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St Petersburg with Thomsons


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Hello All.

 

We are off to the Baltic 10th May on the Thomson Spirit out of the Tyne, been on this ship many times.

A few questions please.

Are the local tours cheaper / better than Thomsons ?

Do we have to pre book a local tour before sailing ?

What currency can we use in St Petersburg / Helsinki / Stockholm /Estonia ?

Can you recommend any local tour company in St Petersburg ?

 

thanks in advance.

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We were very happy with Red October.

 

IIRC, you need to get a Russian visa in advance if you want to go off on your own. The tour companies arrange this for you.

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Welcome to Cruise Critic!

 

There is a huge volume of info here, you just have to look in the right places. In your case, to answer your questions, I would be looking at the Thomson board, here:

 

http://boards.cruisecritic.com/forumdisplay.php?f=497

 

and the Northern Europe Ports board, here:

 

http://boards.cruisecritic.com/forumdisplay.php?f=192

 

where you will find lots of recommendations for your excursions.

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Unusually, in St Pete's, local tours are not a lot cheaper than ship's tours - esp bearing in mind Thomson tours are generally cheaper than the identical tour via other ships.

But the experience with local operators will be much better - groups are normally a max 16, early admission to Hermitage, etc..

Might be a problem getting a group together - needs 8 to get a tour at the standard price, & local operators don't always offer individual bookings for all ships- esp comparative tiddlers like Spirit.

Contact Alla, SPB, Red October, Anastasia & TJ Tours (just google them) - they're pretty efficient at getting back to you. You'll probably find they already have folk from your ship registered for tours & your choice of operator may be dictated by who is offering a tour that you can join. But no worries, they all have excellent reputations.

 

Don't delay, you've left it a bit late & life will be complicated trying to sort out St Pete's once you're at sea .For instance they will need your passport details to organise your visa-waiver, which you'll have to print-off.

Also payment - they generally price in US dollars & although other currencies are accepted payment in USD avoids grief over exchange rates, so you'll need to take US dollars. Credit cards are accepted, but I think they all add the commission charge. Payment is on-the-day (start of day 2 if you're on a 2 day tour). My reference to US dollars is for paying for a tour only - USD are no use for anything else on your cruise.

 

I expect you're aware that unless you take a pre-booked tour either with the ship or with one of those accredited local operators, you'll need a personal visa - which is expensive & complicated, & you're probably too late to organise that anyway.

 

Chop, chop ;)

 

JB :)

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