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SteelCity Cruiser

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Posts posted by SteelCity Cruiser

  1. I can't pass judgement on the burger controversy since that's not one of my personal food specialties, but my hubby was absolutely addicted to the swiss-burger from the grill on our Oceania cruise last year - had that every day for lunch!  However, he also is a fan of the Viking grill's burger. 

  2. 17 hours ago, Peregrina651 said:

     

    I was wondering about using the train.

     

    I just checked the routing on Google Maps and while it may be a shorter time compared to Viking's shuttle by the Google Maps' estimation, I walk slower than the Google estimation. So for us, it is 50-50 -- and Viking shuttle gets us closer to where we want to be.

     

    Regardless, now that I see what the shuttle schedule is,  I am glad that I booked I booked our tour at the Little Dublin Museum for 11 am, because with the tendering, I don't see us arriving much before 10am, even if we are on the first shuttle at 9am.

     

    Here's the link to Irish Rail for timetables and tickets: https://www.irishrail.ie/en-ie/

    Nice to have the option though, particularly if you find you just missed the shuttle by 5 minutes and have to wait another hour for it (when we were there last year, the shuttle only ran once an hour), you CAN take the train 1-way if you want to.

    • Like 1
  3. 8 hours ago, Peregrina651 said:

    Tender and shuttle information most helpful!!! I'm taking notes because we are doing things on our own.

     

    One question. Since the day we booked at the end of 2022, our invoice listed departure time as 11 pm. Today, someone on the roll call reported that the time on their invoice is now 8:30pm (and 8 pm in other places like MVJ Calendar). Did something like this happen for your sailing or has your departure always been 8pm. TIA

    we used the train service from the port instead of the Viking shuttle. It was 5 pounds for a round trip ticket and runs about every 30 minutes and only took about 15-20 minutes each way.  The train station is a short, easy walk from the dock.  Ticket booths are right inside the station entrance

     

  4. On 3/30/2024 at 5:10 PM, PAJoe said:

    Just tried to book the The Ultimate Loch Ness Outlander Experience, but it was sold out.

    Does anyone know of a 3rd party tour company that offers a similar tour?  Thank you. 

    Ours was booked via Viator with Thistle Excursions.  Only 8 of us in a mini van and it was terrific.

  5. 31 minutes ago, Clay Clayton said:

    Letter today in Sky that Viking will now provide malaria and yellow fever gratis to any who want it. 

    That's a pretty nice deal for passengers.  We did an Africa trip a couple of years ago and I ended up paying my doctor's office around $400 for the vaccinations and malaria meds we needed for that trip (Hep A booster, Yellow Fever and Tetanus booster)

  6. We had a very similar situation occur in Athens when we disembarked.  Another passenger took our suitcase (theirs was similar but we had completely different 'ties' on the handle - ours was bright yellow, her tie was bright red). An Oceania rep did the same thing as the OP's - took our report and a photo of our bag (we had 2 identical bags so they photographed the one we did retrieve) and a photo of the incorrect bag.  Gave us zero contact info for follow up-they didn't even provide the port agent contact info. I took a photo of the luggage tag on the other passenger's bag and took a chance and texted her.  Fortunately she too was on a 2-day extension in Athens as we were and Oceania contacted her to deliver her bag to her and I was able to meet her to retrieve my bag while still in Athens.  I never heard a word from Oceania about our missing bag.  Not a peep.  I made repeated phone calls to their customer service lines and was basically told they couldn't help us.  Sent emails to every executive in Oceania I could find and got the same response from their Corporate people: we can't help you because "you are no longer a passenger after you disembark"

     

    They are right - after that experience, it will take a very special itinerary for me to be an Oceania passenger again.  The on-board experience was fine.  Off-ship their customer service and support before and after the cruise was very poor.

