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CruiseLog January 2004
 
 

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 January 2 0 0 4
     
 



Sneak Peak at Silversea 2005
Another Cruise Cancelled
Oceania’s Cruises
Talks Go On
Star for NCL in Alaska
No Party for Festival
Swapping Pride
Tahitian All Around
QM2 Out & About
Viking Adds More Sailings

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

Sneak Peak at Silversea 2005

     Silversea Cruises is in-demand. The line has just revealed its full-year 2005 global itineraries for all four of its ships in response to a strong early demand by guests to finalize their travel plans for next year. According to execs at Silversea, the line has been seeing “an extraordinary increase in call volume and bookings over the past several weeks, with many callers inquiring about next year's voyages.” So the line has responded accepting reservations for 2005 sailings and has published its full-year cruise schedule on its web site, www.silversea.com

     “January is shaping up to be a month that will surely break all our previous sales records,” said
David Morris, Silversea’s Senior Vice President, North America Sales. “I’m thrilled to see such a strong surge in bookings, plus guests who are showing a renewed enthusiasm for making their vacation plans early.”

     Here’s what’s on tap for 2005:

bulletThe Silver Cloud will kick of the year with three cruises to Australia and New Zealand, ranging from 10 to 16 days, and the will head to the Far East and Africa. In the spring, the ship will be in the Mediterranean, where it will sail a series of eight cruises to ports in Spain, Portugal, France and Italy before embarking on summer cruises to Northern Europe. Silver Cloud will finish off the year with a schedule of cruises to South America and the Amazon.
 
bulletSilver Wind will begin the year in South America, with a variety of itineraries ranging from seven- to 16 days, before it begins a series of cruises to Africa, with stopovers in Walvis Bay, Cape Town and Richard's Bay. The ship will then sail more than twenty Mediterranean sailings, ranging from five to 15 days. In the fall, Silver Wind cruises to Egypt, the Seychelles and South Africa.
 
bulletSilver Shadow will spend the winter season in the Mexican Riviera and South America before repositioning to the Mediterranean. During spring and summer, Silver Shadow will offer more than 25 different cruises throughout western and eastern Mediterranean, including a special program of 14 seven-day voyages. In autumn, Silver Shadow will sail an “exotic collection” of voyages to the Far East and South Pacific.
 
bulletDuring the winter, Silver Whisper will sail throughout the Caribbean on nine different voyages, ranging from five to ten days. Afterwards, it will reposition to the Mediterranean for a series of cruises, ranging from six to ten days throughout Spain, Italy, France and Northern Europe. The ship will make several three-day stopovers in St. Petersburg. In the fall, Silver Whisper will cruise the east coast of Canada and New England as well as offer sailings in the Caribbean.

The line will release its new printed Voyage Planner, with complete itineraries and pricing for 2005, in April.

Another Cruise Cancelled

     Festival Cruises/First European Cruises has cancelled another sailing of the European Vision from Santo Domingo. The February 1 cruise has been eliminated from the ship’s schedule, as the line continues to negotiate with shipbuilder Alstom and bank Credit Agricole regarding options for refinancing the European Vision, European Stars and Mistral.
 

     "We believe that answers and future direction should be coming shortly," said Jim Applebaum, president for First European Cruises, Festival Cruises' North American marketing arm.

     The company says it remains optimistic about reaching a solution and is working day and night towards that goal.

Oceania’s Cruises

     In addition to announcing the Insignia’s slate of inaugural 2004-2005 season of cruises to the Panama Canal, Central America, South America and the Regatta’s winter season of cruises to the Caribbean, Central America, Panama Canal and Mexico, the line has released revised itineraries for voyages to the Black Sea and Greek Isles that bypass Istanbul and Kusadasi due to the turmoil in Turkey.

     The revised itineraries retain much of the original itineraries and now include new ports-of-call at Athens, Mykonos and Santorini in Greece, Amalfi, Siracusa and Messina in Italy and Valletta on the island of Malta in lieu of Istanbul and Kusadasi in Turkey.

     The 120-day “Black Seas Sojurn” from Athens to Athens, departing on September 14 will now visit Nessebur, Constanta, Odessa, Sevestapol, Sochi, Yalta, Mykonos; the 14-day “Aegean & Adriatic Wonders” from Venice to Athens, on August 31, September 26, and October 10 will now call at Ancona, Split, Dubrovnik, Corfu, Amalfi, Siracusa, Valletta, Santorini, Rhodes and Mykonos; and the 10-day “Ancient & Artistic Gems” sailing from Athens to Barcelona departing on October 24 will stop at Mykonos, Rhodes, Messina, Naples, Rome, Florence, Monte Carlo, and Provence.

