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Outerdog

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Posts posted by Outerdog

  1. A nifty little coin-sized device which replaces the cruise card. The system is able to locate people (medallions) around the ship, crew use it to see who's who. 

     

    https://www.princess.com/en-us/ships-and-experience/princess-medallionclass

     

    https://www.princess.com/en-us/ships-and-experience/princess-medallionclass/medallion-accessories-customization

     

    Some will tell you it's a curse upon humanity. They think Princess is tracking them all over the place and the Medallions are the gateway to a privacy violating dystopia. Psst, you're already a customer, you're already on the ship having spent hundreds or thousands of dollars to get there, and they were collecting data long before the Medallions.

     

    • Like 2
  2. If you want tons of bottled water in your room, just order a bunch of the water packages.

     

    It's $7 for 12 x 12oz bottles. It's a great price and a hell of a lot more convenient than dragging cases of bottled water all over the place.

     

    I purchase these even when we have one of the packages. It's cheap.

     

    image.png.5ae4280e61293fa8491acd84c64c1618.png

    • Like 4
  3. 4 hours ago, Nily D said:

    I am going to look into the rafting expedition at Haines.

     

    Bad photo, but gives you an idea of what the raft is like:

    image.thumb.png.ac8e762699013a405112c17bc3421df3.png

     

    The river is shallow, but it's cold out there.

     

    image.thumb.png.3638316568c3bddd6109f9ac3bc65c34.png

     

    image.thumb.png.1b1f61082d29c6adca9c2dc3c458019a.png

     

    image.thumb.png.0289ded7d749370513c604e1f1ffeb7e.png

     

    The nests are large -- 2,000 pounds in the extreme cases.

     

    image.thumb.png.d6ba4fedea453b16e77ea6cfe3641fa7.png

     

     

    • Like 4
  4. Agree with Lee on Haines/Skagway Eagle Preserve raft trip. Very hands-on experience as you might imagine. Lots of eagles. This isn't a rafting experience. It's a floating experience.

     

    Other must-dos in Skagway are the train (obviously) and those helicopters you'll see there in port. They will fly you up and land you on a glacial ice sheet to get out and explore. Pretty fantastic ride up and over a mountain range. Nat Geo scenes for sure. When I think of all my trips up to Alaska, this is the one that comes to mind the most (and I can't resist sharing a couple pics)...

     

    image.thumb.png.9b672465b140d2a4caaad0b30eee62b5.png

     

    image.thumb.png.2c88c56dcf8ced41fc34f0d57a8ab2f8.png

     

    image.thumb.png.fc8c4cf94cc75f457f1fe5ab73c2a68c.png

    • Like 4
  5. I really struggle to think what a "game changer" for cruising could actually be. Things like modifying PVSA, return of CTN, truly all-inclusive one-price fare, 4x security/check in staff to eliminate terminal wait altogether?

     

    Giant ass ships with literally everything -- 2 decks interior promenades with animated canopies, roller coasters (!) -- none of those are "game changer" for Florida.

     

    I mean, we're talking about Princess here -- the same Princess who called the Medallion a game changer. I like the Medallion, but let's not pretend it's nothing more than a cruise card on steroids. Hardly a game changer. That's it! Maybe we're getting new Medallions! 

     

    Brought to you by Flava Flav!

     

    image.png.3928363fb135fbb2d7890d241fa27eaf.png

     

    • Like 1
    • Haha 6
  6. 19 minutes ago, cruisepest said:

    The main question is what should we do now?

     

    You should file a claim with your travel insurance to recoup the costs of the medical services.

    • Like 7
  7. On 3/20/2024 at 1:38 PM, DCThunder said:

    I did see that ravens had killed their hatchlings last year.  Nature is not kind.

     

    Not quite. Jackie and Shadow abandoned the nest after they determined the eggs were dead. The ravens came to the nest and devoured the eggs. They never hatched.

     

    The same thing will eventually happen this year as well.

    • Like 1
  8. On 3/20/2024 at 2:37 PM, Polopup said:

    I think being in solitary confinement in a prison would be better.

     

    All in all it was one of the worst experiences up my life.

     

    Do you expect people to take these comments seriously?

     

    • Like 1
  9. The row of two-tops is the correct answer. If you go to dinner around the same time every night, you'll usually wind up in the same table (more or less) each night and sitting amongst the same people. The folks directly next to you may change day to day from one table to another as people arrive or don't arrive at various times. It's definitely a shared experience, and toward the end of the cruise, you end up with at least a familiarity with everyone in the section, and more if folks are talkative and social.

     

    I wouldn't choose the MDR over RC because you want to socialize. RC can be a social experience if that's your jam.

     

    I don't have many good pics of RC dining (it's weird to take pictures of people dining), but this snap is from the Baked Alaska parade they (still) do. You can see these two tops are pretty close and make for good crosstalk between tables. The pic is taken from another row of two-tops that extends along the back wall toward the windows.

     

    image.thumb.png.808773a7ad3fb2cc6c02536693b9227b.png

     

     

  10. 1 hour ago, WonderMan3 said:

    Not sure why the ages of everyone involved keeps being emphasized here. The female passengers are adult women not girls. The crew member in question’s age is irrelevant; his behavior going to a passenger’s cabin was inappropriate regardless of age.

     

    This is the correct answer, assuming of course that this "senior staff member" is crew subject to the same fraternization rules as all crew, and not some entertainment dude with different rules. I've heard various takes on whether or not entertainment are actually crew.

     

    Not sure about OP's assertion of "grooming tactics". These are adults we're talking about.

    • Like 3
  11. 32 minutes ago, Ken the cruiser said:

    I remember when we were on the Regal, it was on the port side. On the Sapphire and the Diamond, and if I remember correctly on the Caribbean, it’s on deck 6 on the starboard side.

     

    It's on the opposite side of whatever side you turn to first when coming down the stairs or exiting the elevator. Always the other way.

     

    • Haha 2
  12. 9 minutes ago, KarmaCruisers said:

    Which one is the “reserve” dining room? Or is it like a special “section” of one of the normal dining rooms?

     

    It's a corner section of one of the existing MDRs. Da Vinci on my last cruise. Picture one of the dining rooms which you can enter on either the port or starboard side. In the case of Reserve Class, they'll take the port side entrance and call it Reserve Class, put an extra item on the menu, assure you have no wait, and will make every effort to keep other folks from wandering into your dining area.

     

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