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piper28

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Cool Cruiser (2/15)

  1. Just double checked and indeed our departure time on the second day is listed as 6pm, so I'm still inclined to think on our cruise it'll be the first day, even if it's the day after motu mahaea. Weird thing is I know at one point there was language in the windstar excursions saying things like "this tour will not interfere with your motu day" and things like that, none of which appears on anything anymore.
  2. I'm curious what time they say you're leaving Bora Bora on teh second day? To me, it seems kinda weird that the beach dinner would be on the second night of Bora Bora, because they ship seems to leave pretty early that day comparatively speaking. I've been trying to figure this out for the Tahiti and Marquesas cruise on July 4th this year, and it's not making much sense to me (and calling Windstar didn't really answer any questions about it). On our trip, Motu Mahaea is one day, the next day is the first bora bora day. To me it makes more sense that the dinner in Bora Bora would be that first night since the ship is there overnight, and I think we leave at like 6pm from bora bora the second night? But that would also imply that the beach day and then dinner were on back to back nights.
  3. We finally got a chance to try O this summer for Alaska, and I'd have to say the experience had it's plusses and minuses. As someone that had spent a lot of time on R class ships with Princess, I really liked the idea of doing the oceania trip to Alaska on one. Pluses: - food alergies: I thought O did a great job of handling this for my wife. Menu delivered to our stateroom the night before, we just had to turn it in by 10am the next morning with her selections. And they caught the nights we were doing specialty restaurants. Other than a couple of nights where they changed the menu between when they delivered it to us and dining time, and then kinda randomly assigned a dish to her. That has handled easily enough at dinner, but was a bit weird. - I'm one of those in the categories of people that does personally like it when a cruise ship includes coke as part of the cost. Having a couple of cans in the stateroom fridge is particularly convenient for me. I'm not a coffee drinker, but I don't feel that's unreasonable to have included too - smaller ships, that's definitely a plus for us - staff: I'd be remiss if I didn't compliment the staff on the ship. As I've generally found on small ships especially, these crewmembers truly do a great job of making your cruise go well Minuses: - I think the OP mentioned a lack of classism as a reason to try O. Unfortunately, for me, I found that right after getting on the ship you kinda got slapped in the face with classism. The availability of your cabin was based on what category you booked. As someone in the cheap cabins, they weren't available until 3:30pm on boarding day. Sorry, but that's just plain absurd on a ship that size. (And quite frankly, the exactitude of them announcing it at 3:30 tells me that the cabins were almost certainly ready well before that.) While I recognize that even Princess I think has moved away from cabins being ready immediately, that was something I always liked about them - the ability to drop my junk off and not have to deal with it for hours after boarding. 3:30 is the latest I've ever seen barring some other factor involved. (I'll note, from doing some reading, it looks like Regent is similar in being exceedingly late available for their cheap cabins) - specialty dining reservations: sure, specialty dining is included. But expect very limited availability on when you can book it. Even booking the minute that it was available for us, looking for a table for 2, all we could get were like 8 and 8:30 times. I don't tend to like to eat that late. I think people with status might be able to book earlier? So all the good spots are already taken. - entertainment: on our cruise at least, shows were once a night, at 9:30pm. Thankfully I don't necessarily care that much about shows, because I just don't find that schedule works well. While I'm up quite late on shore every night, for whatever reason on a cruise ship I tend to get to sleep a lot earlier. Part of that is sometimes there's some pretty early mornings that need to be made for excursions. - showers: Ugh. As I noted, I've been on R class ships a bunch, something like 140 days with Princess. For whatever reason, Oceania decided to literally cut the corners on the showers in at least the cheaper staterooms. Princess had these as more of a round footprint. Oceania takes a chunk off the side of the circle. The old joke of soaping the sides of the shower and just turning around to clean yourself? Well, that wasn't much of a joke anymore. Looking at the floorplans, it looked like you had to go pretty far up in category before you got around it. I never thought I'd say this type of thing, but to me, it's almost a dealbreaker to have to deal with that shower to cruise those ships. Neutral: - food: Obviously, this is one of the most subjective things on a cruise. Oceania bills itself as the finest cuisine at sea. I'll fully admit, I really probably don't have the sophisticated palate to judge that. And I recognize that in general, food quality is something that everyone has complained across all lines that it's gone downhill in recent years. But honestly, to me, the food wasn't anything to write home about. It was decent, but I wouldn't call it great. Quite frankly, a couple of nights where I had steak, the cuts I had were about as bad as I've ever had on a cruise ship. Other nights were fine. There were some good deserts. I personally thought Windstar's food was better though. At the end of the line, I'd probably book Oceania again, if the itinerary was a good fit. While I doubt I'll ever get a chance to do one, I've always thought O's world cruises were some of the most interesting looking ones. Although I don't think I could do 180 days with that shower. That said, for me, the biggest question I was left with was the value one. Oceania is a significant step up in cost over the mass market lines. And I'll be honest, I was left kinda questioning whether I thought that the experience was really worth the extra cost or not. That's the great thing though, there's still enough different cruise lines out there that something will git some people better than others. We recently did Windstar also, and quite honestly, I thought that was a better experience than the Oceania trip, and look forward to going back on them soon.
  4. While the McCullough book is the one lots of people tend to recommend, personally, I'm not really a huge fan of it. I can't fault his research and dedication to detail, and the book is probably the definitive history of the project, but god is it a dry read. Personally I prefered Matthew Parker's "Panama Fever: The Epic Story of the Building of the Panama Canal". It's definitely not quite as detailed, but I feel still does a very good job of covering the topic, and personally I thought it was far more engaging and easier to read.
