Propulsion Problems, Again
Celebrity Cruises has encountered more problems with the
propulsion system onboard its Millennium-class ships. This time
it’s on the Infinity.
The ship needs to go into dry dock to have the system’s
thrust-bearing units replaced. Instead of canceling the ship’s
sailings, the line has moved them to the Millennium.
Two Panama Canal cruises on March 28 and April 11 will take
place on the Millennium instead of the Infinity. Consequently,
the Millennium’s March 28 sailing to the eastern Caribbean has
been canceled.
When the Infinity re-enters service, it will sail the
Millennium’s itineraries for three voyages to the Caribbean on
April 4, 11, and 18. The two ships will return to their normal
itineraries April 25.
Guests booked on the cancelled sailing will receive a full
refund and a voucher for a free Celebrity cruise to the
Caribbean, of seven nights or less, that concludes before
November 30, 2005.

Love Letters at Sea
Seabourn
Cruise Line is giving its guests “Love Letters.” Not
hand-written ones, of course, but the actual play.
Husband-and-wife actors Michael Tucker and Jill Eikenberry will
perform the romantic two-act play Love Letters aboard the
Seabourn Legend during an April 18th Mediterranean cruise.
The actors who gained fame as odd-couple attorneys on
television's 'L.A. Law,' are participating in Seabourn's Dress
Circle onboard enrichment program, which gathers celebrities and
experts from a variety of fields to the line's three all-suite
vessels.
The seven-day cruise will depart from Lisbon and sail the
Iberian Peninsula including calls at Gibraltar and the Spanish
ports of Malaga (for Granada), Cartagena, Alicante and
Barcelona.

Game Time
Going on a Holland America cruise this month and worried you
won’t be able to catch the March Madness basketball games?
Don’t fret!
All of the line’s 12 ships will broadcast the 2004 NCAA Division
I Men’s Basketball Tournament, which begin mid-March and wrap up
on April 3rd and 5th with the Final Four Championship Games
taking place in Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.
Due to a partnership the line has with ESPN International,
Holland America Line will carry games live via satellite to its
fleet of ships, and will be broadcast in public areas including
lounges, bars and cafes throughout the ship, with a number of
special game-watching parties planned.

Numbers Prove
Popularity of Cruises
Every year
cruises become more and more popular — and we have the numbers
to prove it.
According to
Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA), last year’s
number of cruise vacationers increased by 10.2 percent over
those in 2002.
Are you ready?
In 2003, a
record 9.52 million worldwide guests sailed on a cruises. In
2002, that number was 8.6 million.
But that’s not
all.
In addition to
the worldwide totals, CLIA’s member lines — representing 97.5
percent of the cruise capacity marketed in North America — also
proved significant growth in the number of guests originating in
North America.
Nearly 8 million
North Americans sailed aboard CLIA member line ships in 2003, a
6.9 percent increase compared with the nearly 7.5 million who
cruised in 2002.
“The industry’s
impressive 2003 passenger totals demonstrate the broad appeal of
cruise vacations and the CLIA member lines’ continuing efforts
to improve our guests’ shipboard experience and to respond
quickly to their changing vacation desires,” said Mark Conroy,
CLIA’s chairman and president and CEO of Radisson Seven Seas
Cruises. “Cruising flourished despite significant obstacles that
challenged the entire travel community in 2003, including SARS,
terrorism fears and an uncertain economy.”
By the end of
this year, CLIA member lines will have introduced 12 new ships.
In 2003, 15 vessels were introduced, and in 2002, 13 new ships
entered the market. That’s 40 new ships in three years!
The 2004 ship
introductions represent a record number of berths (26,687 in
2004 versus 21,273 in 2003 and 21, 074 in 2002) because of the
number of large ships coming out this year.
“We could
anticipate another record year in 2004, with approximately 10.6
million guests,” said Conroy, assuming that industry occupancy
remains at current levels.


