Sunday, October 18, 2009

Talking with the Captain and Hotel Director of Jewel of the Seas




Captain James MacDonald was Jewel of the Seas first captain and has spent most of the last five years with the ship. Hotel Director Robert Taggart has only been with the ship for more than a year. Still, talking to both men one quickly sees that they regard Jewel as a special ship.

As a master mariner, Captain MacDonald’s focus was naturally on what makes Jewel special from a nautical perspective. Amongst other things, he pointed out her unique environmentally-friendly power plant and talked about her state-of-the-art propulsion that gives the ship the ability to obtain speeds rare for a cruise ship.

Mr. Taggart started his career on the Canadian Pacific liner Princess Patricia, which ship buffs will recall was the first ship sailed by Princess Cruises. His prior experience also includes time with Carnival and on the big Royal Caribbean ships including Adventure of the Seas. Thus, he has seen a great deal of the cruise industry. Yet, he sees Jewel’s spacious and elegant style as something unusual.

My interview with Captain McDonald appears at http://beyondships.com/RCI-JOS-MacDonald.html while my talk with Mr. Taggart is at http://beyondships.com/RCI-JOS-Taggart.html

Some items in the news that caught my eye which I thought I would pass on:

Star Princess and Sun Princess delivered relief supplies to tsunami victims in Apia, Samoa and Pago Pago, American Samoa. Princess Cruises Community Foundation is also donating $10,000 to the Red Cross for relief efforts in Samoa and American Samoa. Captain Edward Perrin, who I interviewed when he was on Grand Princess http://beyondships.com/GrandPrincess-Perrin.html , was in command of the Star Princess’ efforts.

NCL has announced that Captain Trygve Vorren, currently of Norwegian Jade, and Captain Hakan Svedung, currently of Norwegian Dawn, will be the captains of the forthcoming 4,200 passenger Norwegian Epic. In addition, the Hotel Directors will be Klaus Lugmaier and Sean Wurmhoeringer. The ship is currently under construction in France and will be undergoing sea trials in January. Her inaugural cruises are scheduled for June and July.

NCL also took the opportunity to highlight some features of the new ship. Among these will be performances by the Blue Man group and a restaurant where cirque acrobats will perform during dinner. There will also be an ice bar where guests will don faux fur coats and drink at a bar made of ice. Outside, the Aqua Park will feature a giant water slide in which guests will slide down a tube into a basin, whirl around and then drop through another tube. It is a long way from the days when shuffleboard was the main outdoor entertainment on ships.

Speaking of innovation, Celebrity Cruises hosted an event this week to highlight its new Celebrity Life program. Traditionally, onboard activities have been an array of offerings each of which bore only a slight relation to the other. Under Celebrity Life, the onboard activities are grouped into unified concepts. In addition, there are members of the activities staff with specific responsibilities for the discovery (i.e. enrichment) activities, savor (culinary-related) activities and renew (spa and health-related) activities. Activities relating to each program are indicated by icons on the daily program and guests can choose to participate in as many or as few as they want. I’ll be having more on this in November, when Beyondships presents an interview with Celebrity Senior VP for Hotel Operations Lisa Lutoff-Perlo along with an update of the Celebrity Constellation section of the site.
Costa Cruises was in New York showcasing its new Canada-New England cruises with Costa Atlantica. We’ll be adding a section to Beyondships dedicated to Costa Atlantica soon.
Also in New York recently was Cunard’s Queen Victoria. The ship was doing a New York-New England-Canada cruise from the U.K. and did an overnight in New York. This gave me the opportunity to do an interview with my old friend Captain Ian McNaught while the ship was here. Cunard used Queen Victoria’s calls in the U.S. and Canada to emphasize how important it regards this market. QV will return in 2011 with a series of U.S. cruises, mostly on the west coast.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your blog is very interesting.

The Jewel of the Seas was here in Rockland a couple of weeks ago. A big event for Rockland, Maine! I'm sorry I wasn't able to get out to tour it. The weather wasn't very cooperative, either. But I hope to take a tour next year, if she returns.

Anonymous said...

By the way, your website is great too!