|
|

Some Picture(s) Courtesy of
Their Respective Cruise Line or Company

Free Travel Insurance
1/16/03

Uniworld has introduced
a complimentary travel cancellation protection policy on river cruises
in Europe.
No, you’re not reading wrong.
It’s true.
Effective immediately, guests who book March, April and
May Europe river cruises will receive Uniworld’s Worry-Free Travel
Protection Gold Plan, free.
With the Worry-Free Travel Protection Gold Plan,
guests can cancel for any reason up until the day of departure.
Cancellation coverage guarantees a refund of 100 percent of the cruise
costs in cash and travel certificates. There are no forms to fill out,
doctor’s notes to request, or adjustors to deal with. If you cannot
travel, you just inform Uniworld in writing, and you’ll be reimbursed.
The Gold Plan also provides upgraded
insurance coverage once you depart on your cruise. Enhanced protection
against such unexpected circumstances as trip interruption, trip
delay, medical expenses, and baggage delay is also included.
“We realize that in today’s economy, a vacation
is a serious financial commitment,” said Uniworld President and CEO
Serba Ilich. “By taking advantage of our complimentary Worry-Free
Travel Protection Gold Plan, our customers can rest assured that their
investment is secure.”
Itineraries include the voyages in Holland, France, Italy and
Portugal, as well as sailings between Amsterdam and Vienna, Budapest
or the Black Sea.

Big Day for Delta Queen
1/15/03
Cruise vacationers concerned about the welfare of Delta Queen Steamboat
Company can stop worrying.
The line announced yesterday that it experienced the highest
call volume and booking levels since the company resumed operation last
May.
CruiseReports has received many phone calls and e-mail
regarding the financial security of the line from people concerned about
booking cruises on its steamboats – the Delta Queen, American Queen and
Mississippi Queen. Here’s some proof that the line has its head above
water.
"With the re-launch of the grand American Queen on January
18th," said
Rick Abramson, president of Delta Queen Steamboat Company, "all three of
the company's steamboats will once again be cruising on the inland
rivers of America."

Crystal Tries New Water
1/14/03

For the first
time in 2004, Crystal Cruises has scheduled a selection of seven-day
cruises on all three of its ships – Crystal Harmony, Crystal Symphony
and Crystal Serenity (set to debut this July) – including routes in the
Mediterranean and Canada/New England, as well as in the Caribbean.
The line also will sail a winter series of new 10-day
Hawaiian island cruises featuring three 10-day round-trip Honolulu
cruises with visits to Kauai, Hawaii, Christmas Island and Maui aboard
the Crystal Harmony.
Twenty-eight of the line’s cruises will sail roundtrip
from domestic ports and 33 cruises will begin or end in domestic ports.
Crystal Serenity’s first world cruise will begin in
January 2004. The 106-day voyage will circumnavigate the globe beginning
and ending in North America via Hawaii, Japan, China, Southeast Asia,
the exotic islands of the Indian Ocean, East and South Africa, South
America and the Caribbean. The cruise departs Los Angeles on January 19
and concludes on May 5 in New York City. Overnight stays include
Honolulu, Hiroshima, Kobe, Yokohama, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Ho Chi Minh
City, Bangkok, Singapore, Yangon, Mombasa, Cape Town and Rio de Janeiro.
The journey also will be offered in segments, ranging from 22 to 29
days.

Oceana is
Here
1/13/03
Oceana Cruises, the new cruise line headed by Frank Del
Rio and Joe Watters, opened its doors in Miami this week.
The line’s first 684-guest vessel, Regatta, (formerly
Renaissance Cruises’ R1) will sail its inaugural voyage from Barcelona
to London on July 5, 2003, and will be followed by a series of cruises
to Scandinavia and the Baltic. The second vessel, Insignia, (formerly
Renaissance Cruises’ R2) will sail its maiden voyage from Barcelona to
Istanbul on October 4, 2003.
“We are delighted to be able to offer these luxurious and
popular ships to the cruising public” noted Watters, former President
of Crystal Cruises. “Their unique size allows us to call on some of
the worlds most desirable ports.”
According to Watters, Oceana will be announcing more
details about their cruise product shortly, but he did say that it
“will be highlighted by an unsurpassed culinary experience, a casually
elegant atmosphere and unparalleled personal service.”
Oceana Cruises’ reservations center will open January
27, 2003. Executive offices are located at 8120 NW 53rd St, Suite 100,
Miami, FL 33166.

Less of a
Generation 1/11/02
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. announced today that it has deferred
options to purchase a fifth and sixth Radiance-class ship for its Royal
Caribbean International brand. The options involve ships scheduled for
deliveries in 2005 and 2006.
Royal Caribbean and Meyer Werft shipyard, of Papenburg,
Germany, builder of the Radiance-class ships, agreed to extend the
options to September 19, 2003. Under the terms of the extension, Meyer
Werft has the ability to terminate the options upon giving adequate
advance notice to Royal Caribbean.
Operating Radiance-class vessels are Radiance of the
Seas, which entered service in March 2001, and Brilliance of the Seas,
which entered service in July 2002. The third and fourth Radiance-class
ships are scheduled for delivery in 2003 and 2004, respectively.

