PDA

View Full Version : Quest Jan 5-19, 2008...AWESOME!


shawnregen
January 26th, 2008, 07:51 PM
Thought we'd add our review too, so people can have as much info as possible, as we are all looking for different things. We truly enjoyed our trip, and thought the Ship and Staff were just excellent! This was all a couple of notches above Celebrity (the food was several notch's above) and gave you a nicer experience without being too stuffy. So here goes...


Azamara Quest Jan 5-Jan 19, 2008

To start, I think some background will help give you our perspective. We are both in our mid-30's, no kids and have been on 4-5 cruises, all Celebrity to the Caribbean and were on this vacation to "do nothing." The ports were not particularly important to us as we were not coming to experience the culture, but to relax and be warm for two weeks (we are from very Northern Maine, where the temp was -16 the day before we left and -30 the morning after we returned and we've had over 6 feet of snow so far this season.) Our one hobby outside of traveling is eating and we have been known to fly somewhere for a weekend for the sole purpose of eating at a particular restaurant. So food is important to us. We have only sailed Celebrity because we really like the brand. Every time we go we consider the other lines, but end up staying with Celebrity as we are worried we will be disappointed with the service/food on the others. Since Azamara was an offshoot of Celebrity we figured we'd be ok, and we were.

So the Quest…

Our trip down was fine. We used frequent flyer miles to get free tickets (always a plus) to Miami, and thankfully there were no problems with weather. We left on Jan 4, 2008 and had booked one night pre-cruise at the Marriott Biscayne Bay through Azamara. We arrived at the hotel around 7 PM and everything was in order for us. This hotel seems not to be walking distance to much, so at the hotels recommendation we took a cab to Bayside Marketplace to get dinner and do some last minute pre-cruise shopping (not to many shopping options in Caribou, Maine). We took the cruise line shuttle at 11:00 AM from the hotel to the pier, where we got a little nervous as there were several families with small children, but it turns out that the shuttle picked up for Azamara, Celebrity and RCCL, so only us a few older couples got off at the Azamara terminal. Phew! (There was only one child about 2 years old on our sailing, very well watched and behaved the couple of times I encountered him.)

Embarkation was a breeze, sign-in, turn in express pass, get keys, set-up specialty dining for that night (apparently to take some heat off the main dining room for the first night all the suite passengers on our sailing were offered an extra specialty dining night the first night in addition to the other 3 you now get), sanitized our hands began walking on board, stopped for requisite photo and we were in. We were greeted as we arrived, handed champagne and told we could put our things in our stateroom, but that they wouldn't be really ready until 1:00-1:30 and to head to the lunch buffet that was ready and available in Windows Café, deck 9. We went to our room, a Sky Suite 8044, dropped off our bags and went straight to eat (we had skipped breakfast and were quite hungry.)

At this point rather than a blow by blow account I think I'll describe each area (ie, food, spa, entertainment et cetera) with pluses and minuses (very few in our mind.)




ATMOSPHERE
The ship is beautiful. After having been only on Celebrity ships (and never Horizon or Zenith), this ship felt much smaller, but never crowded at just under 700 passengers. Our sailing was full. All the décor was very rich and tasteful, lots of nice little niche’s to spend time in. During the day everyone was fairly casual, at night a whole range of dress was found, from shorts and polo’s (up in the Breeza) to gowns and Tuxedo’s. People seemed to enjoy being comfortable (whatever that meant to them). The staff were all so pleasant, greeting you in the halls, welcoming you back from shore, saying hi on deck. There was no waiting for anything really. Getting tenders was easy. I never felt herded anywhere (do have this feeling occasionally, especially on the M-Class Celebrity ships) and best of all, essentially no second hand smoke. The overall feel was quite quiet. Several evenings we went to the big Looking Glass lounge and found only a few people there. There was certainly not happening night life. The casino always seemed very busy.

STATEROOM
We had a Sky Suite. They are all on Deck 8 I believe and under the pool deck. The room itself is was similar in size to a regular hotel room (obviously a little smaller, but with the undersized furniture it still felt roomy). You could occasionally hear chairs being moved around up on deck, but never did it interfere with anything, or did it go on more than several minutes. The TV was a nice swiveling flat screen and we did have a DVD player. The satellite very frequently got the sound and picture out of sync with one another, sometimes it was only a little out and not bothersome, other times it was very, very out of sync and hard to watch, and sometimes it was right on. I had my laptop and used the wireless, expensive and slower than cable, but faster than dial-up most of the time…that said it was nice to have the service in my room.

