1. Get There the Night Before -- and Extend the Fun.
Sounds simple, but hundreds of
cruisers literally miss the boat each year because of delayed flights,
traffic, bad weather and other unforeseen troubles. Others board by the
skin of their teeth, panting and screaming at one another. Who needs
that sort of stress? Fly or drive into your port city the night before
and you simultaneously bypass pre-departure jitters and add a day to
your vacation. Check tourist boards for stay-and-cruise information.
Fort Lauderdale’s convention and visitors bureau, for instance, has a
top-notch (and in-depth) web page devoted to deals on pre- and post-cruise stays, many of which include parking and free shuttles to your ship.
2. Say 'Bon Voyage' in Style.
Nothing kick-starts a cruise better than a little spurge, and the cruise lines
are happy to oblige -- plus you’ll look like a hero to your better
half. Most lines offer gift packages that will be waiting for you in
your cabin when you check-in. Holland America, for example, offers
everything from a champagne-and-balloon package (under $25) to a dozen
long-stemmed roses (about $45) to give your cabin a little floral
panache.
3. Stay Away From the Pool.
At full capacity, Royal Caribbean’s
Allure of the Seas can hold 6,360 passengers -- and many will have their
eyes set on the vessel’s pools. Unfortunately, mega-ships only have a
fraction of the chairs necessary to accommodate everyone. The result: a
mass of humanity sun-burning in tandem on chairs they claim early and
won’t give up. Instead, duck the hubbub. Most new vessels have
adults-only areas, some with pools, and almost always less crowded
(several newer Carnival ships, including Magic, Dream and Breeze, boast a
Serenity Deck
with bar service, plush loungers and whirlpools). Also, scope out ship
deck plans for a place to call your own; Norwegian Epic, for example,
has multiple levels of alfresco seating available, many unused because
they’re too far from the pools (a nearly hidden warren of loungers on
Deck 18 is a particular find).
4. Eat on Your Terms.
Many major cruise lines (Norwegian
being a notable exception) continue to encourage group dining at a
prescribed time. If making small talk with the same strangers every
night at the same time is your thing, go for it. But myriad options
abound to break up the routine: If the ship is in port late, slip off
and have dinner, preferably something native. Order room-service
breakfast (it’s included in most cases) and have a picnic on your
balcony. Make reservations at an extra-fee specialty restaurant; for
instance, tapas at Qsine,
a staple on the newer Celebrity ships featuring whimsical presentation
and menus on iPads, will set you back about $40 a person (far less than
if you paid for a similar meal on dry land).
5. Stay on the Ship.
The ugly little truth about port
calls? You barely get to see the place you’re visiting, and you’re
paying a high price for the (lack of) privilege if you book an
excursion. If you can stand not spending 6 hours crammed on a
tour bus, stay onboard. Most facilities are still open, and you’ll have
them to yourself -- hit the AquaDuck
water flume on Disney Magic and Fantasy as many times as you wish,
catch the planetarium show on Cunard’s Queen Mary 2, read a book
unencumbered on the Promenade Deck of the Coral Princess. For 8 hours, it’s your ship.
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