Talks Go On

    
Festival Cruises has canceled the January 26, 2004, European Stars sailing from Genoa in addition to the January 25, 2004, European Vision departure from Santo Domingo. The company is still in negotiations with shipbuilder Alstom and bank Credit Agricole regarding the monies owed for the ships mentioned above as well as the Mistral, as reported in CruiseReports on January 20.

Star for NCL in Alaska


When Norwegian Cruise Line announced the other day that the Pride of Aloha (currently the Norwegian Sky) will debut early to take over the delayed Pride of America’s Hawaii routes, we wondered what ship will operate the Norwegian Sky’s Alaska cruises this summer.
Today we found out.

One of the ships from Star Cruises’ fleet (NCL’s parent company) will sail for the line in Alaska this summer. The 2,000-guest SuperStar Leo will take over Norwegian Sky’s previously published seven-day itinerary from Seattle, beginning May 15, with calls in Ketchikan, Juneau, Skagway and Prince Rupert.

NCL’s “freestyle cruising” concept will apply aboard the SuperStar Leo, as the it was the first purpose-built Freestyle Cruising ship for Star Cruises in 1999, and is the sister-ship to the Norwegian Star. The ship has seven restaurants including two main restaurants, three alternative restaurants -- Maxim's (a French restaurant); Shogun (a Japanese restaurant) and Tai Pan (a Chinese restaurant), -- the Raffles Lido Café and the 24-hour Blue Lagoon. SuperStar Leo also boasts an expansive children’s and teen facility, a 1,000-seat theater, a disco, a cinema, several bars and lounges and a casino.

Since the ship has a higher percentage of balconies than the Norwegian Sky, NCL will move booked passengers to an equivalent or superior cabin on their chosen sailing date. In addition, all passengers currently booked on Norwegian Sky will receive a $25 per person onboard credit when they sail on SuperStar Leo.

No Party for Festival

Festival’s/First European Cruises’ three newest ships were arrested this week – Mistral, European Vision, and European Stars – due to the company’s “failure to meet its contractual financial obligations,” according to a press release from ALSTOM, the ships’ financial backer and parent company of shipbuilder Chantiers de l’Atlantique, where the ships were built.

The Mistral was halted in Marseilles and the European Vision was arrested in Barcelona, while the European Stars was taken over in Santo Domingo.

The line reportedly owes its financers 176 million euros. ALSTOM says that it has 100 percent interest on Mistral, 9.5 percent on European Vision and 10.5 percent on European Stars.

According to Festival, the company has been in negotiations for weeks with ALSTOM and Credit Agicole to resolve the situation, but discussions were terminated abruptly two days ago. However, the line said it hopes to reach a resolution in the next couple of days.

Swapping Pride

     Last week Norwegian Cruise Line’s Pride of America partially sank in Lloyd Werft shipyard in Germany while under construction due to stormy weather and high winds.

     Initially the line wasn’t sure of the damage and if the delivery of the ship would be delayed, but NCL has announced that there will be “substantial delay – months rather than weeks.”
So the line has decided to introduce the 2,000-guest Pride of Aloha – currently sailing as the Norwegian Sky – early so that its NCL America brand will launch on time. Originally scheduled to debut in the fall, Pride of Aloha now will take over the Pride of America’s published cruises of seven-day inter-island Hawaii cruises beginning this July 4th. The ship will undergo a multi-million dollar remodeling in May and be reflagged into the U.S. registry to debut in June with California Coastal cruises.

     “This unfortunate event has certainly challenged us and there is a great deal to be done to ensure our passengers receive the vacation they have planned in spite of what has happened,” said Colin Veitch, president and CEO of NCL. “While this is certainly a hurdle in the process, we will not be deterred from launching our U.S. Flag operation this year and ensuring the continued employment of the 1,000 plus U.S. seafarers who have already been hired. Reversing the order of the two ships allows us to do this.

     Guests booked on Pride of America will be rebooked on Pride of Aloha. Those guests booked on the Norwegian Sky’s summer Alaska cruises will be rebooked on another ship in Alaska as well.

     The line has plans to move Pride of America passengers to equivalent cabins and sailing dates on Pride of Aloha. If an equivalent cabin type is not available, NCL will offer passengers a new applicable price, a future cruise credit certificate, and an air discount for Air/Sea guest. Guests who choose not to transfer to Pride of Aloha will receive a full refund.

