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CurlerRob

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Posts posted by CurlerRob

  1. 42 minutes ago, huntwc said:

    Is there a site that reviews the Viking Ocean excursions?  We are on the Saturn in September.  It is hard to choose without any ratings and limited descriptions!  
     

    Ports are

     

    Koper Slovenia

    Zadra Croatia

    Dubrovnik

    Kotor Montenegro

    Corfu Greece

    Olympia (Katakolon) Croatia

    Santorini

    Athens

     

    Many thanks!

     

    No dedicated thread / site, but if you check one of the prior Roll Calls for your cruise, you'll find lots of comments regarding ports and excursions. 🍺🥌

  2. 11 hours ago, Heidi13 said:

     

    Connectivity may depend on whether the ship is still using the geostationary satellites, or if they have a Starlink system.

     

    As you proceed further north in Alaska, the altitude of the geostationary satellites reduces, and with mountainous terrain, you have increased potential for the signals being blocked. Over the years we have received a signal almost everywhere except alongside the Railway Dock in Skagway. Even on the large Princess Grand Class ships, we didn't get a signal when alongside that berth.

     

    Haven't experienced Starlink, but with the ever increasing number of satellites being launched, I anticipate they should have a reasonable chance of continuous connectivity.

     

    With respect to sailing between Kodiak and Dutch Harbour, you have open waters to the south, so if using geostationary satellites, while they will have low altitude, you should not have any obstructions to block the satellite signals. If Starlink, with the route being mostly open waters, you should get some visible satellites, so I expect you would receive connectivity.

    @Islandbc, further to Heidi13's accurate information, Orion has Starlink capability. On our recently completed Hong Kong - Vancouver cruise, I assessed the internet performance as quite reasonable for shipboard.

     

    Generally about 3.5Mbps download, with roughly 3Mbps upload on Starlink. That provides for a quite tolerable browsing experience, albeit noticeably slower than what you'd find on land. There were times when the Starlink service degraded - I was never able to pin down causes. It didn't correspond to pax peak usage times or nearby geography. We experienced a number of "stalls", but the longest one was a couple of hours.

     

    Unless you have bad luck with one of the dead times, you should be able to reach MVJ and book your excursions, but be sure to use the prioritization method described many times on these boards, as the slower speed may see you miss out on some shorex if you do too many at a time.

     

    I saw no difference in speed between the common area desktops and my iPad.

     

    Lastly, the ship did not use Starlink exclusively - there were a few times, usually in ports, that it was using what looked like the prior geostationary systems. Why, I have no idea. Good luck! 🍺🥌

  3. 14 hours ago, pinotlover said:

    Oceania, especially the CD, would rather not listen to 1-3 days of complaining . 

     

    I agree.

     

    In addition, the cruise lines appear to believe pax are technologically illiterate - unable to see weather patterns on Windy.com; unable to see the ship's position and track on MarineTraffic.com and unable to read newspapers from destination ports - any of which can make it clear that an itinerary change is imminent.

     

    On a Sept/23 TA on Regent, we ran afoul of Hurricane Lee and a co-incident major depression. Our skipper did a magical job keeping us out of harm's way, but the above made it very clear that we weren't going to make Bermuda. The Bermuda Times published our port cancellation 3 days before we were informed.

     

    Most cruise lines are poor at communicating bad news. Perhaps NCL has raised it to an art form? 🍺🥌

    • Like 2
  4. 8 minutes ago, travelingJimmy said:

    I'd be interested to hear anyone's experience with private tours and refunds on canceled ports.   We book almost exclusively private tours.  We were very worried about booking private tours and having port cancels.   That said, in Europe on 2 different cruises when we have had last minute port cancels (France, Spain and Italy), the private tour companies have been extremely gracious about giving refunds. I think they must know that on social media people will talk and those that do give refunds, even last minute, will be rewarded with a positive comments online.   Not to mention it would be pretty easy to verify that a ship has canceled a port verses someone changing their mind.


    The vast majority of professional cruise tour providers will tell you up front that they refund payment for a missed port. Any one that doesn’t is a deal breaker for us. Refund policies overall are one element of how we choose a provider. 🍺🥌

    • Like 4
  5. 2 hours ago, Twitchly said:

    This is a fascinating thread. 
     