Merger Is On
1/9/03
P&O Princess, the UK-based parent company of Princess
Cruises, intends to change its name to Carnival (UK) plc at the next P&O
Princess shareholders meeting. It’s existing brands – Princess Cruises,
Swan Hellenic, Aida Cruises, Arosa, Seetours, and Ocean Village – will
not be affected by the change to the parent company name.
This brings the two companies closer and closer to a
merger. In fact, the board of Carnival announced today that Carnival and
P&O Princess have indeed entered into an agreement to combine the two
companies through a dual listed company structure. And if the
shareholders of both companies approve the transaction, and everything
is agreed on during their meetings in late March/early April – the dual
listing is expected to occur in the second quarter of 2003. Both
companies will remain separate legal entities.
"We are extremely pleased that the board of P&O
Princess has recommended the Carnival DLC transaction to P&O Princess
shareholders. Our DLC structure provides the current P&O Princess
shareholders with the opportunity to participate in the largest cruise
vacation group in the most exciting and dynamic segment of the leisure
travel industry,” said Micky Arison, the Chairman and Chief Executive of
Carnival.
The combination of Carnival and P&O Princess will
create the largest cruise vacation group in the world, based on revenue,
passengers carried and available capacity.
Talk about cornering the cruise market.

Broadway Up Close1/8/03

Cunard Line is
giving its Queen Elizabeth 2 passengers backstage tickets to one of the
hottest shows in New York City -- The Producers.
The line has teamed up with Broadway Inner Circle,
Broadway's premier ticketing service, to offer guests "Broadway Up
Close" packages. The pre- and post-cruise multi-day experiences extend
the QE2’s six-day voyage between London and New York with tickets to The
Producers, dinner at The Palm with cast members and/or a producer from
the show, and two nights at the Crown Plaza in Times Square. The package
also includes tickets to attend special workshops, like Mysteries of
Stage Make-Up and Auditioning & Acting, during the day.
Broadway Up Close package rates are $739, $975, and $1175, depending on
hotel room category.
Contact your travel agent or Cunard at 1-800-728-6273
for more information.
For guests who've already seen The Producers, or don't
want to participate in the package deal, Broadway Inner Circle has
tickets available for a list of other shows including Hairspray, The
Lion King, Aida, Movin' Out, Cabaret, Chicago, Rent, Thoroughly Modern
Millie, Man of LaMancha, The Flower Drum Song, and Dance of the
Vampires.

New
Orleans at Sea 1/7/03

Royal Caribbean
International is spicing up all Grandeur of the Seas' 2003 Caribbean
cruises out of New Orleans.
Before the ship left for its January 4, “official
Louisiana Purchase Bicentennial kick-off cruise,” the line vowed to give
guests the tastes of Louisiana with featured menu items throughout their
cruise, as well as local guest entertainers. A selection of signature
dishes created by New Orleans' own Chef Susan Spicer will be served, as
well as locally famous drinks such as the Hurricane, Mint Julep, and
Louisiana Lemonade.
Regional entertainers will play music heard in
Louisiana, and the ship will host a poolside Mardi Gras bash. Grandeur
also will feature the sights of the state with a Louisiana Film
Festival. A rotating schedule of movies will be shown in the ship's
theater as well as on a dedicated channel on stateroom televisions.
Festival selections include "Divine Secrets of the
Ya-Ya Sisterhood,"
"Interview With the Vampire," "A Streetcar Named Desire," "Steel
Magnolias," and "Great Balls of Fire," as well as Bob Hope's "Louisiana
Purchase" and Elvis Presley's "King Creole."
In 2003, Grandeur offers two different seven-night
Caribbean itineraries out of New Orleans with stops in George Town,
Grand Cayman; Cozumel, Mexico; and Progreso, Mexico; or Progreso,
Cozumel and Key West, Florida. Prices start at $499 per person/double
occupancy.

More
CBL in US and Europe
1/6/03

Cruisers who want to play the role as
skipper, but don’t own their own boats will have more opportunities
available to them this year. As reported in the November issue of
CruiseReports, Crown Blue Line, a self-skippered boating company based
in Europe, will launch programs in Maryland and Florida, and also will
added more departures in Europe, including England.
Beginning in mid-May, the two- to 10-person
catamaran/boat cruisers will be available for rental in the Chesapeake
Bay area sailing from Annapolis. In November, the boats will be
available from Fort Myers to the Gulf Intra-Coastal Waterway and Barrier
Islands of southwest Florida.
Crown Blue Line also has joined forces with
Connoisseur, another self-skippered company who has been offering
boating trips in Europe since 1952. The addition of Connoisseur’s more
than 600 boats in six different countries – Britain, Ireland, France,
Belgium, Germany and Italy – brings to more than 1,200 the total number
of boats available through the company in Europe.
The addition of England to Crown Blue Line’s roster of
cruising regions gives travelers the option to cruise along the Thames.
Crown Blue Line has made some changes to its list of departure bases –
one-way cruises will now be available between Portumna and Carrick on
Shannon in Ireland and between Tannay and Laroche Migennes on the Canal
du Nivernais and Yonne River in France. The line currently also offers
cruises in France, Holland, Germany, Ireland, Scotland and Italy.
Weekly prices are approximately $500 per person,
depending on the size of the boat, the region and the season. Prices
include fuel, damage waiver, VAT and canal tolls.
Call your travel agent or 1-888-355-9491 or visit
www.crownblueline.com/powercats.