CRUISE CRITIC MEET AND GREET
It was actually a very nice get together, and there was not just the usual social hostess there, but the entire senior staff including the captain came. Everyone at the meeting agreed that we didn’t know which ship all the other Quest cruisers had been on before us (referring to all the bad reviews), but we felt like it was all going great, people were very pleased, and quite surprised at the turn out from the ship staff to this event. One person requested that the breakfast remain open a little later on sea days so that they could sleep in more, and the next sea day, breakfast hours were extended out at the pool grill for one more hour to accommodate the really late sleepers.

ENTERTAINEMENT
Our favorite thing was actually the Azamara Carbaret Singers, a group of five energetic performers who put on 3 shows during the 14 days. The Cabaret environment is much more personal and up close with the performers, but does limit the size of the productions. A pianist Naki Ataman was also excellent as was a Broadway singer Jordan Bennett. There was also a comedian, and a couple of other acts that we didn’t go see so I can’t comment. I heard from others that they were good too though.

There was a full slate of all the usual cruise activities each day, trivia, name that tune, wine tasting, culinary demonstrations, lectures, games, table tennis, shuffleboard et cetera.

THE SPA
This was a very nice (and very expensive) place. The thalassotherapy deck up front is small, but very comfortable and great to get away from all the chair hogs on the main deck (yes, they were on here too, the species seems pervasive and irrepressible). I had two hot stone massages, that were awesome. The area is beautiful as the rest of the ship and kept up nicely. The fitness area is also here, and it had a few bikes, treadmills and elliptical sans well as several weight machines and a open floor for classes. There were also Spin bikes. All the classes )yoga, pilates, spin) were only able to take 5 -8 people and filled very quickly the first day. Again, as in the rest of the ship the staff is just great.

FOOD
The Windows Café/Breeza - The buffet area is small (everything is smaller on this ship) but had a nice selection. The set-up is buffet style, there are waitstaff all over the place, you can sit inside or out on the back deck. Waiters will usually come by and get your beverages for you, but if the person in your area is off getting someone else's beverage when you sit down or otherwise involved you can also get your own ( big minus = people sitting at their table in a huff ticked that no one has come to get them coffee when there is a coffee urn 3 feet from them and they can serve themselves) The waitstaff are very helpful and friendly, and if someone knows you from the main dining room they tend to go out of their way to be extra helpful. It only occasionally felt "very" busy in there, and maybe three times we had to wait to get a table cleared to have somewhere to sit. We ate there everyday for breakfast and lunch and 4-6 times for dinner.

At breakfast there is a waffle/pancake station made to order, made to order omelette station, eggs, bacon, sausage, potatoes, corned beef hash, selection of fruits (pineapple, honeydew, cantaloupe, watermelon, grapefruit, oranges, apples, mixed fruit salad, berries) cold meats, cheeses, all kinds of pastries, yogurt, granola, oatmeal or cream of wheat and probably a couple of other things I am forgetting.

At lunch there are 3 cold salads, 3 main hot entrée's plus sides, a carving station, make your own salad station, soup, make your own sandwich station, pizza, desserts and ice cream.

At dinner the place gets called Windows Breeza, but is same venue. There is pizza, made to order stir fry, 3 entrée's plus sides, usually 2 soups, salad bar, pasta bar, sushi bar, and carving station.

To drink for free there is lemonade, cranberry juice, orange juice apple juice, ice tea, hot tea, coffee and milk. (Varies slightly depending on meal)

The major pluses for this venue, are that it is quick, easy and has the very nice back deck to eat on. In the evening we enjoyed sitting there to have a drink at the Sunset bar regardless of whether or not we were eating dinner there. The only minus (except for obnoxious lazy passengers who couldn't get their own drinks) was even though there was a nice selection of things that I thought were all pretty tasty it did get repetitive after 14 days (many of the cold salads repeated several times etc) particularly at lunch, when on Port days your only other option was the pool grill (main dining room was only open for lunch on sea days).


Pool Grill - Was open from 12-6 everyday, had lunch there one day, all the usual grill stuff, plus tacos, and a side station with the same salads available in Windows. Taco was good, enjoyed a plate of fries as a snack many afternoons, yummy! Also, noticed nachos some days.

