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Neuhoftraveler

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Posts posted by Neuhoftraveler

  1. The Q4 ("Penthouse Suite") cabins on QM2 have a separate stall shower in addition to a bathtub.  No one at Cunard/US seems to know whether those showers include safety grab bars.  Can anyone speak to this?

     

    Related practical question: Are the toilets on QM2 standard height, higher so-called"comfort" height, or supposedly stylish low-slung height?

     

    Unfortunately, this is the kind of question we must ask before deciding whether and what to book.

  2. On 1/11/2022 at 3:45 PM, kohl1957 said:

    the accessible QG suites on QM2.  If you don't need it, those are pretty dismal. 

    Mr/Ms Kohl, may I ask you to elaborate on this?  I do need accessible facilties, and we are booked in an accessible QG suite for a Fall 2022 QM roundtrip crossing.  We have previously been in a regular Q5 (I think it was).  I'm aware the closet space is a bit more limited, but what else do you think makes them "pretty dismal"?

  3. Today the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a new advisory that all travelers, even those fully vaccinated, should avoid cruise ships.  This comes after 91 ships departing from US ports have reported cases during the past seven days that warranted CDC investigation.  For its part, the Cruise Lines International Association claims to be "particularly perplexed" because the reported cases are only "a slim minority" of all passengers, and are mostly asymptomatic or "mild" anyway.  (That should be a great comfort to the "slim minority.")

     

    Just reporting the news here -- please don't shoot this messenger.

    • Like 2
  4. Cartagena (Spain) was one of our most enjoyable port calls.  Very easy to DIY.  You don't need a tour, ship's or otherwise.   Don't miss the Maritime Museum down on the waterfront, which includes a lot of marine archeology.  Part way up the hill from the waterfront is an unearthed Roman villa with lovely mosaic floors and walls.

     

    A good book to read for local color is a mystery novel whose name I can't remember but which is set in and around Cartagena, about the search (in modern times) for a sunken 17th/18th-century Spanish treasure ship.  I'm sure a little Googling will bring up the name of the book.

    • Like 1
  5. Sevilla is a terrific city to visit.  Well worth the travel time from Cadiz.  My near neighbor MSKaufman lists the highlights.  I'd add only that the Santa Cruz barrio is the oldest (or one of the oldest) parts of the city, with narrow streets, charming/quaint historic architecture, attractive little shops, etc, etc.

     

    If your alternative is a day in Cadiz, don't even think twice.  Cadiz is attractively sited, but doesn't have a lot of character, and there isn't much if anything to see there.  If you're a sherry aficionado you might try to arrange a visit to the Osborne (or some other) sherry winery (bodega), across the water in El Puerto de Santa Maria.

     

    Be very cautious about a ship's excursion to Jerez de la Frontera.  Find out exactly what the tour timetable is.  Ours was poorly planned, lots of idle time waiting around for things to open.

     

    But if you haven't seen it, you really shouldn't miss Sevilla.

  6. 5 hours ago, ExArkie said:

    As far as esthetics (see photo), the presence of the door did not bother me nor did I think it interfered with the decor.

    We were in 9047 in December 2018 (TA westbound).  I'm not sure we even noticed the connecting door.  In any case, there was no noise whatsoever from the connecting cabin.  Beyond that, the cabin was absolutely lovely in every respect.  Mrs. N especially liked the little dressing table just inside the large walk-in closet.

    We expected to appreciate being very close to an elevator bank, but soon realized that, in practice, you have to traverse the same length of corridor to get to any particular destination no matter whether the elevator is next to your cabin, next to the destination, or anywhere in between.  So that alleged "advantage" is illusory.

    The big (and only) downside of traveling in QG is that it hooks you for life.  As the famous WWI-era song goes,  "How're you going to keep 'em down on the farm after they've seen Paree?"  This was our first time on QM2.  We'd booked PG.  When the PG price went substantially down, we decided to re-book the same cabin at the lower fare.  Cunard counter-offered to upgrade us to Q5 if we stuck with the superseded fare.  We took it in a heartbeat, and have never looked back.

    Unfortunately our 2020 TA in QG was cancelled, and though we have high hopes for our October 2022 roundtrip TA in QG, we have low expectations that it will actually happen.

  7. Forgive this post if it's just old news that I missed until now, but I notice that in Cunard's latest promotional emails, the (oxymoronic) "required gratuities" have been re-christened "Hotel and Dining Service Charges."

     

    At least this will put an end to the perennial question on this board, "Do I have to pay the gratuities?"

    • Like 1
  8. We are considering the classical-music-themed crossing in 2022, but the Cunard website gives no details on the number or nature of performances to be offered.  Has anyone on this board ever taken one of those voyages, and can you provide any information and comments?  If you still have the daily program sheets, it would be wonderful if you could post them.

     

    Thanks in advance for any information and advice.

  9. 38 minutes ago, latserrof said:

    Have you ever read any of Cruise Critic's articles?

    Yes.  That's why I said "Maybe even."  And that's why it occurred to me that if the Major could get someone like her to contact Cunard and tell them, "This is really too much," they might actually do something.