Kosher
Cruising
1/4/03

Crystal Cruises is offering gourmet kosher cuisine -- food
that is permissible to eat under Jewish dietary laws -- for its guests
throughout 2003.
Crystal Harmony, Crystal Symphony, and Crystal Serenity
(set to debut in July) will have kosher cuisine for guests on all 70,
seven- to 104-day global itineraries next year.
As part of Crystal's 2003 food and beverage program,
dozens of kosher soups, poultry, meat and fish, including roasted
turkey and chicken, rack of lamb, Beef Wellington, rib eye steak,
grilled halibut and salmon will be available – all of which is stored
frozen. To comply with kosher preparation and cooking standards
Crystal uses kosher pots, pans and utensils that have been sterilized
in salt water, and all plates, silverware and glassware used in the
main dining room during the cruise are hand-washed and stored
separately. New china, silverware and glassware are available for
guests' use throughout the cruise.
Each ship offers red and white kosher wines and Kosher
desserts. Guests may contact the Maitre D' or Headwaiter for any
special requests or kosher standards. During several Jewish holidays
rabbis are onboard supervising the kitchen and blessing the food
during preparation. If a Mesghuia is traveling with a guest, at the
guests' expense, a $25 per person, per-day charge will be assessed.
|
The 2003
fleet-wide kosher menu features the following choices
|
Baked Filet of Salmon Beef Burger
Beef Bourguignon
Beef Wellington
Dover Sole
Grilled Halibut
Grilled Lamb Chop
Grilled Salmon
Halibut
Herb Roast Chicken Breast
Lamb Rack
Lamb Rib Chop
Lamb Shoulder Chop
Lamb Stew
Marinated Grilled Chicken
Ox Tongue
Red Snapper
Rib Eye Steak
|
Roast Chicken Salmon
Salisbury Steak
Sliced Lamb
Sliced Turkey
Soups, assorted flavors
Stuffed Cabbage
Veal Goulash
Veal Liver
Veal Rack
Veal Rib Chop
Veal Roulade
Veal Schnitzel
Veal Shoulder
Vegetarian Burger
Whole Chicken for Roasting
Whole Duckling for Roasting
Whole Turkey for Roasting |

Survey Results
Change Course for SeaDream
1/3/03
SeaDream Yacht Club has altered 2003 sailing schedules
for the SeaDream I and II as a result of a European SeaDream survey that
included interviews with more than 500 of the line’s past guests and
would-be guests, 200 travel agents and more than 50 yacht charter
experts in Europe.
The results – high demand for more Mediterranean
cruises and deeper Caribbean ones.
So the line added some of both to this year’s cruise line-up.
SeaDream has added a series of seven-day
round-trip cruises out of Monte Carlo to increase its Mediterranean
voyages for 2003. There will be seven Monte Carlo round-trip voyages, a
Monte Carlo to Malaga sailing and a Malaga round-trip.
The ships’ 2003 Caribbean sailings now include
several Barbados, seven-day, round-trip voyages, including a year-end
holiday sailing. The line also has opened bookings for its eastbound
transatlantic sailings of both SeaDream I and II in April, which it
originally had planned to reposition to Europe without passengers.
“Clearly, our target market both in North America and
Europe is enthusiastic about the Mediterranean,” said Larry Pimentel,
CTC, Chairman and CEO of SeaDream. “Not only did our European upscale
target market and the travel agent community register a desire for us to
increase our Mediterranean presence, but those whose business is full
yacht charters for corporate meetings, incentive programs and individual
families, found favor with additional SeaDream Mediterranean sailings.”
The revised 2003 schedule includes a series of new
SeaDream ports of call to be added in both the Mediterranean and in the
Caribbean. Among these in the Caribbean are: Charlotteville, Tobago; St,
George’s, Bequia, Cariaccou and Mayreau in the Grenadines and Rodney Bay
and Soufriere in St. Lucia. In the Mediterranean -- Malaga, Cartegena,
Mahon and Barcelona have been added.
The new schedules and itineraries can be found on
SeaDream’s website,
www.seadreamyachtclub.com.

Queen for
Sale
1/2/2003

American West Steamboat Company is offering reduced rates
on Queen of the West sailings in February and March. On cruises
departing February 15, 22, March 1, 8 and 15, 2003, guests can save up
to 43 percent or $2,600 per couple off regular low season rates,
depending on cabin category. Special rates start at $837 to $2,099 and
include all shore excursions.
Cruises departing February 15, 22 and March 1, 2003,
feature the rivers of the West, the Columbia, Willamette and Snake
Rivers aboard the Queen of the West. The seven-night itinerary will
visit Multnomah Falls, the Mount Saint Helens National Volcanic
Monument, Lewis & Clark’s Fort Clatsop, a jet boat ride into Hells
Canyon, a rodeo demonstration in Pendleton and excursions to Astoria and
Cannon Beach, Oregon.
On March 8 and March 15, 2003, the Queen of the
West will operate seven-night itineraries featuring the lower Columbia
River, where Lewis & Clark first caught sight of the Pacific Ocean. Each
cruise will feature special guest historian and author, Rex Ziak. Points
of interest include Station Camp, Fort Clatsop, the Bonneville Dam, The
Dalles, a the Multnomah Falls, a visit to Mt. St. Helens, a tour of the
Columbia Gorge Discovery Center, and excursions to Astoria and Cannon
Beach, Oregon.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-434-1232 or visit
www.columbiarivercruise.com.

Double Savings on Radisson
12/31/02

Vacationers who book and make
a deposit on a 2003 Radisson Seven Seas Cruises trip by February 28 will
receive an extra 10 percent off of the early booking rate. The savings
apply to most of the line’s seven- to 12-night voyages on the Seven Seas
Voyager, Radisson Diamond, Song of Flower and Seven Seas Navigator in
the Baltic, Western Europe and Mediterranean.
The additional Early Booking Savings are five percent
in the following categories: Seven Seas Voyager Master Suite through
Seven Seas Suite; Seven Seas Navigator Master Suite through Navigator
Suite; Radisson Diamond Master Suite; and Song of Flower A and B
Staterooms.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-285-1835 or visit
www.rssc.com.