    • Like 3
  7. 10 hours ago, Jim Avery said:

    An off and on rainy day in Cairns.  We didi not do the boat to the barrier reef as we did that last time here.  One time in the stinger suit is enough.  Went to the Aquarium and it was very nice. After went walkabout in the very convenient town center and did some shopping.  Ended at Dundee's Pub/Restaurant.  Excellent food, much supposedly local sourced.  Right on the water a short walk back to the ship.  And the ship is docked right at Hemingway's Brewery..  A real working brewery with attached pub.  Close enough to visit in your Viking robe and slippers......🍺🍺🍺

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    We had dinner at Dundees when we spent 3 days in Cairns last January.  Wonderful food, service and atmosphere.  Another fun place, best for lunch, is Prawn Stars which is IN the marina.  HUGE platters of fresh prawns served on fishing boats that have been converted to restaurant seating/

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  8. That pretty much sums up our experience on Virgin, and, as someone mentioned, their target demographic is much younger than Viking's, although we didn't feel it had a huge impact on our experience. Our cruise had a lot of "friends groups" on it.  The food was outstanding  I found the service a bit more 'wanting', but our cruise was immediately post-pandemic (Feb 2022) and I think all service industries were having service issues at that point anyway.  Very different experience, but I think I'd do another Virgin cruise depending on the itinerary and length (and probably choose it over Oceania if both itineraries were similar).

     

  9. 19 hours ago, formernuke said:

    What provider did you use for Invergordon tour? Thanks 

    We did a similar tour in Invergordon, sans Cawdor Castle (but spent a decent amount of time exploring Uruqhart Castle) through Thistle Tours (selected from the Viator site) and it was wonderful.  Only 8 of us in a mini-van and a terrific guide who modified the schedule for our interests.

  10. 11 hours ago, allyg said:

    Thanks so much for sharing your information and insights. We are on British Isles Explorer May 1-15, 2024. In Edinburgh, did you do the “ Scotch Whiskey Experience “ that you mentioned on your spreadsheet? I also think I would enjoy the Bagpipe Workshop and Whiskey Tasting offered by Viking but it is pricey so not sure. Thanks again!

    Not sure where the one you mention is, but we did the whiskey tasting excursion offered at Ullapool.  It was good - wonderful tour of the distillery and tasting (and this particular distillery does NOT export to the US - only available in Scotland and Asia so shopping is key here!), a short visit to Beully (cute little town) and an incredibly lovely (but long) drive through the Highlands.  It does take all the time you have in Ullapool so we didn't get to see the town itself though since we were only in port for a half day.

     

  11. We were on this cruise in June 2023.  We didn't do all the excursions you are asking about, but friends of ours did some.  Plus, some personal observations having been a few of those places previously:

     

    Tower of London: very doable on your own (we've been there 3 times).  The Wardens give free talks and there are lots of resources.  See if you can get your admission tickets in advance on line though.

    Canterbury - we didn't do this but our friends did and really enjoyed it.  They did go inside the cathedral.  It is not walkable from the boat.

    Can't help with the castle question - haven't been there

    Wicklow County is LOVELY!  Visited there years ago with friends on our own. It's  bit of a ride, but the scenery is worth it I think

    Ffestiniog Railway may have been one of the highlights of our trip (along with the Orkneys and Shetland stops which were our favorites overall).  The train ride is fun, the scenery is breath taking.  The small town you go to for lunch is simply charming.  A little pricey, but we thought it was worth it.  If your husband is a fan of classic trains, he'll love it for sure.

  12. 1 hour ago, SJD117 said:


    The tram is pleasant but nothing remarkable. Much nicer views of Wellington and the surrounding area are available from the Mount Victoria lookout, just off Oriental Bay.

    We went to Mt. Victoria during the included excursion our Viking cruise last year and it was fantastic.  We missed the funicular ride which I wanted to do, but that gives me a great excuse to go back there some day!

    • Like 1
  13. Not sure if this is any contribution on the Hawaii thing, but we've been planning a 2-week 50th anniversary trip to Hawaii for the past year and I've been doing a lot of research and reading in preparation.  Similar to other ports around the world, there is a great deal of concern in the state about the negative environmental impact of excessive cruise ship arrivals and there are some in the state that would like to end them completely.  Also, dock space (with the exception of Honolulu) is limited and is needed to receive shipments of goods (virtually everything there from toilet paper to building supplies has to be shipped in).  It wouldn't surprise me if the ports are, on their own, beginning to limit docking privileges for cruise ships.