     Here’s a glimpse at the Pride of Aloha’s slated schedule:
 

bullet

May 17, 2004 -- The ship enters 21-day drydock;

bullet

June 7-11, 2004 – Will sail a new California Coastal itinerary beginning in San Francisco with calls in Monterey, Santa Barbara, San Diego and ending in Los Angeles

bullet

June 13-18, 2004 - Will sail Pride of America's previously published Pacific Coastal from Los Angeles to San Francisco with calls in San Diego, Catalina Island, Santa Barbara and Monterey.

bullet

June 20-July 3, 2004 - Pride of America's previously published12-day Escape to Hawaii sailing from San Francisco to Honolulu with calls in Monterey, Calif.; Hilo, Kona, overnights in Maui and Kaua`i and Honolulu

bullet

July 4, 2004 and beyond - Pride of Aloha will sail seven-day inter-island cruises from Honolulu with an overnight in Kauai`i, a call in Hilo and Kona on the Big Island of Hawaii, and an overnight in Maui.

     When the new delivery date of Pride of America is known, NCL will announce the combined deployment of the two NCL America ships.

Tahitian All Around


     Princess Cruises is trying to give guests sailing on its Tahiti cruises a Tahitian experience from beginning to end.

     The line has teamed up with Air Tahiti Nui to offer passengers sailing in French Polynesia a flexible flight schedule as well as the airline’s Polynesian-style service and amenities. As of May 5, 2004, all Pacific Princess passengers who purchase air through Princess’ FlightChoice program as part of their cruise package will be booked on Air Tahiti Nui’s new A340-300 aircraft.
The aircraft has in-seat video displays and video games. The company also has interline luggage transfers for passengers with connecting flights.

     The 670-passenger Tahitian Princess offers round-trip, 10-day sailings from Papeete year-round. Itineraries include Polynesia, the Marquesas, and the Cook Islands. The Pacific Princess sails seasonally in the South Pacific Islands, including Hawaii and Western Samoa.

QM2 Out & About

     It’s official!  Cunard Line’s highly anticipated 151,400-ton Queen Mary 2 is packed with passengers and sailing the Atlantic Ocean.  With all of the hoopla leading up to the ship’s big arrival, you’d think it was the second coming of the Titanic.

     The 2,620-guest QM2 was named in Southampton during a ceremony on January 8, by Her Majesty The Queen. According to Cunard, more than 2,000 guests — including prominent figures from politics, the services, entertainment and the arts — attended the ceremony, which was hosted by British broadcaster Michael Buerk.

     “Queen Mary 2 is a transatlantic liner with all the dignity and grace of the liners of the past, but she is also a transatlantic liner of the future with comforts and technology undreamt of when Queen Elizabeth 2 was launched,” announced the line’s President Pamela Conover, during the event.

     As the largest, longest (1,132 feet), tallest (236.2 feet), widest (135 feet) and most expensive ($800 million) ocean liner every built, the ship has 10 dining venues with popular Chef Daniel Boulud serving as Cunard’s culinary advisor and Chef Todd English operating a Mediterranean specialty restaurant of the same name. The liner also has the only Canyon Ranch SpaClub at sea and the world’s first planetarium at sea, as well as duplex staterooms, a Veuve Clicquot Champagne Bar, a two-story theater, a casino, five indoor and outdoor swimming pools, hot tubs, boutiques and children’s facilities complete with British nannies.

     QM2 set off on its 14-day maiden voyage from Southampton to Ft. Lauderdale on January 12. During its inaugural year, the vessel will sail 13 transatlantic crossings between Southampton and New York — taking over the Queen Elizabeth 2’s schedule.

QM2 will spend the winter in the Caribbean, with cruises from Ft. Lauderdale to Cartagena, Curacao, and St. Thomas, and also will visit Rio de Janeiro during Carnival. In April, the ship will make its maiden six-day eastbound transatlantic crossing in tandem with the QE2, marking the first time two “Queens” have been berthed in the port together since March 1940.

      In July and August, QM2 will take a brief break from its transatlantic schedule and sail to the Mediterranean, with visits to Greece, Spain and Italy. 

According to Cunard, QM2 is:

~ 113 feet longer than the original Queen Mary
~ More than twice as long as the Washington Monument is tall (550 ft.)
~ 47 feet longer than the Eiffel Tower is tall (984 ft.)
~ More than 3 ½ times as long as Westminster Tower (Big Ben) is high (310 ft.)
~ Only 117 feet shorter than the Empire State Building is tall (1,248 ft.)
~ As long as 41 double-decker London buses (31 ½ ft. each)

And its whistle can be heard within a 10-mile radius.

Titanic who?

Viking Adds More Sailings

     Viking River Cruises has announced that in response to many sold-out sailings, it has added two more sail dates to its “Eastern European Odyssey,” a 14-night itinerary along the Danube River from Budapest to the Black Sea and returning to Vienna. The newly-added August 21 sailing will be a reverse itinerary from Vienna to Budapest, while the September 4 sailing will sail from Budapest to Vienna. Prices for both dates start at $3,059 per person. Call your travel agent or 1-877-66VIKING or visit www.vikingrivercruises.com