Seattle Revealed 12/28/02
Cruise vacationers planning an Alaska or West Coast
cruise out of Seattle next year will receive a new cruise guide to the
Washington home port. Launched by WHERE Seattle and Cruise Terminals
of America, Home Port Seattle-The Official Cruise Passenger’s Guide to
Seattle will be distributed to all passengers who embark and disembark
ships in Seattle during the 2003 season.
Published April through October, the new guide will
detail the hot spots of Seattle, provide detailed maps, and include an
editorial feature on the city’s history.
According to Holly Shook, director of marketing for
Columbia Hospitality, partner-owner of Cruise Terminals of America,
the new format is more user-friendly. “The new design and name of the
cruise guide, Home Port Seattle, now gives cruise passengers the
ability to quickly and thoroughly navigate through Seattle’s uniquely
individual neighborhoods,” she said.
The Port of Seattle will boast more than 220,000
passengers next year. Norwegian Cruise Line, Holland America Line,
Cruise West, Glacier Bay Cruiseline, Princess Cruises, American Safari
Cruises, and Lindblad Expeditions will all sail out of Seattle next
year.

Hilton at Sea
12/26/02
Hilton International is hitting the high seas. The
company has collaborated with Festival Cruises – known as First
European Cruises in the U.S. – to offer the first Hilton-branded
product in cruising.
The venture, named "Hilton Floating Resort on Festival
Cruises,” will be launched in the beginning of 2003. Under the
agreement, 'Hilton Suites' and service will be available on three of
Festival's ships - European Stars, European Vision, and Mistral - for
cruise 2003 programs to the Mediterranean, the Canary Islands,
Northern Europe and the Caribbean.
The new "Hilton Suites," which are to be marketed and
promoted by both Festival and Hilton, are aiming to attract discerning
leisure travelers who seek the upscale standard of comfort and service
long associated with the services and amenities generally found in
Hilton Executive rooms, combined with Festival product quality.
Suites on Festival's ships are equipped with a private
balcony and offer dedicated in-cabin service by multi-lingual
stewards. The new program provides for special services to Hilton
customers, including special check-in and check-out facilities as well
as priority handling and additional benefits for onboard dining,
entertainment and excursions.

Concierge Service Gets Fluffy
12/26/02
According to a 2002 poll by the National Sleep
Foundation, Americans sleep about 6.9 hours every weeknight. Over the
years, that number has continued to fall and complaints about sleepless
nights and tired mornings continue to rise.

Cunard Line is attempting to put an
end to their passengers’ restless sleep. In 2003, the line will add the
first pillow concierge service at sea on the Queen Elizabeth 2. Through
the new concierge service, guests will be able to choose their own
pillows -- from king-size feather blend, standard- and king-size
synthetic, 100 percent goose down, U-shaped, neck rolls, companion and
head support cushions.
Pillows can also reduce snoring, but Cunard is not
making any guarantees! Research shows that neck roll and U-shaped
pillows are thought to reduce snoring because the contoured foam
elevates the chin from the chest, keeping the jaw forward and airways
open, which makes snoring less likely.
Among the more unusual pillows in the group are
neck roll head supports. These look like a typical, rectangular pillow,
but with a neck roll pillow attached on one side. The roll supports the
neck while the head rests on the pillow and can be used for sleeping on
your back or side.
U-shaped pillows are also offered. Shaped more like a
candy cane than a horseshoe, these hypoallergenic pillows are typically
designed for those who sleep on their sides. When properly used, the
head rests along the curve, permitting the sleeper to cradle the long,
straight section.
Cunard Line offers 100 percent goose down pillows as
well.
Sleep tight – and long!

RSSC Voyager Sets New Course
12/24/02

Radisson Seven Seas
Cruises has announced its first-ever 94-night Grand Asia Pacific Voyage
aboard the new 700-guest all-balcony suite Seven Seas Voyager – slated
to debut in Monte Carlo on April 1, 2003.
The ship will set sail for its port-intensive itinerary
round-trip from Los Angeles on January 10, 2004 – visiting 41 ports in
18 countries. Guests can start booking the entire voyage or five
shorter, combinable segments of 15 to 23 nights beginning January 6,
2003.
"We are excited to announce the 2004 Grand Asia Pacific
Voyage on the Seven Seas Voyager, setting our new ship on a new course,
calling at eight new ports of call," said Mark Conroy, president and CEO
of Radisson Seven Seas. "Recent booking trends and our guests' interests
influenced our decision to develop this extended, concentrated Asia
Pacific program. This first-ever itinerary offers our guests the benefit
of extended touring time in 10 major cities with a total of 13
overnights in port."

The Seven Seas
Voyager will call at the Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia, Tonga, New
Caledonia, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, China,
Taiwan, Japan and Hawaii, with extended overnight calls in Sydney,
Melbourne, Fremantle (Perth), Singapore, Laem Chabang (Bangkok), Hong
Kong, Shanghai, Tianjin (for Beijing), Kobe and Tokyo.
First-time visits for the line include Ile des Pins in
New Caledonia; Adelaide in Australia, Fremantle & Perth, twin cities on
the Swan River; Albany and Broome, renowned for its seawater pearls;
Taipei and Kaoshing in Taiwan; and Tianjin, near Beijing.
Those who book the 94-night cruise by May 31,
2003, will receive 10 percent early booking savings, with prices
starting from $38,695 per person, including first class air from 84
North American gateways and up to $1,000 shipboard credit.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-285-1835 or visit
www.rssc.com.

South Pacific Sojourn
12/23/02
Cunard Line’s Queen Elizabeth 2 is heading to the French Polynesia. On
January 24, 2003, the ship will sail from Hawaii to Tahiti on an
11-night cruise, offering two-for-one savings.
QE2 will set sail from Honolulu to Papeete, Moorea, and
Auckland. The itinerary also includes a full day and overnight stay
onboard the ship in Auckland prior to disembarkation. Rates start at
$999 per person, double occupancy.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-7-CUNARD or visit
www.cunard.com.