Mosaics Café – This area sold high end teas and coffees to drink there or to go and had little bites available all day, pastry in the AM, little sandwiches from lunch through afternoon and “tapas” through dinner. This area was right in the center of everything and was frequently used during the day for various activities (trivia, games, name that tune, et cetera.)

Discoveries Dining Room - Generally open for breakfast and dinner on our sailing, open for lunch on sea days only. Open seating. In the 5 nights we ate there only one night did we have to wait for a table for two. There was always a small line when we arrived (two or three other groups.) The Maitre'd took your room number and table preference and then sat you, so this could take a minute or two to accomplish for each group, but the wait was brief. Because each table in a section could be at a different point in dining, things are a little more hectic feeling with open seating, than with assigned seating (I think the staff like assigned seating better), but the food is mostly cooked al ‘minute and is significantly better than on Celebrity in our opinion. Had heard some coments about the beef, being badly cooked, ours was always cooked to our order (mine med rare and hubby’s medium), but did talk to one couple who had a “charred” piece.

The major plus for this dining room is that it is open seating, you can go when you want, eat with who you want. The caviar service was excellent. The major minus is that it is open seating so if everyone wants to go at the same time and everyone wants a table for two someone is going to have to wait. The waiting was no problem for us (its that way at any chain restaurant in the US all the time, and most of that food is terrible to boot) but we heard many people complaining about this.

The two specialty restaurants worked the same – Reservations needed, you got to pick the time. Prime C is a steak house and Aqualina was American with a Mediterranean flair. The menus are posted on CC and on Azamara’s website. The service was very good. Atmosphere quiet and relaxed in both. We got to go to each twice with no extra charge.

On the whole the food was excellent. We thought it was comparable to a nice restaurant (3 stars, certainly much better than say Olive Garden or that sort of thing). Particularly with 14 day itinerary it was very nice to have 4 dining selections each evening.

There are as usual, bars all over the ship, and people circulating too. The nicest improvement from the last time we were on Celebrity, was that we didn’t ever get pestered by the circulating drink waiters. By the pool, they just walked by and only stopped if you approached them. In the Cabaret and at dinner, they came by once, and left you alone. The last 2 times on Celebrity the circulating waiters were very bothersome, pushing the drinks. This was an excellent improvement.

PORTS
As I mentioned early in this overly long report, we didn’t really care about the ports. In most of the places we got off the boat took a quick walk around and went back to chill out and read. The thing to know is that they were mostly “developing ports” so you definitely had to be a little more adventurous to get around and do things if you didn’t take ships tours. It was refreshing to get off and NOT see a Diamonds International, Columbian Emeralds et cetera in every port. We did spend the whole day on St. John and on St. Barth’s , both very nice islands with beautiful beaches and good food. St. John also has some nice shopping (and a Columbian Emeralds for anyone in withdrawl). St. Barth’s has very, very nice shopping, like you are in Paris shopping, so unless you have lots of expendable cash (its all priced in Euros to add to the pain) its window shopping only. Even window shopping made my wallet catch on fire!

OVERALL
We loved it! Would go again in a heartbeat. By the end of two weeks many of the staff (not just you Butler, but bartenders, activity staff, waiters, security) knew you. It was relaxing to an extreme degree for us, everything on our time, our schedule, our way and we got lucky with great weather too. A truly wonderful trip.

Spender Nui
January 26th, 2008, 08:44 PM
Great and objective review. Thanks for the information.

Host Andy
January 26th, 2008, 08:56 PM
Hi Shawnregen !

Thank you for your outstanding review. I truly hope you submit your review to Cruise Critic, as they are looking for Azamara reviews. It sounds like you had a wonderful time. Here is the link, for further information :

http://boards.cruisecritic.com/showthread.php?t=571560

After reading your review, I am just about ready to book Journey for next year, as she will be in the Caribbean instead of Quest.

Thanks again, and welcome home !

factor30
January 27th, 2008, 07:06 AM
Thank you for a fantastic review. It brings back so beautifully all our memories of our 24 Nov 07 Caribbean cruise on Quest, and reliving it all over again. We're now very much looking forward to our forthcoming Mediterranean cruise on Quest in June. As far as I can remember, the very talented group of cabaret singers told us their contract ended in April 08 so we'll look forward to more talented performers to entertain us.