Put Your Face on a
Stamp
Nowadays you
don’t have to be Elvis Presley or Audrey Hepburn to have your
face on a stamp. Especially if you’re a guest on Holland
America Line’s Rotterdam.
The line
recently launched “Personal Postage” aboard the ship’s 10-day
Panama Canal cruises. The new product of Post Nederlandse
Antillean, the postal administration for the Netherland
Antilles, allows cruise passengers to mail postcards and letters
with legal stamps imprinted with their faces for delivery
anywhere in the world from any Netherland Antilles port. The
Rotterdam visits Curaçao
on the Panama Canal itineraries. “You don’t have to be famous to
have a stamp published in your honor,” said David A. Giersdorf,
executive vice president, marketing and sales. “Now Holland
America Line guests aboard the
Rotterdam can surprise family and friends with letters
that have the guests own image printed right on the stamp.”
The set of ten
(10) “peel and stick” stamps and are printed on an 8 ½” x 11”
presentation sheet designed in full color, and cost $20.95 per
sheet. The ten stamps are personalized with the guest’s favorite
photo and are printed against a painted background of Dutch
Curaçao, the Rotterdam
or a map of the Netherlands Antilles.
Pretty cool!
Guests can use a
picture taken onboard, or one they brought from home in digital
or print format. According to Holland America, the entire
production process takes about a minute.
Mail can be
deposited onboard at the Reception Desk, in the Photo Gallery
mailbox or at any post box or post office in the Netherland
Antilles, including Bonaire, Curaçao, Saba, St. Maarten and St.
Eustatius.


Paying the Price
Cunard Line’s
Queen Mary 2 has hardy
been sailing two months, and the line has already implemented a
charge for the initially included dining experience at the
156-seat Todd English restaurant onboard.
Starting March 6
guests will have to pay a per person charge of $20 for lunch and
$30 for dinner at the reservations-only venue.
According to the
line’s spokesperson, Julie Davis, “Todd English has been
extremely popular and the demand was so high that the charge was
implemented to allow all guests the opportunity to experience
the restaurant.”
Todd English
serves up Mediterranean cuisine.


Name Change
Nordic Empress
soon will no longer be the odd one
out of Royal Caribbean International’s fleet.
The 10-year-old
ship will adopt the same “of the Seas” name that distinguishes
the rest of Royal Caribbean’s vessels.
The re-named
Empress of the Seas will
also emerge from a refurbishment this May with extensive
renovations before it arrives at its new homeport of Cape
Liberty Cruise Port in Bayonne, New Jersey, to begin six- and
eight-night Bermuda cruises.
According to the
line, the 1,602-passenger ship’s facelift will extend to every
area of the ship, including the addition of dining and
entertainment options as well as an expanded fitness area.
Empress of the
Seas will gain the line’s
Italian-style alternative Portofino restaurant, an upgraded
Windjammer Café and main dining room, and the line’s Latte’tudes
coffee bar and ice cream shop serving Seattle’s Best Coffee
drinks and Ben & Jerry’s ice-cream. The ship’s ShipShape Fitness
Center and Day Spa will be expanded onto two levels.
More
entertainment venues will be available onboard, including the
line’s Latin-themed bar called Boleros, and the nautical-themed
Schooner Bar
Most importantly
to many passengers, the staterooms and bathrooms will be
upgraded and have new décor and increased storage space.


Adventurer In Libya
Clipper Cruise
Line is heading into North African territory next year. The line
says it plans to add Libya and other ports in the region to the
Clipper Adventurer’s
2005 schedule — an announcement that comes as a result of the
U.S. State Department’s decision last week to drop its travel
restrictions on Libya.
The ship will
drop previously slated calls in Spain, France, and Monte Carlo
during the 15-day “Antiquities of North Africa and the Italian
Mediterranean” cruise between Lisbon and Civitavecchia, with
visits to Tangier, Morocco; Tunis, Tunisia; Tarabulus (Tripoli),
Libya; Valetta, Malta; Porto Empedocle and Syracuse, Sicily; and
Sorrento, Italy.
The cruise
departs in May, but the line hasn’t released an exact departure
date yet.
Intrav,
Clipper’s parent company, doesn’t plan to stop experimenting
with new itineraries for the small-ship cruise line.
“In addition to
North Africa, we are also focusing our eyes toward Cuba, where
our ships and well-designed excursions can continue to offer
guests an intimate discovery in places previously off-limits,”
said CEO David Drier.
Not that
Americans will easily be able to travel there though!