Windstar Sets New
Sailing Schedule
12/21/02

Primarily due to the
redeployment of the Wind Star in Tahiti, Windstar Cruises has announced
new schedules and cruise itineraries for 2003.
During the 2003 European cruise season, the
148–passenger Wind Spirit will now operate a blend of the Mediterranean
and Greek Isles cruises originally scheduled onboard both the Wind Star
and Wind Spirit as published in 2003 brochures. There will be no changes
to the published cruise schedules of the 308-passenger Wind Surf
featuring first time calls in the Baltics and Northern Europe.
The line will maintain it’s year-round presence in
Tahitian waters, resuming seven-day cruises on January 24, 2003 aboard
the Wind Star. As previously reported in the December issue of
CruiseReports, the Wind Song was damaged in an engine room fire and was
pulled from its Tahiti itinerary. The Wind Star will replace the Wind
Song’s cruises through December 2003 – a total of 42 sailings round-trip
from Papeete to Huahine, Raiatea, Bora Bora, and Moorea. On September
26, 2003, the ship will sail a 14-day route from Papeete to the
Marquesas Islands.
Windstar will shorten its Greek Isles season from
24 to 10 sailings onboard the Wind Spirit, sailing seven-day itineraries
between Athens and Istanbul. Four cruises departing May 10 through 31
and six running from September 13 through October 18, 2003, will visit
the Aegean islands of Mykonos, Santorini, Rhodes, Bodrum, and Kusadasi.
The Wind Surf will maintain its published 2003
itineraries in the Mediterranean offering a total of 16 sailings in May,
June, September, October, and November 2003. The Wind Spirit will now
offer 18 Mediterranean cruises departing April through November 2003.
The seven- to 11-day Mediterranean cruises depart from Lisbon, Portugal;
Barcelona, Spain; Nice, France; Rome, Italy; Grand Harbour, Malta; and
Venice, Italy.
In July and August of 2003, Windstar visits the Baltic
Sea and Northern Europe for the first time ever on a total of eight
cruises. The Wind Surf will sail four 10-day cruises from Copenhagen,
Denmark with a St. Petersburg, Russia overnight. While repositioning to
and from the Baltic Sea, Wind Surf will sail two 10-day cruises between
Lisbon and Dover and two 12-day cruises between Dover and Copenhagen.
Port calls include St. Petersburg, Moscow, Paris, London, Lisbon,
Amsterdam, Oslo, Talinn, Helsinki, and Berlin.
The line will of course continue its Caribbean journeys
as well, with a total of 32 sailings in 2003, featuring the addition of
Isla Culebra, Puerto Rico. Wind Surf will call there during its cruises
from St. Thomas to Barbados. The ship also will sail two repositioning
cruises between St. Thomas and Ft. Lauderdale, visiting the Bahamas. St.
Thomas will be the Wind Spirit’s homeport in 2003, offering 14 Caribbean
cruises to St. John, St. Martin, St. Barthelemy, Tortola, Jost Van Dyke,
and Virgin Gorda.
In April and November of 2003, the ships’ crew will be
aiming to break the record of 103 hours under sail power alone during
four trans-Atlantic cruises. The 14-day voyages will depart April 5 and
November 22 on the Wind Spirit; and on April 20 and November 16 aboard
the Wind Surf. The latter will sail from Lisbon to Ft. Lauderdale, while
the others will sail between Lisbon and St. Thomas

Cruise ‘N Stay in London
12/20/02

Cunard and Virgin Vacations are
teaming up again in 2003 to offer more 10-day trips to England. In
addition to a six-day transatlantic crossing aboard aboard the Queen
Elizabeth 2, the program includes a three-night hotel stay in London
at the Crowne Plaza St. James, airfare to or from the United States
and more.
Rates start at $1,499 per person, and includes one-way
economy class air on Virgin Atlantic Airways between London and eight
U.S. gateways: Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, Newark, New York, Orlando,
San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
Air add-ons are available from Boston for $149, Los
Angeles for $299, Miami for $229, Orlando for $249, San Francisco for
$299 and Washington, D.C. for $199. Call your travel agent, or call
1-800-7-CUNARD or visit
www.cunard.com.

Short Stint
12/19/02
Royal Olympic Cruises is introducing a new weekend
cruise to Freeport and Nassau in the Bahamas this spring aboard the
Olympia Voyager, with rates beginning at $204 per person.
The ship will depart round-trip from Fort Lauderdale on
Saturday, April 12, 2003 at 3 p.m., and return Monday morning, April 14
at 9 a.m.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-872-6400, or visit
www.royalolympiccruises.com.

Create More
Cruises 12/17/02

Silversea Cruises has expanded its “Personalized
Voyages” program to all of its ships. First announced in July for 2003
voyages aboard Silver Cloud, the custom-made cruise options will be
available on the Silver Wind, Silver Whisper, and Silver Shadow
beginning next month.
With Silversea's Personalized Voyages guests can choose
the length of their voyage as well as points of embarkation and
disembarkation.
"The overwhelming response and favorable feedback
to Personalized Voyages have encouraged us to roll out the program on
all our vessels," said Albert Peter, Silversea's Chief Executive
Officer. "The great success of Personalized Voyages is attributed to the
fact that it addresses the needs of today's luxury traveler by giving
them total vacation flexibility. We're enabling guests to customize
their vacation experiences to fit their needs, not the other way
around."
The company's 2003 revised Cruise Atlas, due out
shortly, contains a listing of over two hundred approved embarkation and
disembarkation ports, daily rates, plus complete terms and conditions of
the program. Guests can cruise for as long as they desire, with a
minimum of five nights in a row. To determine the cost of a Personalized
Voyage, guests select a desired suite category, then add up the daily
rate of the days they plan to be onboard. Guests will need to arrange
their own air transportation, but Silversea will assist with hotel
and/or transfer arrangements in select ports.
Guests opting not to book under the Personalized
Voyages program can still confirm a Silversea cruise vacation by booking
either an air/sea fare or cruise-only fare.
To build a custom itinerary on the line’s web site –
www.silversea.com --visitors can use the section's "Search Button"
to select the month, destination, or desired embarkation port. Then
select the desired ship, port of embarkation, port of disembarkation,
and suite category desired, and the cruise-only fare will be displayed.

