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BlueRiband

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  1. Getting a scooter through the door is only 5% of the problem.  Finding a place to park it once inside is the other 95% of the problem.  Some years ago we had a post from a passanger who was in your situation: No HC cabins were available so she booked a standard one and showed up with an undeclared scooter.  After assuring the check-in agents that her scooter folded, and she would manage just fine, she was permitted to board. 

     

    You can probably guess how this went.  She wrote a dissertation here about her difficulties in stowing it. And complained about the delays in getting a shower seat that she never told Cunard would be needed until after she had boarded the ship.  So after letting her board the ship with an undeclared scooter Cunard gets a negative review about how callus, inattentive, and mean they were toward a passenger with reduced motility. 

     

    If you are in the US the current scooter policy can be found here:Wheelchairs and motility scooters

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  2. And now that the incident has been well publicized, we'll next read of somebody suing Cunard for the emotional trauma supposedly caused by the incident.

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  3. 20 hours ago, London-Calling said:

    Palmer now says it was Covid that delayed the project, rather than 'second thoughts'.

    Given that the Titanic II project had prolong periods of dormancy I won't believe that it is going to happen until a shipyard contract is signed.   No yard is going to do that unless they are confident that they will get paid when the ship is completed.  If 2024 passes and there is still no contract, I think this latest revival can be written off as something Palmer decided to do because he got bored with politics.

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  4. On 3/24/2024 at 10:02 PM, ldubs said:

     

    I could see how they might be an issue for others in a scooter, wheelchair, etc. What do you do, move them?  Call security?  

     

    - I give the Purser's desk a call and let them handle it.  Within an hour it's gone. 

     

    As for door decorations, just walk by looking straight ahead and try hard not to let them ruin your day.  🙂 

     

    - Ruin my day?  No.  But if it proliferated on the ship that I sail I wouldn't be sailing that ship much longer. 

     

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  5. On 3/20/2024 at 9:40 AM, chengkp75 said:

    I believe the thread title was "tongue in cheek", as this thing could no more compete with QM2 than a ferry boat.  There isn't enough demand for "crossings" to support more than the QM2 and the industry knows it.

    Two years ago the Belfast Telegraph said that Palmer was having second thoughts on the long term viability of the ship once the initial curiosity had worn off.   It might eventually go the the Chinese market.  One, Chinese passengers love to gamble. (And when people gamble the house always wins.)  Two, there is a huge fascination with Titanic in China such that a theme park was building a floating but docked replica of the ship.  It was estimated to be about 25% complete before that project ran out of money.

  6. 3 hours ago, ldubs said:

     

    I'm beginning to wonder if you are one of the hall monitors?  😃

    When it comes to finding a scooter parked in a hall, yes.

     

    However to get back on topic, door decorations seem to be more prevalent on some lines rather than others.  I've never liked the practice.  At best it's folk art. At worst it's about as appealing is spray paint graffiti.

     

  7. The Finland-based naval architecture firm Deltamarin was working on Titanic II previously.  In the first effort, it got as far as model basin testing but then the project went dormant 2015-18.  In 2018 Palmer revived the project and it got as far as a "conceptual design for shipyard pricing."  Then the project again fell silent until this latest revival.   I'm skeptical that this time will be different. 

     

    If my recollection of the ship dimensions is accurate, the top of the funnels of Titanic II would just about reach deck 13 on QM2. 

  8. Scooters in hallways block the passage of other passengers who also need mobility devices.  The bariatric models are like mini-golf carts.  If I see a scooter in the hall I give the Purser's desk a ring. 

     

    Carnival's Cunard Line has done this for some years now: require that scooter-using passengers book an HC cabin.  There was a lot of board bickering on the topic:
    "This was never a problem on QE2!"

    "Mine can fold!"

    "I cannot get to the bathroom if the scooter is in the cabin!"

    - and, my personal favorite -

    "What about the housekeeping carts?  They are in the hall!" 

