Jump to content

njhorseman

Members
  • Posts

    26,439
  • Joined

Recent Profile Visitors

6,608 profile views

njhorseman's Achievements

20,000+ Club

20,000+ Club (6/15)

  1. When the St Regis hotel was built they were required to maintain and permit public access to the beach so it should be open.
  2. There will be taxi drivers available . They should look for a "Blue Flag" taxi driver...they're certified as tour guides.
  3. It's up to the police who are directing traffic that day. If the port is very busy, say a couple of large ships disembarking, they sometimes will not allow pick ups at the cruise terminal and require you to cross 12th Ave. You should be able to get a porter to take your luggage across the street...with a generous tip of course.
  4. No hotels offer shuttle service to the cruise terminal. You can actually walk to the cruise terminal from the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood. There are a Comfort Inn and a Holiday Inn Express on West 48th St. just a stone's throw from the cruise terminal, and if you want a fancier hotel Ink 48 is in the same area. Otherwise a taxi or Uber will be inexpensive as it will be a short trip. Price estimates are not possible without knowing exactly where you're staying.
  5. Assuming you'll be driving in the day before your departure check trinityreservations.com. They normally have several hotels available with packages that include a room, parking and shuttle service to and from the port. Nothing is free. If parking is included it's been baked into the price you're paying for the package, as will the transfers between the hotel and the port.
  6. NCL includes 150 minutes of wi-fi per cabin on a 7 day cruise. Of course the value of that wi-fi is built into the base fare, and if you want more or unlimited wi-fi you will have to pay extra. Anyone who thinks any business provides any amenity for "free" does have the foggiest idea of what they're talking about. The cost of any "free" amenity is built into the price of the products or services you buy from the business. The coffee shop on the corner with "free wi-fi' has built the cost of that wi-fi into the price of the cup of coffee you buy.
  7. Your only reasonable options from transportation between LGA and Cape Liberty are rideshare (Uber or Lyft) or a car service. Public transit between the two is impractical, requiring 5 or 5 different transportation mechanisms combining bus, multiple trains, and a taxi or uber ride at the end. It seems fairly obvious from reading the pp2f website that they only provide local shuttle service to and from their parking facilities in the immediate vicinity of each of the three airports, not service between airports.
  8. Assuming that you're flying into EWR there are a large variety of hotels near the airport. To narrow your search you might want look at a cluster of five hotels including an Embassy Suites, a Courtyard by Marriott and a Residence Inn located on International Boulevard in Elizabeth. The hotels are adjacent to The Mills at Jersey Gardens outlet mall and a couple of chain casual dining restaurants. They will all have complimentary shuttle service from the airport. The next day you can take Uber or a car service such as Carmel Limo from the hotel to the cruise terminal.
  9. Trinityreservations.com has park and cruise packages with transportation to/from the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal at some hotels near EWR.
  10. Yes, it's the "pirate ship" located at the Dockyard.
  11. It hardly matters whether you choose LGA or JFK. Pick the one that has the flight schedule that best meets your needs.
  12. Capital One is just the name of a bank. Their credit cards are either Visa or Mastercard branded so they're no different than any other Visa or Mastercard issued by any other US-based bank and are accepted anywhere in the world where Visa or Mastercard are accepted. I suspect the OP wants to use a Capital One card because many if not all of their cards don't charge a foreign transaction fee.
  13. Although it will probably take less, give yourself an hour. Traffic can be a mess at any time. Yes...use Uber.
  14. There are three cruise terminals in the port of New York: Manhattan, Brooklyn and Cape Liberty (which is actually in Bayonne NJ rather than NY City). Which one are you asking about? While there will be taxis available at all three the amount of time to get to LGA will vary, with Cape Liberty taking longer than the other two. If you're coming into Cape Liberty you don't want to use a taxi at all to go to LGA...Uber or a car service would be much better. In Manhattan you should cross 12th Av and pick up a taxi there, as @navybankerteacher said, but in Brooklyn the taxis will be available within the confines of the cruise port grounds. At either cruise terminal even doing self disembarkation it may take a few minutes to actually get a taxi as many others will be doing the same. 30 minutes drive time to LGA from Brooklyn or Manhattan is an absolute minimum, but never count on that. Allow at least an hour.
  15. In my experience the only time that cruise lines, including NCL, use Pan American for a port call is when there are more ships in port than can be accommodated in OSJ. Every cruise I've taken making a port call in San Juan did so at OSJ and every cruise I've taken embarking in San Juan has done so at Pan American. Based on the information I could find, there were three ships in port on April 23. I believe only one of Muelle (Pier) 3 or 4 is in use in OSJ at present so two ships docked there and one, the Prima, at Pan American.
×
×
  • Create New...