Luxury Goes Exploring 12/16/02

Radisson Seven Seas Cruises is offering exclusive,
complimentary shore excursions on four segments of the Seven Seas
Mariner’s first 108-day world cruise.
The first segment is a 31-night voyage from Los Angeles
to Sydney departing January 21, 2003. In Nuku Hiva (Marquesas Islands),
following the traditions of Polynesian sailors, guests will gather at a
sacred marae (temple). In Hobart, among the ruins of the Port Arthur
Penal Colony, a "Tasmanian Heritage" dinner show will take guests back
to a time to Australia's history as they witness a full costume
reenactment of convict arrivals by ship.
The second segment is a 34-night voyage from Sydney to
Singapore on February 21 with an overnight stay at Bangkok's Shangri-La
hotel. The third segment is a 21-night voyage from Singapore to Cape
Town on March 27, where guests can set out on a Tsavo East National Park
safari, exploring the lands of the Big Five. The forth segment is a
22-night voyage from Cape Town to Ft. Lauderdale on April 17, including
a Transatlantic crossing to Brazil. In Walvis Bay, Namibia -- the oldest
desert in the world – guests will have dinner under the stars. Optional
Enrichment
Additionally, Le Cordon Bleu chefs will host "Classe
Culinaire des Croisières" hands-on cooking classes and workshops on
segments one and four, guests can dice it up with skilled Le Cordon
Bleu® chefs during the workshop series. Participants will learn how to
prepare selections from the ship's Le Cordon Bleu menus served at
Signatures - the Seven Seas Mariner's 110-seat reservations-only dinner
restaurant. Cost is $395 per person.
Single combinable segments of 21 to 34 nights begin at
$10,075 per person and include economy airfare. Guests will also receive
a $200 shipboard credit.

Deilmann Expands
European Cruise-Tours 12/16/02
Peter Deilmann Cruises has expanded its European cruise-tour program for
2003, featuring seven- and 14-nights of cruising on nine deluxe river
ships that sail the Danube, Rhine, Moselle, Rhône, Elbe, Po and other
rivers from late March through early November.
Deilmann has more than doubled the number of “Great
Rivers of Europe” departures. Among the 18 cruise tours for next year
are three new ones focusing on Lake Como and northern Italy, northern
Germany and Poland and Vienna, German wine regions and Amsterdam.
The 14-day "Spires to Windmills" program combines the
cities of Vienna, Cologne and Amsterdam with a seven-night cruise on the
79-passenger Katharina sailing on the Danube, the Main-Danube Canal and
the Rhine. In Franconia on the Main-Danube Canal, the ship will sail to
castles and historic towns of Regensburg, Nuremberg, Bamberg and
Würzburg. The cruise also visits Rüdesheim. The 12-night program, with
six departures between May 13 and October 28, is priced from $3,460 per
person double occupancy, including two hotel nights in both Vienna and
Amsterdam and one in Cologne.
The line’s 12-day "Best of Northern Italy" cruise-tour
begins with three days on Lake Como at Villa d'Este in Cernobbio and
continues to Venice for a seven-night Po River cruise to Cremona on the
96-passenger Casanova. Visits include Bologna, Ferrara, Verona Burano,
Torcello and Murano on the Venetian Lagoon. The final night is spent in
Venice aboard the ship. There are eight departures on this 10-night
program between May 27 and September 16, priced from $3,470 per person,
double occupancy.
The 15-day "Discovery Route-Dresden to Krakow" begins
with a seven-night Elbe River sailing on the Dresden, with visits to
Berlin, Warsaw and Krakow. The trip includes an overnight in Dresden and
tours in Meissen and Wittenberg. There are 11 departures on this
13-night program between May 2 and October 3, priced from $2,890 per
person, double occupancy.
Call your travel agent or 1-800-348-8287 or visit
www.deilmann-cruises.com.

New NCV Ships
Takeover 12/14/02

The third Norwegian Coastal Voyage
Millennium-class ship, the 674-guest, 15,000-ton Midnatsol, is scheduled
to start service on April 15, 2003, from Bergen along Norway's west
coast. One of five new ships being launched from 2002 to 2005, the new
Midnatsol will be more than twice the size of its namesake, the
325-berth, 6,100-ton Midnatsol built in 1982, which it will replace.
Between April 2002 and April 2003, more
Millennium-class ships will take the place of smaller, older ships,
increasing the capacity of the 11-ship coastal fleet from 4,188 to 5,519
guests. When the last mid-generation ship is withdrawn in 2005, the
oldest ships on the route will be the Richard With and Kong Harald,
490-berth contemporary ships launched in 1993 to celebrate Norwegian
Coastal Voyage's 100th anniversary.
The new generation of Millennium-class ships, the Midnatsol, Finnmarken
and Trollfjord, has 50 percent more deck space than the six 1990s
contemporary ships, many more suites and modern cruise ship amenities
like the line's first private balconies and Internet cafés.
Each ship will have a two-story panoramic lounge,
saunas, and glass elevators a fitness room, bar and an observation
lounge balcony, as well as two restaurants, an Internet café, library,
other bars and lounges, an arcade, children's playroom, shop and a
conference center.
The 19 suites include five with a private balcony, 10
with a bay window and four junior suites.
The fourth and fifth Millennium ships are scheduled for the spring of
2004 and 2005.