  5. Renting one, or perhaps buying it then selling it, is definitely a pretty reasonable option. Lenses retain enough value, that the buy/sell option isn't necessarily that bad of one, and the rental on a lens like the 100-400 isn't too bad. I know before buying the 150-600 that I took, I considered potentially renting it for the trip. I think for my trip length, it would have been about $150-$200 to do that? After looking at prices for used versions, I figured that I could buy one new, then sell it after the trip if I decided I wanted to, plus have it for a while before to get used to it. Now that I've taken the trip, I do need to decide whether I want to keep it or go ahead and sell it though. I'm finding that to be a tough decision.
  6. Everything I've seen says that's a pretty good lens for something that's not in an L lens, and whenever I get around to moving to a mirrorless camera, I'll probably pick that one up as a pretty good option. Anything better is going to be a lot heavier and more expensive. That said, as an only lens? 100 seems a bit long for the short end to me. Personally, since I haven't moved to mirrorless yet, on my crop camera, I'm planning on bringing my 18-135 and a sigma 150-600 lens that I picked up recently. Although the sigma lens definitely makes carrying things a lot more complicated.
  7. I don't have any menus, but did do a WS trip in the caribbean this last christmas. I'm definitely what you'd call a pretty plain eater (like, meat and potatoes without the potatoes I've been described as at times 🙂 ). I didn't have any problems really with the menus. Sure, there were a couple nights that were less thrilling, but I get that on any ship to be honest. Candles (steakhouse) I thought was real good, the french restaurant was less appealing to me. The one meal I really had the most trouble with myself was lunch - on the sailing yachts at least the buffet itself was pretty small, and often filled with things I had no interest in. Not sure if the motor yachts are any different. I did end up eating a lot of burgers for lunchs on that trip. Booked for the 14 day Tahiti and Marquesas trip next summer on the Breeze. Looking forward to it very much (although less so the flying there and back part).
  8. Hmm, I had to dig and turns out it's indeed opt-in on the samsung phones, for some reason I thought it was opt-out like apple does. That said (at least according to Samsung, so take it with a grain of salt), they're up to about 300 million "find nodes" worldwide, with 100 million added in the last year. If that's accurate, I'd say it probably still exceeds Tile significantly. (What's also kinda interesting is that based on looking at my phone, they *don't* turn on the checks for unknown trackers by default.) I think the number that have opted in probably is a sign that people think apple's find my idevice stuff has worked well enough that it convinces them that it's worth doing. I've been playing around with one for a little bit now trying to get a feel for how well things work before we take our next airline flight. So far it's been interesting to see how often it really does seem to get picked up. I'm definitely curious to see how well that ends up working when we actually travel soon.
  9. This is something I'm kinda curious about, but unfortunately, nobody would ever really tell us the real numbers - Does the installed base of the Tile software exceed the user base of samsung galaxy phones? Clearly, whichever one has the larger user base would be the winner between the two of those. Also, from what i'm seeing, it looks like the more generic android find my device compatible trackers are just starting to hit the market in the next couple of weeks. Looks like those are going to be open to a number of brands, but will all work with the built in android tracking. Doesn't help for anyone who needs something now, but will probably be a strong choice in the near future. (Makes me wonder if that also might have something to do with the current availability of the samsung ones).
  10. I'll give them credit for being the one area of Oceania that really seems on the ball to me. Submitted my request late last night (July 4th no less), and by midafternoon I already have paperwork forwarded from my ta that shows the credit.
  11. Hmm, with ipads you might be able to go with the airtags too? I'm not sure I've seen for sure whether that's viable or not, and I'm not familiar enough with the apple side of things to know for sure. If it does work though, right now it's probably cheaper, and with the number of iphones out there to do the tracking, would be a good choice. (Brief search seems to indicate that it's feasible to use airtags even if you only have ipads and not an iphone. Given that, with the current supply situation with the samsung tags, I'd probably say airtags might be the better choice right now.)
  12. If you have samsung phones, I'd probably consider the galaxy smarttags (or the plus model). Only issue is that I've seen rumors that they might be doing an update to those later this year, and right now stock seems to be very limited, and places are charging a premium for them now. Otherwise, for android, I'd probably say Tile. I'm not sure how the installed base on Tile is, since they're basically limited to only devices that have the app installed, versus airtags that can access any iphone, and smarttags that can hit galaxy phones.
  13. I've yet to manage to catch whales breaching like that. That was definitely a nice looking experience. Personally, what I'm curious to see this year is if I can manage to catch another shot of the same whale we've seen on previous trips - I've got photos from 3 trips in the past, and on each of those trips I was able to get a good enough fluke shot to identify that we saw the same whale on each of them. It's been a few years since our last trip, so who knows, but I'm looking forward to the possibility.
  14. I will note that at the various ports, it's probably less sure exactly what will be used. The tides in Alaska can make the gangways very different at various points of the day, and sometimes can be quite steep. That said, I've always found the cruiselines there to be pretty good with helping people that need assistance on those gangways.
  15. Yeah, I think you'll find that they're not going to be very hard to find. They're very abundant in Alaska. You'll probably see a lot of them in harbor areas, and I know in Juneau, if you look in the trees on the hills along where the ships are docked, you'll probably see them there. Basically, anywhere that fish might be available in the nearby area, you'll probably find them.
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