Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent excursions are usually nicer or at least cheaper. Go visit cruisecritic’s forums if you want any tips for a particular port or cruise.
That is correct. Plus if you miss your excursion due to your boat being late to dock you won't get a refund. If you book it through the cruise company you will.
This depends. There are very honorable independent excursion operators who will refund you. They detail this on their webpage. Independent is almost always cheaper and better, less crowded.
A refund of the excursion still leaves you standing on the dock as the ship pulls away. If you book through the cruise line they will get you to the next port to rebound the ship at their expense. Or so I’ve heard.
Anonymous wrote:Any advice for an Alaska cruise? Leaving from Seattle in two weeks. Just us grown ups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are preparing to embark on our first ever cruise and it feels daunting. I feel like I will forget something important or do something wrong, only to find out too late.
What general advice/tips would you give a first timer? Things you found out too late or wish you had known before you even left the house?
Pick another trip? They're crowded, people stuffing their faces all week, and the excursions are expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish I would’ve figured out how to smuggle in liquor.
Choose Disney. No smuggling needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent excursions are usually nicer or at least cheaper. Go visit cruisecritic’s forums if you want any tips for a particular port or cruise.
That is correct. Plus if you miss your excursion due to your boat being late to dock you won't get a refund. If you book it through the cruise company you will.
This depends. There are very honorable independent excursion operators who will refund you. They detail this on their webpage. Independent is almost always cheaper and better, less crowded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re leaving from a port in Florida, some locals will have arrived and started drinking long before you arrive right when the safety briefing begins
Even high-end cruise lines suffer this
And? how many safety briefings do you need? they are all the same
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent excursions are usually nicer or at least cheaper. Go visit cruisecritic’s forums if you want any tips for a particular port or cruise.
I thought you should never book independent excursions because if something happens and you don't get back to the boat in time the boat won't wait for you.
This is what I heard too. And, they are vetted - if you go out on your own you could end up with some shady excursion that’s dangerous/not regulated/under the table.
The excursions to see the Whakaari volcano in New Zealand (in 2019) were RCL vetted. Yet numerous people died or were horribly burned by the eruption. A cruise excursion is no guarantee that all will go well!
I’m pretty sure vetting a company won’t ensure that a freakin’ volcano won’t erupt on any give day![]()
Anonymous wrote:We are preparing to embark on our first ever cruise and it feels daunting. I feel like I will forget something important or do something wrong, only to find out too late.
What general advice/tips would you give a first timer? Things you found out too late or wish you had known before you even left the house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent excursions are usually nicer or at least cheaper. Go visit cruisecritic’s forums if you want any tips for a particular port or cruise.
I thought you should never book independent excursions because if something happens and you don't get back to the boat in time the boat won't wait for you.
That is correct. Plus if you miss your excursion due to your boat being late to dock you won't get a refund. If you book it through the cruise company you will.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I would’ve figured out how to smuggle in liquor.