Rita

Gadgetguru
January 27th, 2008, 08:30 AM
shawnregen

Thank you for your review. I was wondering which day did they set up your meet and greet?

Thank you in advance for your response .

shawnregen
January 27th, 2008, 08:48 AM
Our meet and greet was set up on our second sea day which was Monday, January 7 (so our second day not counting embarkation in MIA). One of our online group, Sandy R5, (her great review is on this board as well) went to the loyalty rep and gave her a list of those of us who had been corresponding online, and got it set-up. There is currently no mechanism to set these up before sailing, like with Celebrity.

Gadgetguru
January 27th, 2008, 08:52 AM
Our meet and greet was set up on our second sea day which was Monday, January 7 (so our second day not counting embarkation in MIA). One of our online group, Sandy R5, (her great review is on this board as well) went to the loyalty rep and gave her a list of those of us who had been corresponding online, and got it set-up. There is currently no mechanism to set these up before sailing, like with Celebrity.

Thank you for the information, I will be acting as our liaison for our group.

Bob

shawnregen
January 27th, 2008, 09:13 AM
Hope your trip is wonderful!

safein
January 28th, 2008, 06:04 PM
Hi Regan!

Glad to see you had a great time. I'm really interested in Azamara, especially since they do call in NYC.

See you on the Millie thread!

Anita

marytexas
January 29th, 2008, 01:10 PM
Thanks so much for your review. We're going to be on the Quest May 24 and are looking forward to it. As we really don't have a lot of info on Azamara and the web site is not that helpful, your review helped.

shawnregen
January 30th, 2008, 06:54 PM
MaryTexas - If you have any specific questions I didn't addess I'd be happy to try and answer them. Otherwise I hope you have as nice a trip as we did.

Luckyladym
February 1st, 2008, 12:45 PM
Thank you, Shawnregan, Sandy R5, and Ed Green for your reviews. Makes it so easy for me just to join in and say "ditto."

Just a few things that I would like to add...the CC get- together was by far the best we have ever attended. The ship's officers who attended were terrific, and the additional hour for breakfast on the sea days was an indication that they were paying attention. Special thanks to Heike, the Hotel Director. Same to Becky, the Cruise Director, for listening later in the Cruise to our suggestion to have Jordan Bennett return for another night.

Don't you think that this itinerary was most ideal for those who love the beach, snorkeling and soaking in the sun? There was little of an educational or cultural nature for those of us who crave that sort of things. Some more diverse lecturers would have been a great additiion.

We also were in a Sky Suite and we definitely had two people assigned to our cabin. I wouldn't call either one a "butler" but one of them certainly was there to help in any way possible, and the other appeared to be more a part of housekeeping.

We found the one weak link to be the Captain's Club and Future Cruise person.
One person wearing two hats....perhaps each area deserves their own individual and then both functions would operate appropriately. Captain's Club is really Non-Existant on this vessel, and future cruises are made very difficult to book.

Would we cruise Azamara again? Absolutely ! !

Marilyn

Host Andy
February 1st, 2008, 01:27 PM
Just a few things that I would like to add...the CC get- together was by far the best we have ever attended. The ship's officers who attended were terrific, and the additional hour for breakfast on the sea days was an indication that they were paying attention. Special thanks to Heike, the Hotel Director. Same to Becky, the Cruise Director, for listening later in the Cruise to our suggestion to have Jordan Bennett return for another night.


We found the one weak link to be the Captain's Club and Future Cruise person.
One person wearing two hats....perhaps each area deserves their own individual and then both functions would operate appropriately. Captain's Club is really Non-Existant on this vessel, and future cruises are made very difficult to book.

Would we cruise Azamara again? Absolutely ! !

Marilyn

Hi Marilyn !

I agree that Heike Cramer is wonderful. I have sailed with Heike previously. We had Andrea as our Cruise director on Quest, and we thought he was excellent as well. I hope we sail with Heike and Andrea again in the future !