Serenity
to Globetrot 12/13/02

Crystal Cruises newest ship will host the line’s 2004
world cruise voyage. The 1,080-guest Crystal Serenity – set to debut
July 3, 2003 – will begin its globetrotting adventure on January 19,
2004, from Los Angeles.
The ship will visit 34 ports of call in 106 days before
it concludes in New York on May 5. Stops include Honolulu, Hawaii;
Hiroshima, Kobe, Nagoya and Yokohama, Japan; Shanghai and Hong Kong,
China; Da Nang and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Laem Chabang (Bangkok),
Thailand; Singapore; Male (Maldives); Victoria (Seychelles); Mombasa,
Kenya; Durban and Cape Town, South Africa. Additional calls will be made
in Rio de Janeiro, Barbados, Tortola and Fort Lauderdale, where guests
also have the option to conclude their cruise.

Coral Princess Delayed, Again
12/11/02
Princess Cruises has delayed the delivery of its newest vessel once
again. Coral Princess -- which was originally set to debut at the
beginning of this month, and then again on December 24 -- will not set
sail until next year.
The 1,970-passenger ship will now depart on its
inaugural Panama Canal cruise on January 3, 2003, which will be followed
by a series of 10-day roundtrip Canal voyages from Ft. Lauderdale.
"We deeply regret having to cancel this departure,"
said Phil Kleweno, president. "The shipbuilder, Chantiers de
l'Atlantique is working hard to deliver the ship as quickly as possible,
however the ship requires additional work which will preclude the
operation of the December 24 sailing. We sincerely regret this
disruption to our valued passengers' holiday plans."
Passengers on the affected December 24 sailing will
receive a full refund, as well as credit toward a future cruise.

The Chosen
Ones 12/9/02

A few cruise lines have recently announced who the
Godmothers of their new ships will be.
Norwegian
Cruise Line has chosen HBO’s “Sex and the City” star Kim Cattrall of as
Godmother of Norwegian Dawn. Cattrall, who plays the risqué Samantha
Jones on the show, will christen the ship in a ceremony in New York on
December 16, 2002 at 4:30 p.m.
According to Colin Veitch, NCL's president and chief
executive officer, "Kim embodies the spirit of New York and the
distinctive style of Freestyle Cruising. Kim's allure is quite
tantalizing, she is the new symbol of New York City and the perfect
Godmother for our newest, most innovative vessel, Norwegian Dawn."
Cattrall, who is a Golden Globe® and Emmy® -nominated
actress, also starred in
"Police Academy 1," "Porky's," "Mannequin," "Masquerade," "Star Trek 6:
the Undiscovered Country," John Carpenter's "Big Trouble in Little
China," and with Tom Hanks in Brian De Palma's "Bonfire of the
Vanities."

Holland America Line has picked Joan Lunden, long-time
co-host of ABC's Good
Morning America and current host of A&E's Behind Close Doors & The Real
Story, as Godmother to Holland America Line's first new Vista-class
ship, the Zuiderdam. She’ll christen the ship in a ceremony in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, on December 14.
"It is indeed an honor to have Ms. Lunden participating
in the dedication of our new ship," said Holland America Line Chairman
and CEO A. Kirk Lanterman. "Her professionalism and integrity
distinguish here as an ideal godmother for this world-class ship. She
embodies the qualities of our guests and the officers and crew who will
bring her into service."
Lunden also co-hosts A&E's award-winning Biography and
received the New YorkWomen in communications Matrix Award for
"outstanding contributions to the broadcasting field."
Madame Tonita Flosse, wife of the President of the
Government of French
Polynesia Mr.Gaston Flosse, will christen the Princess Cruises’ new
680-guest Tahitian Princess, Princess' first ship to cruise year-round
from Papeete.
The christening ceremony will take place on December
20, 2002 in Papeete and it will launch, and officially rename, the
recently acquired ship.
"We are extremely honored that Madame Flosse has agreed
to become the godmother of our very first full-time ship in the region,"
said Peter Ratcliffe, CEO of P&O Princess Cruises. "Having the
President's wife christen our new Tahitian Princess confirms our
commitment to share this wonderful destination with our passengers, and
shows our appreciation to the people of French Polynesia as we prepare
to launch both our new ship and the most extensive cruise itineraries in
this part of the world."
Legendary entertainer Dame Julie Andrews will has been named the
Godmother of Crystal Cruises’ new Crystal Serenity, set to debut in
July.
Andrews will christen Crystal Serenity into service at the port of
Southampton, U.K. on July 3, 2003.
"As a world renowned performer, Ms. Andrews' remarkable
career has solidified her stature as an international legend and secured
her place in the hearts of generations of fans around the world," said
Gregg Michel, president, Crystal Cruises. "Her refined sense of style,
elegance and immense talent are so closely aligned with Crystal's
reputation that she is the perfect choice for Crystal Serenity's
Godmother. It is a joy and honor for everyone at Crystal Cruises to have
Ms. Andrews send our glorious new ship into service."
An Academy Award® and two-time Golden Globe Winner,
Andrews' career includes roles in the classic films “The Sound of
Music,” “Mary Poppins,” “Victor/Victoria,” “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” “S.O.B.,”
and “10,” and many more. She also most recently starred in Disney's “The
Princess Diaries,” and has been in a variety of stage production shows.

