. You can line up to talk to him/her about getting any dinner reservations you could not book online. I know you can also ask your butler, but butlers are very busy on embarkation day and won't get to this until long after you could handle it yourself on boarding.
    Can't answer the Nova questions. Haven't been on it.
    Hope this helps.

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  7. Yes you can ask for a deviation to fly a few days earlier. Yes there will be a deviation fee. It used to be $150pp but it varies depending on the deals that Silversea has with the airlines.

    You can also ask for D2D without flights. You get back a credit that I think varies by cruise. I checked back and got a credit for $1100pp on my most recent cruise and $1500pp on the cruise before. Plus, if you paid for business class you also get that back.

    Keep in mind that when you don't take their flights, you lose the transfer from airport to ship or hotel (if a pre-cruise hotel is included). If you book your pre-cruise hotel through Silversea for the extra days, then the transfer is included and you usually are not charged a deviation fee for the flights.

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  8. You are perfectly ok in a sports coat and tie on formal nights. You will see just as many blazers as suits, and very few tuxedos. You don't say which cruise or how long it is. I have found that people dress more formally on longer cruises, grand voyages and world cruises. And more casually on shorter cruises, especially in the Caribbean and Alaska.
    Usually the menu does have some specials on formal nights. Like lobster for example. So, we always like to eat in Atlantide then.

  9. @rayho94066 last year when we booked D2D Silversea air routed us from Santiago to Toronto, Canada to San Francisco. This was in January. We would have accepted any of the US airports you mentioned but not that crazy route. We canceled and did our own air, United via Houston. Coming back into the US was no problem from Houston.

  10. Yes, a transfer is always included. It is by bus in the late morning from the Egan Convention Center for P2P passengers. I don't know the exact timing, you'll have to find out from Silversea. I believe they run multiple buses, one every half hour or so. They take your luggage at the convention center and deliver it to your room.

     

    The transfer by charter train used to be included and free for all D2D passengers. P2P passengers could pay Silversea in advance to upgrade to the train. But I read that they have changed the rules and now anyone who wants the train will need to pay for it, unless you booked before they changed this policy. If taking the train and staying at the Captain Cook hotel, charter buses will take you from the hotel to the train station by the airport to begin your journey. They take your luggage separately directly from the hotel to the ship. The train doesn't leave until around 1:30pm because it brings disembarking passengers back from Seward in the morning.

     

    As others have said, you get to the ship in the earlier afternoon by bus, and much later by train. The highway that the bus takes follows the train tracks so the view is the same. And the train is not as reliable. When we were supposed to take it, the track was blocked by a landslide. If we were to do this trip again, we would take the bus. [and go in the reverse direction starting from Vancouver.]

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  11. Agree. Formal is always optional on these short Alaska cruises. My husband took a blazer and tie and I took black pants and a nice silk top and we were fine. The rest of the dress code is the same, ie. no jeans in the dining room, collared shirts etc. The weather may be cold and rainy, or warm and sunny, so fill your suitcase with clothes for the shore excursions not formal wear.

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  12. We are booked on 525 later this summer. We always pick a balcony suite that is low and close to the center of the ship to minimize the motion. Plus, if you're crazy like me and like to do your own laundry, it's just down the closest stairs. The deluxe verandas would have been better of course, but we didn't think the extra cost was worth it. Keep what you booked.

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