I was curious, who was the Captains Club hostess ? We werent very happy with the person on our sailings, as she initially refused to arrange a CC meet and greet, saying "we dont do that here". When I was persistant, she said yes, but did absolutely nothing to assist. I had to do everything on my own. When we met at the library on the day and time she assigned us, it was being used by TA's on the ship. In her defense, it was the first sailing, so that would proabably explain why she was overwhelmed. Still, her attitude left a lot to be desired. I agree there should be 2 people in this position, especially someone to handle future bookings. When I asked the CC Hostess about a future sailing, she handed me a piece of paper, and asked me to come back some other time, as she "was busy". She had 2 bookings in her hands (totalling well over $10,000), and she blew it. IMHO, you should never do that to a customer, especially someone who has interest in spending more money on Azamara. That's very bad customer service.

Napi's Mom
February 1st, 2008, 04:41 PM
The young lady did indeed seem to not know what was going on said that she was the person to contact about the meetings...so I left my list with her, luckily we met Becky Fields the next morning,(as we waited to deal with our private tour people who weren't going to get to see Jamacia, good thing we didn't pay in advance!) and asked her how the process was going, and she had heard NOTHING about it, so she took over and did a great job, and also planned with us Cruise Cr. people to do Xmas carols...even printed booklets of songs , got a piano player (from band) and invited the whole ship!! But the future cruise desk was frequently empty, and as you said the Capt. Club was pretty much not there...which was OK with many of us aboard not being new to Azamara and Celeb. and had no membership anyway. Right now I should be able to get a membership but Azamara seems to have no record of us having sailed with the ??? I should call as their website is screwed up always...but hate to phone!

shawnregen
February 1st, 2008, 09:00 PM
If the pre-printed name at the bottom of my booking form is correct the CC loyalty rep/future sales rep on our sailing was Jennifer Prince. We booked The solstice while on board, but it took several trips to that desk to find her there and able to help us. Her posted hours in the daily were usually like 4-7pm and some days also 10-Noon if I recall correctly. She was pleasant enough, but not as outstanding as most of the rest of the crew we encountered.

Luckyladym
February 2nd, 2008, 02:13 PM
Yes, Andy, her name is Jennifer Prince. It seems that she was preoccupied with other things and really didn't want to be bothered with future bookings. I have expressed my opinions to all that I have dealt with in regard to our bookings since our return home.

It might be important for guests who are making future bookings directly with the cruise line while onboard to know that there is a now a TRANSFER form that has to be signed and completed if you decide to transfer to a TA. In past years, a phone call would suffice. Now it has to be in writing and signed. The Future Cruise person should provide one of those forms to those who have not chosen a TA as yet in case they decide to do so. Of course, some people always use the same TA so it does not present a problem...but for those of us who are not computer savvy or do not have a printer, it is a real problem.

Happy to hear that Becky came to the rescue for some. We just didn't think that she was as strong and "take charge" as many of our previous cruise directors.

Happy sailing,
Marilyn

JBeaune
February 3rd, 2008, 03:41 PM
Do you mean that there is no Exclusive Captains Club Party, Complimentry Wine Tasting, private Event for Select and Elite Members, priority tendering, etc. How can that be when their site indicates that you will get the benefits on Azamara? Joan

greeneg
February 3rd, 2008, 07:41 PM
Do you mean that there is no Exclusive Captains Club Party, Complimentry Wine Tasting, private Event for Select and Elite Members, priority tendering, etc. How can that be when their site indicates that you will get the benefits on Azamara? Joan


Joan, that's essentially correct. There was a Cruise Critic party on the second day at sea which was very nice, but other than the onerous coupon booklet and that the fact that your Seapass card identified you as an Elite ( or whatever) Member there were no Captain's Club Perks.

I think that Azamara is still working those things out and hopefully this will change in the Near Future. Otherwise, why bother with a loyalty program?

shawnregen
February 3rd, 2008, 08:22 PM
Actually there was a captains club party with the officers during the second week in the Looking Glass Lounge at 5:30pm, and there was a wine tasting. We were notified of these events at the beginning of the cruise in a letter placed in our stateroom. They were not otherwise advertised and there were no reminders. There was no priority tendering or departure lounge. Though it was so "uncrowded" there really was no need for priority tendering.

greeneg
February 3rd, 2008, 08:59 PM
Well, all I can say is that we were not notified of either which explains why we didn't attend either.......or didn't know about them until now.

Process certainly needs improvement.

JBeaune
February 3rd, 2008, 10:47 PM
Thanks for your replies. I am leaving on the Quest the 16 of Feb so I will see first hand if things have changed regarding Captain Club activities. Joan