    I spent much of my career as a contractor/consultant. I never worked in a situation where the entire staff was made up of contractors. Is that the case on a Viking ship? I would be surprised if there were’t at least some number of actual Viking employees on a ship in order to ensure that Viking’s cultural and quality standards are met. While I’ve seen contractors take on those duties to some extent, I’ve never seen a company hand them over completely to outside staffing.
     

     


    I also found it unique and I’ve run businesses that were very highly leveraged with contractors. However, our resident professional mariners have educated us that this approach is common in the industry and has been so for many years. Given the degree of success, it’s hard to criticize it. 
     

    I’m certain that Viking invests in ensuring that their standards are met - I suspect through policies and procedures, training, communications and measurement systems. I’d also expect that they do have a process for inspection (even if it’s just Tor and Karine sailing a lot)!

     

    One observation I have is that personnel turnover on the cruise lines appears low - crew and senior staff keep coming back to the same line. This makes it easier to propagate Viking culture and standards. If you keep working for the same company, after a while it doesn’t matter who signs your paycheque, you identify with the cruise line. 
     

    This ability to retain contractors indefinitely is unique in my experience. Many land-based jurisdictions will deem a long-term contractor to be an employee, and require the firm to provide statutory benefits and pay taxes. This forces turnover and works against the positive “cultural assimilation” that negates the difference between contractors and employees. 🍺🥌

    • Like 1
  6. 2 hours ago, Mike07 said:

     

     

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge to the best of your ability. I have not found the Viking officer crew to be particularly great... and thus I feel less guilty, and almost empowered, for lighting up the officer crew on the surveys. If they are indeed contractors, I'll continue to do the same.


    Curious as to why their employment arrangement would have any effect on your personal evaluation, or why you would feel “less guilty”? 🍺🥌

    • Like 1
  7. 7 hours ago, z111 said:

    We are going to Alaska. It sounds like we should expect rain, cold, and warm.

     

    Packing for cold weather or variable weather always takes more suitcase room.

    Trying to also pack for outdoor things and indoor cruise things is adding more complication.

    I'm trying to limit myself to just a carry on and am struggling, in part, due to bulky items but also, for vacay, I usually just have comfortable outdoor clothes and nothing dressy.

     

    I have some thermals that don't take up much room. I'm thinking 2 pairs of jeans. And a few daytime not jeans outfits.

     

    Any advice would be gratefully received. I am aware we can do some laundry! 

     

    Thanks 

     

     


    You’re going on your first cruise, to an area that may be variable in temperature and weather. 
     

    Why stress yourself over packing? One of the beautiful things about cruising is that your hotel room moves with you - you only unpack once.
     

    Check a couple of bags (cross-packed) and take a light carry on each with emergency stuff for a few days, in the event of luggage issues. You’ll find you will take too much, but you’ll learn for the next trip without having to worry about this one. Focus on what should be a great experience - your first cruise. 🍺🥌

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 2
  8. 34 minutes ago, anaky1229 said:

    I have also been comparing the two cruise lines. I know that Regent's cruise only price is higher but it includes so much more. If, on Viking, one is paying for excursions that would have to be added in. Same for gratuities. I don't know if Regents includes gratuities for the local guides on excursions or if that is separate. Then, if you have a couple of drinks in the evenings outside of wine and beer at dinner or want to get a soft drink at the theater, I'm not sure how different the price would be. I know there are many intangibles like how comfortable one feels on the ship etc but if it's just price, am I wrong that they would not be that different in the end?


    Welcome to CC! If you use the search function, you will find many discussions that attempt to compare pricing between cruise lines. 
     

    In the end, it becomes a highly individualized answer, depending on what matters to you. For example, if you don’t drink, included alcohol at any amount can be viewed as wasted money. Or, if you always tour on your own, the inclusion of multiple included excursions is of no value. 
     

    Further, sales and promotions have a huge effect and are obviously transient. 
     

    To your question, there’s no consistent answer. Just look at the things that matter to you and do your personal price analysis for each cruise. 🍺🥌

    • Like 1
  9. 8 hours ago, Buck King said:


    Thanks for this. Your extensive and accurate factual comments will help others in their research. 
     

    I had to chuckle about the TV noise issue. We haven’t had the issue on Viking, but our first Regent cruise was a TA in Sep/23. Our neighbours played MSNBC 24/7, at a stupid volume that made it impossible to sleep - swivel mount or not. (In fairness, this was poor behaviour, not ship design or soundproofing and stopped after a couple of complaints). If I never hear the MSNBC commercial “filler” again it’ll be too soon 😵‍💫
     

    Of interest, Oceania’s new Vista is catching a lot of flak for the same TV bleed issue. 
     