     

    In the US, some of the (surviving) newspapers run a weekly consumer-oriented travel column, and people will sometimes bring their complaints to those columnists who then contact the travel supplier with a view to writing up how successfully they solved the problem.  If one of the major UK dailies has such a column, it might be something for the Major to try.

  10. 21 hours ago, majortom10 said:

    they now want a refund of more money than what they double refunded me

    This is beyond absurd.  Bank transfers cost money (at least in the US they do.)  Are they authorizing you to deduct that cost?  And why Is an additional amount requested?  Changes in exchange rates?  If so, I can't imagine why Cunard shouldn't be made to eat the difference.

     

    This would make a great article for a syndicated travel journalist.  You might consider finding one that tends to side with consumers.  That often gets vendors' attention.  Maybe even the editor of Cruise Critic?

  11. For those keepiing score: Full refund finally credited to our cc account for 31 May Norway cruise.  Booking cancelled by us on 3 April after getting assurances from Cunard on "hardship" grounds  (planned TA travel to UK already cancelled by Cunard, plus a lockdown order here at home) that a full refund would be made (no FCC), and then cruise totally cancelled by Cunard a few days later.  Elapsed time: 76 calendar days.  Better late than never.  This included return air fare booked through Cunard.

     

    Good luck to all still waiting.

    • Like 1
  12. For those keeping score and/or counting the days, today my US credit card issuer notified me that on June 6 my account was credited with a full refund on our cancelled May 13 TA.  Both the cancellation and the refund request were on March 30, so the interval was 68 days.  The booking was made through a US travel agent, who submitted the refund request on my behalf.

     

    Still waiting for the refund on our May 31 QV Norway cruise, which we cancelled April 3 on the basis of a promised full refund, in anticipation of Cunard eventually pulling the plug (as it did just a few days later).

    • Like 2
  13. 2 hours ago, Trevor33 said:

    if you cancel the cruise before final payment date we would lose the deposit

    My understanding is that  those who cancelled because of the pandemic before Cunard pulled the plug are getting their deposits and any other payments refunded.  I haven't been tabulating the posts here or on the predecessor thread, but has anyone cancelling since the official pandemic declaration been denied (I don't mean delayed) a full refund?

     

    At my request, my TA managed to get through to Cunard (US) today.  She was told that the promised 60 days will be up to 90 days.  For those keeping score, our sailings were to be May 13 and May  31.  Cunard cancelled the first on March 30, and on April 3 I cancelled the second, after Cunard promised me a full refund.

     

     

  14. 15 minutes ago, phbr said:

    The problem we have is we are due to fly in from Ireland. If there is no indication that the incoming travel ban will be lifted by early October, and we have paid the balance, then we will be out a lot of money.

    Your trip insurance probably includes coverage for being "quarantined."  You might talk to your insurance agent/issuer and ask whether being excluded from the country or port of departure would be a covered risk.

  15. 2 hours ago, Roger Ackroyd said:

    B) Don't pay the balance. Then what happens when Cunard cancels (say, end of June, early July)? Will the deposit be returned?  Or is that lost come what may?

    If Cunard cancel the cruise, they have no legal basis for keeping your money.  If all else fails (or maybe even if it doesn't) your credit card agreement probably obligates the card issuer to reverse the charge.

     

    The passage of time since you put down the deposit should not be an issue.  Any time limit stated for disputing charges is meant for the typical case of a goods purchase for immediate delivery, not for something in the distant future.  The only effect of the stated time limit is to require review and approval of your claim by a human being rather than automatic clearance by a computer program.

  16. 31 minutes ago, Bennybluehat said:

    We should have been in New York today before completing the return voyage to Southampton on QM2 but as of yet no refund.

     

    16 minutes ago, majortom10 said:

    We also should have been in New York today on our roundtrip TA which we cancelled on 30th March and have heard nothing since.

    If it's any consolation, I assure you that you would not want to be in New York today.

    • Like 1
  17. It seems to me that both of the points made above are correct -- paying current expenses out of current cash flow is the way business often if not usually or always is done, but that doesn't make it morally OK.  If what Cunard was promising in return for the current cash flow was using future cash flow to pay future "investment profits" rather than future cruise operating expenses, it would be called a Ponzi scheme.

     

    As to trust accounts or escrow accounts, the only businesses I know of that use them (much less required by law to use them) to hold customer prepayments for future services are lawyers and real estate brokers.

     

     

  18. 1 hour ago, si_boy said:

    No Cunard fee for transferring the cruise, but steep flight cancellation fees.

    My understanding has been that Cunard do not actually ticket return flights until 45 days prior to cruise departure (if not flight departure).  So I'm puzzled by the idea of air cancellation fees for return flights following an August 2020 cruise.

     

    FWIW, my own cancellation notification from Cunard for a late May cruise, which I cancelled more than 45 days prior to scheduled sailing (shortly before Cunard cancelled the cruise), shows no cancellation fees of any kind.

  19. 21 hours ago, Bigmike911 said:

    When these stories don't even ask for comments from the subject of the story, it always strikes me as why not?

    All competent and respected reporters ask for comment from the subject of their upcoming story.  Most competent and respected press advisers tell their clients to decline to comment when asked.  The exception is when the adviser has developed a press strategy for her client and thinks the opportunity to comment can usefully be worked into the strategy.

     

    That's been my experience.

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