Will
Wind Song Survive?
It is still yet to be determined whether or not the damages
caused by an engine room fire that broke out aboard Windstar
Cruises’ Wind Song ten
miles off the coast of Tahaa, French Polynesia on December 1,
will leave the line with one less ship.
Carnival Corporation, Windstar’s parent company, filed a
statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
December 2, stating that “the extent of the damage” to the
fully insured ship “is significant and, based on initial
observations, it appears to be a total loss.”
But Windstar officials said the damage assessments are just
beginning so it remains to be seen if, when, and where the
Wind Song will be
rehabilitated.
Tom Russell, Windstar’s vice president of sales and marketing,
was reported in the Tahiti Presse as saying: "There is little
physical damage that we can see. Most of the damage we know is
where the fire really took place which is in the engine room,
which is very difficult to replace and to repair.”
According to Russell, there are only two shipyards that can
handle the engine repairs. “One of them, I think, is probably
Singapore but we are also considering New Zealand,” he told the
Tahiti Presse. The final decision has not been made on that
score.
According to Marry Schimmelman, the line’s public relations
manager, the ship’s passenger cabins, reception area, library,
lounge, pool deck and pool bar, and watersports platform all are
in good shape.
“The staff have bagged up all of the passenger luggage and
already reunited people with their belongings,” she said.
After all 127 passengers and 92 crew members were safely
evacuated from the ship during the fire, guests were flown to
Papeete to continue their Tahiti vacations on land.
Since then, Russell and other Windstar staff have been “doing
everything possible to minimize the inconvenience to the
passengers including providing clothes, toiletries, spending
money, unlimited signing at the hotel, transportation to and
accommodations at hotels on other islands if they so choose, as
well as things like bringing in an optometrist for those needing
contacts or glasses,” Schimmelman told
CruiseReports.
For now, Windstar’s 148-guest
Wind Star will take over the
Wind Song’s Tahiti
cruises starting January 24. The
Wind Star´s winter
season of Costa Rica, Panama Canal and Belize cruises has been
canceled; and Wind Song’s
seven-day Tahiti sailings through January 17, have been
canceled — seven it total.
Back to the top

NCL Takes Back
Crown
Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) will take back the
Crown Odyssey from
sister company Orient Lines next year. The 1,026-guest ship,
originally built for the defunct Royal Cruise Lines in 1988,
will enter the fleet on September 15, 2003.
The ship is no newcomer to NCL. It sailed with the line as
Norwegian
Crown from 1995 to 2000, before it
was transferred to Orient Lines and once again named the
Crown Odyssey. Will its
name change again? “No,” says NCL officials
The ship itself will change quite a bit though. On February 12,
Crown Odyssey will head
to Singapore to undergo some major internal surgery to transform
it into a “Freestyle Cruising” vessel. Three restaurants will be
added — NCL’s signature French-style Le Bistro, an Italian pasta
café, and a covered al fresco dining café. A “state-of-the-art”
fitness center and children’s activity area will be added too;
and the ship’s spa and casino both will be expanded. In order
to accommodate more guests, the ship also will be fitted with
additional cabins.
So why is NCL
taking back the ship?
To expand its “Homeland Cruising” program, which is dedicated to
deploying more vessels to various Canadian and U.S. home ports.
The line has added Baltimore, Houston and New Orleans to its
roster of seasonal departure points that its ships will sail
from on round-trip cruises next year. The line’s vessels also
sail from Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Orlando, San Juan,
Seattle, Vancouver, Miami, and Honolulu.
“Homeland Cruising has been well received by cruisers and travel
agents alike since we introduced it a year ago and it is now
very much the focus of our expansion plan for NCL,” said Colin
Veitch, CEO and president of NCL and Orient Lines. “We have
brought the ships to the consumers rather than asking them to
fly across country to get to the ships.”
In fact, Veitch says that the program “has been so successful”
that the line’s move to bring
Crown Odyssey back into the NCL fleet will allow the line
“to open up several more homeland ports.”
Crown Odyssey will begin a series
of 11-day Canada/New England cruises from Baltimore next
September and will take over
Norwegian Dream’s previously scheduled South American
itinerary in November. In May 2004, it will resume
Norwegian Sea’s
seven-day Bermuda cruises from New York and Philadelphia through
October, before cruising the Chilean Fjords and Straight of
Magellan again during the winter.
After its summer Bermuda season,
Norwegian Sea — which
will undergo a multi-million dollar refit in January — will move
to Houston in November 2003, where it will sail a seven-day,
four-port western Caribbean itinerary year-round.
Norwegian Dream heads to New
Orleans in November 2003 (see review on page 4) where it will
spend the winter and spring sailing a seven-day, four-port
western Caribbean itinerary as well. In April it will continue
its summer season in Scandinavia/Russia and then head over to
Boston in the fall for Canada/New England sailings.
As for Orient Lines — it will return to being a one-ship
operation with only the Marco
Polo in service. The ship will cruise to the British
Isles from Britain for the first time in 2004/05, and also will
return to Antarctica. The ship will continue its cruise-tours in
Scandinavia and will expand its Mediterranean season as well.

Back to the top
WEC Sits Out 2003
A company merger
that fell through has caused a San Francisco-based cruise line
to suspend its operations in 2003. Shortly after declaring its
joint venture with Helsinki-based Silja Line in late November,
World Explorer Cruises announced in the beginning of this month
that it “has decided not to proceed” with the alliance.
Through the
deal, World Explorer was to acquire a new 725-guest vessel from
Silja, the Enchanted Isle
— later to be renamed the
Universe Ambassador. Due to the termination of the deal,
World Explorer has become shipless.
The line’s only
vessel, the 737-passenger
Universe Explorer is scheduled to leave the line and
serve as a full time shipboard campus for the Institute for
Shipboard Education’s Semester at Sea program. For years the
University of Pittsburgh’s program has chartered the ship during
the months when it wasn’t plying the waters of Alaska or Central
America for World Explorer. And next year it will take over the
45-year-old vessel year-round.
This leaves
World Explorer with no choice but to sit next year out.
According to Dennis Myrick, WEC’s senior vice president of
sales, this is not a financial issue for the line.
“We had
already committed the Universe
Explorer to our friends at Semester at Sea. They have
been marketing a summer 2003 semester for some time and it is
|