    I’d add only one item. While we’ve always had excellent crew service on each line we’ve sailed, Regent staff excelled at anticipating our needs - it verged on uncanny.  🍺🥌

     

     

    • Like 1
  10. 5 hours ago, janetcbl said:

    Be careful taking fruit into some countries. It is often not allowed and penalties can be severe. Discovered this the hard way when, as a tour guide, one of the people on my tour didn’t listen and the results were unpleasant.


    Second this and it often applies to ANY food taken off the ship. Oz, NZ, Hong Kong and Japan are all live examples with various restrictions and penalties.🍺🥌

    • Like 3
  11. 2 hours ago, Syd58 said:

    Some lines provide a larger bathroom (with a roll-in shower) and a little more floorspace (for wheelchair or scooter turning radius) at the same level non-accessible cabin. There may be some that I'm not aware of, but I personally don't know any others that require those needing an accessible cabin to pay considerably more to book a penthouse junior suite.


    Not all grass is greener. Oceania’s R ships have only 3 accessible cabins - all are inside cabins (Sirenia may have 2 OVs). No accessible cabins with balconies. They also have a habit of not holding them for those who actually need them. 
     

    Certainly cheaper, but not without impact on the experience. 🍺🥌

    • Like 1
  12. 2 hours ago, Peregrina651 said:

     

    Not so bad for us; we've been with Viking, but it will be a real disappointment for those who haven't been.

     

     

    You’ve been fortunate, we are 0 for 3. It’s just a tough port. 
     

    Conversely, we are 2 for 2 in the Faroes, also a notorious miss. Cheers. 🍺🥌

  13. 1 hour ago, Peregrina651 said:

    My bags are packed. I'm ready to go. I have one more job to do before we walk out the door (in the middle of the night): start this thread (while I still have a real keyboard to type on).

     

    @formernuke covered a lot of ground on his thread, Semi-LIVE from Venus British Isles Explorer 4/19 with Churchill Pre-extension, so check it out as well. It is full of great information and vacation-enducing photos.  Also note that  formernuke did the Churchill extension and took really good notes for anyone who is also doing that extension.

     

    For the search engine, let me name-drop the ports we will be visiting by sharing our schedule:

     

    THU MAY 09, 2024 Embark in London (Greenwich) on Viking Neptune
    FRI MAY 10, 2024 London (Greenwich), United Kingdom 02:00 PM
    SAT MAY 11, 2024 Dover, United Kingdom 08:00 AM 06:00 PM
    SUN MAY 12, 2024 Scenic Sailing: English Channel
    MON MAY 13, 2024 Dublin (Dun Laoghaire), Ireland 08:00 AM 08:30 PM
    TUE MAY 14, 2024 Holyhead, United Kingdom 08:00 AM 06:00 PM
    WED MAY 15, 2024 Liverpool, United Kingdom 07:00 AM 06:00 PM
    THU MAY 16, 2024 Belfast, United Kingdom 08:00 AM 06:00 PM
    FRI MAY 17, 2024 The Highlands (Ullapool), United Kingdom 12:00 PM 06:00 PM
    SAT MAY 18, 2024 Orkney Islands (Kirkwall), United Kingdom 08:00 AM 05:00 PM
    SUN MAY 19, 2024 Edinburgh (Newhaven Harbour), United Kingdom 08:00 AM 05:00 PM (always a tender port)
    MON MAY 20, 2024 The Highlands (Invergordon), United Kingdom 08:00 AM 05:00 PM
    TUE MAY 21, 2024 Shetland Islands (Lerwick), United Kingdom 08:00 AM 05:00 PM
    WED MAY 22, 2024 Bergen, Norway 08:00 AM
    THU MAY 23, 2024 Disembark in Bergen
     
    We also have 3 full days of touring on our own in London pre-cruise and another four days of touring after as we make our way from Bergen to Oslo, which I will also talk about for the do-it-yourselfers.
     
