Cruise 184
When I was in high school, I had a
teacher who would give higher grades on book reviews if you savaged
the book. He equated negative comments with critical thinking.
Alas, I am about to disppoint my old
school master because I do not have anything negative to say about my
recent cruise on Regal Princess. Quite to the contrary, it was an
extremely well done cruise.
The cruise was a seven day voyage out
of Fort Lauderdale to Princess Cays, St. Thomas and St. Maarten.
Thus, it included Princess Cruises' private island and two of the
most popular Caribbean cruise ports. I've been to these ports many
times now so the itinerary did not have the virtue of novelty. But,
at the same time, these places are familiar to me and so I know how
to structure my days there so as to have a good time.
Therefore, the focus of this cruise
was on the ship. Regal Princess is the second ship to be built in
her class. Royal Princess was the first. A third one is on order
for Princess. P&O Cruises' forthcoming Britannia is being built
to the same design.
Regal Princess is a large ship and I
find her quite spacious. She has a better passenger space ratio than
the mainstays of the Princess fleet, the Grand and Super Grand class
ships. Thus, I did not find her at all crowded.
On Royal Princess, one problem with
the people flow has been long waits for elevators particularly at the
midship elevator bank. This is primarily due to the fact that the
stairs by these elevators do not run all the way up through the ship and so more people
have to use the elevators. While Regal also lacks a midship
passenger staircase, adjustments have been made to the elevators
programming and I did not experience much in the way of delays.
Another adjustment that has been made
is in the theater. On Royal, each row of seats extends all the way
to the wall so that people have to go up or down via the central
aisles. On Regal, space has been allowed between the seats and the
walls so that guests can go up or down that way as well. This seems
to have created a better passenger flow.
The larger size of this class of ship
allowed Princess to add several new venues. Of these, Princess Live
is the most memorable. It is a television studio which serves as the
venue for lectures, game shows, and various other activities. Such
activities are common on cruise ships but having them in a studio
with cameras and monitors lends them a sense of excitement. Also,
the sight lines in this intimate room are quite good.
The size also allowed Princess to
expand the size of some venues. This is nowhere more apparent than
in the Piazza, the ship's central atrium. It has now become a grand
room. In addition, whereas some entertainment was presented in the
Piazza on earlier Princess ships, this larger Piazza lets the concept
blossom so that this truly can be called an entertainment venue.
As far as décor, it would be
difficult to tell the Piazza on Regal Princess from the one of Royal
Princess. It is Princess' philosophy to make ships of the same class
nearly identical in décor so that passengers returning to the line
will have a sense of familiarity regardless of which ship they book.
Whatever the merits of that philosophy, the décor of the Piazza on
Royal is so spectacular, it demanded that it be used again on Regal
Princess.
Of course, the hardware only
contributes so much to making a great cruise. In my experience,
Princess consistently provides good service. Of course, you can
always run into someone who is a jerk or who is having a bad day but
as a general finding the people serving on the Princess ships seem
genuinely interested in ensuring that the passengers have a good
time. In addition, the cruise lines usually assign their top people
to bring out a ship. By the time of my cruise, the ship had also
been in service long enough to have gotten any kinks out.
Consequently, the service was very good with no negative incidents.
How was the food? It is of course my
personal taste but I always like the food on Princess and Regal
Princess did not let the side down. A favorite venue for me is
Alfredo's Pizzeria. This is a restaurant specializing in gourmet
individual pizzas. They are made and cooked as ordered. At the
beginning of a cruise, people walk by but do not enter. They either
assume that there will be an additional charge because it looks like
a specialty restaurant or that they can get pizza up by the pool.
There is no additional charge and while you can get pizza by the
pool, you can't get this pizza by the pool. As word gets around the
ship about what Alfredo's is really about, it gets busier and busier.
By the end of the cruise, it is tough to get a table at lunctime.
So let's keep this between ourselves.
Entertainment was very good. High
points were the shows by the Beatles tribute group Beatlemaniacs and the Sixties
deck party in which the production cast performed along with the
fountains on the pool deck. I also enjoyed the enrichment program.
This included two authors, Sarah Jio and Claire Bidwell Smith, who
spoke about their work and writing. Princess executive Chis Joly
packed Princess Live with a talk on how cruise ships are built. On a cruise that involved three sea days, a good enrichment program is
essential.
This week on Beyondships we present
part one of our profile of Regal Princess.
http://beyondships.com/Princess-RE-Profile.html
This includes a photo tour of the interior of the ship.
http://beyondships.com/Princess-RE-Tour-1.html
as well as a daily programs page with Princess Patters and other
inormational leaflets distributed aboard Regal Princess.
http://www.beyondships2.com/regal-princess-daily-programs.html
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