     

    • Like 2
  14. Re: rugs.  If you are interested in purchasing one, we were advised by one of our guides in Istanbul to consider carving time to visit a dealer in one of the smaller Turkish ports - prices there are lower than in Istanbul and more willing to haggle prices down.  We purchased ours in Kusadasi for about half of what it would have cost in Istanbul (even with haggling).

  15. 17 hours ago, Squawkman said:

    We did the Viking Beatles tour and while similar to your tour, we fared much better. We had a great guide and did the museum first - almost had the place to ourselves. Had several photo opportunities. The guide lectured in depth about the Merseybeat groups of the 60’s, etc. As often the case with tours, YMMV.

    Yes, there were other groups (I think there were 4 bus loads both morning and afternoon) that went to the museum first and had a great experience there.  Our guide was terrific though; he was a musician and a life-long resident of Liverpool.  He had some great stories to share including one about his uncle who actually lived in Paul McCartney's childhood home for a few years (and sold it because he got tired of dealing with all the tourists tramping through his yard!!)

  16. 3 hours ago, Peregrina651 said:

    Happy New Year, Everyone!

     

    Time to bring this very, very helpful thread back up to the top in the hopes that past guests will continue to answer questions for those who are about to sail.

     

    Let's start with Liverpool!

     

    If you took a Viking tour in Liverpool, which one did you take? Would you do it again? Any accessibility warnings that you can share -- steep inclines; rough going; too many, too steep, no handrail stairway, no accessible toilets (meaning toilets that people wouldn't be able to get to at all as opposed to no wheelchair accessible stall available or even worse buses without toilets)? 

     

    If your wandered on your own or did an independent tour, what did you?

     

    Thanks in advance for jumping in to answer our questions.

    We did this cruise in June 2023 and took the Beatles Tour with Viking.  It was OK: stopped at Penny Lane, Strawberry Fields (spent a lot more time there than needed) and Paul's childhood home, drove by a couple of other spots, and ended at The Beatles Story Museum which is good, but was so crowded when we got there we couldn't really enjoy it like I hoped. After lunch we walked over to the Cavern Club ourselves and wandered around town and the waterfront.  It was a good day.  Our friends took an independent Beatles Tour and really liked it a lot - being in a car/van, they saw a lot more than we did.  Based on their feedback, I'd recommend an independent tour over the Viking provided one.  The ship docks right in town which was great, but the walk from the ship to shore is fairly long, and the gangway can be steep when at low tide!

     

    • Thanks 2
  17. I'm sorry you were disappointed in your experience.  I don't know why Viking continues to advertise Leon on the itinerary because they haven't stopped there at least since our cruise in March of 2022 - more because of the political situation than Covid I believe (safety issues).  We essentially missed Cabo (arrived at 5 pm due to a medical emergency diversion) on our cruise as well.  Was there a reason for the extended time in Panama City?

    • Like 2
  18. 15 hours ago, FatBoy20 said:

    Dun Laoghaire is a Tender Port with bus shuttle into Dublin Centre taking around 30-40 mins dependant on traffic.

    We explored Dublin independently (having been there before and there not being any excursions that interested us) and we took the DART train into the city and back.  It's much faster than the Viking provided shuttle, very easy to use, only 5 pounds for a round trip ticket, and an easy 10 minute walk from the tender dock.  Highly recommend this option.

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 1
  19. Viking hasn't been docking in Dublin for quite some time.  The city/country has disallowed cruise ship docking in the city so they have to go to Dun Laoghaire now.  We anchored/tendered there last year (June) during out BIE cruise.

     

  20. Just a tip: if you want butter/margarine/jam/jelly with your toast or rolls, be sure to order it; if you want milk for your coffee, be sure to order it.  We were surprised the first time we ordered our room service breakfast and the 'condiments' didn't automatically accompany those items!

     

    • Thanks 1
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