    So, away we go! 🎉
     
     

     


    Enjoy your trip! I hope the Shetlands are accommodating. 🍺🥌

  14. 6 minutes ago, mariners said:

    … if we make the decision to take a world cruise, perhaps Clay or other players of LCR, will accept CDN loonies instead of USD bills.  🤣 


    Seems fair. 🍺🥌

  15. 41 minutes ago, mariners said:

    On our next cruise on VO, we have SBC vouchers that can be used for onboard items.  The invoice has the vouchers in Canadian dollars.  How does that work if we don't use some, or all of them, until when we are onboard the ship given that the ship prices are in USD?  We do understand that they "will not be reissued or reactivated in case of cancellation".  The SBC vouchers were part of a promotion by Viking Ocean if that makes any difference.

     

    I expect they will convert them to USD onboard at the time of use. We had a similar situation currently - purchased an excursion prior to sailing in CDN, then cancelled on board. The refund was applied to our onboard account, converted from the CDN price to USD. 
     

    No luck on CDN $ at par, unfortunately! 🍺🥌

  16. 1 hour ago, kahuna21 said:

    OK, this sheet says they give you $100 per person onboard credit for each cruise booked. So you book a cruise with $25 deposit. You get $200 to offset drinks and gratuities on current cruise, and you “buy” that with a $50 deposit? Too good to be true. This offer must have been available only for future cruises with a higher required (non-refundable) deposit?

    It’s both true and good - assuming the new trip is under the $25 deposit offer (many are). For example, in Dec/23 we booked onboard for an Antarctic trip. $25 pp deposit, $100 pp OBC. 
     

    in theory, you are liable for $100 pp if you cancel (std. terms), which would neutralize the gain, but it’s not likely worth Viking’s time to chase you for the delta if that happens. In reality, most people who book onboard intend to do the trip versus clipping a few bucks, and a live booking is always better than a “maybe later” one to the cruise line.🍺🥌

    • Like 1
  17. 1 hour ago, SailorPaulH said:

    Does the shuttle run on disembarkation day, so you can leave ship and be dropped off with your luggage at Harpa...? or is taxi or local bus the only way to do that (our self post-extension begins at hotel across from Harpa).


    I’m speculating but I don’t think a shuttle would be available for a disembarkation day. The only way there might be one is if the cruise is B2B and your disembarkation was an in-transit day for pax continuing. Even then, I don’t think you could use it. 
     

    As mentioned, taxi is easy and a short trip. 🍺🥌

    • Thanks 1
  18. 12 minutes ago, Clipper said:

    I will be on an Insignia voyage to Bermuda.  How does a single cruiser navigate Waves or the Terrace with no companion to find and save a table before ordering?  Thanks in advance for your guidance.


    If your preference is to dine alone, just leave an article of clothing or a tote bag on the chair to mark it as taken, then go and get your food. For added assurance, order and receive a drink first. 🍺🥌

    • Like 5
  19. 1 hour ago, miami mama said:

    I know for most stops, Viking usually provides a shuttle from the port into town. Can someone let me know if there is one from Skarfabakki into the center of Reykjavik, and if so, what kind of schedule do you recall and where does it drop you off?  Thanks so much. 


    My personal experience is dated (2019), but I think it’s still valid. Our shuttle ran every 30 minutes, drop off was at the Harpa Conference Centre - an easy few minutes walk to the heart of downtown. 
     

    You can also walk the shoreline back to the ship if the weather is good - about 50 minutes. 🍺🥌

     

    • Like 1
  20. 30 minutes ago, anaky1229 said:

    I was just on my first Viking cruise and were in a V2. We could pretty easily get reservations on the ship for the Chef's Table but were told that Manfredi's was booked for the whole cruise. We did eventually get in but it took a lot of persistence and a bit of stubbornness. 


    We have observed (Star in December and Orion currently) that Manfredi’s has become much busier than in the past. You can still get tables, but it requires a lot more diligence and a bit of luck. 
     

    Chef’s Table is noticeably easier to reserve. If you sail again, stay with the day before / day of queries and be flexible on your time. Hope you enjoyed yourself. 🍺🥌

  21. 10 hours ago, Syd58 said:

    Most cruise lines, including Seabourn, Silversea, and Oceania, specify which shore excursions are accessible and appropriate for people with handicaps. I'm surprised Viking does not...

    Why would you think they don’t? Like every other cruise line, Viking provides a description of each excursion, including a difficulty rating. The ratings are defined in detail in their ShoreEx documents. 
     

    Unfortunately, there are always some who won’t read or choose to ignore the information - to everyone’s detriment. 🍺🥌

    • Like 5
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