     

    My booking confirmations for non-premium cabins all had the disclaimer, "Mobility scooters not permitted."

     

  9. The Alaska Marine Highway system operates US-flagged ships.  Its only port in the "lower 48" is in Bellingham, Washington.  Some ships have basic overnight cabins and some are "day boats".  They provide a vital transportation link among smaller Alaska communities.  If you are more adventurous you might want to check it out.  But be aware this is intended as A-B transportation and it does not offer cruise ship style dining or entertainment. 

    • Like 1
  10. If there is a steep incline when getting on or off the ship, you might want to consider "walking" your wife's empty scooter up or down the ramp. (Of couse this presumes that you yourself still have the agility to do this.)   From what I've observed in these situations,  mobility impared passengers will be placed in a wheel chair and assisted by a crew member.   Once she is ashore she can then get on the scooter.  You both will have a lot more independence ashore if she can use a scooter rather than have to be pushed in a wheelchair. 

     

    If this is your first time renting a scooter please check if you will be restricted to booking only certain cabins.  Getting a scooter through a cabin door is only 1% of the problem.  Where you will park it once inside is the other 99% if the problem.  Many cruise lines have become very strict because too many passengers will try to leave them in a hallway.  This is a serious safety problem and blocks the path of other mobility impared passengers. 

    • Like 1
  11. This has been true at least since the re-start.  Cunard does offer what they call the "At Ease" cancellation fee waiver program.  But there is an important caveat: the protection ends 72 hours before sailing

     

    I thought the benefits didn't justify the premium being charged and obtained insurance elsewhere for my last sailing.

  12. Used what is now called "Express Disembarkation" today.  It was a much less painful procedure than dealing with the baggage hall.  (The only time I took the advice to hire a porter it went terribly wrong.)

     

    However today neither the escaltor nor the elevator was working at the Brooklyn terminal!   Everyone had to decend the stairs but Cunard sent crew members over to carry our bags down the staircase for us.  I don't know what they did about the mobility impaired passengers.

    • Like 2
  13. 20 hours ago, david,Mississauga said:

    ...Regarding the new Deck 8 staterooms 8116 to 8130 (port side only as I read it)  number 8130 is a Queens Grill suite.  

    8124, 8126, and 8128 are wheel chair accessible cabins while 8130 is a Q7.

     

    I took a walk down to the end and "small peepholes" are found in 8116-8126.  8128 and 8130 had the larger peepholes.  This suggests that only 5 cabins were updated.

  14. 6 minutes ago, JT1101 said:

    The rowdier behaviors I think tend not to happen on Cunard ships because of the more formal atmosphere and the imbuement of history and tradition into everything. It sort of leads to self selection by guests. 

    Agreed.  The dress code and formal atmosphere act as a filter.    Potential passengers who see the ships are a mismatch for their preferred vacation style won't book Cunard.

    • Like 1
  15. On 12/1/2023 at 8:51 PM, Liberal_Baggie said:

    Did anyone get to the bottom of what went on with Deck 8 . Clearly cabins were removed was this a trial for a future refit or was it done for access to other equipment? I’m guessing cabins on deck 8 port side Aft were the ones taken out anybody got any information?

     

    On 12/2/2023 at 3:14 AM, Winifred 22 said:

    I walked all round deck 8 corridors and looked in the Verandah and could see no difference whatsoever except new carpet on the floors. No new exit to deck 8.

    There was a Senior Officer's party today and I inquired about this from an engineering officer.  According to him there were no plumbing or other issues with the cabins removed but the replacement was just part of renewing areas of the ship.   The only noticeable difference - if one looks closely - is that the "peepholes" on 8116-8130 are smaller than on the original cabins.

     

    Also, the outdoor Jacuzzis were replaced along with new steel decking around the pools.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 2
  16. As one who has always sailed solo, FWIW consider:

    1) sailing solo for your first trip, and

    2) seek a cruise line that offers a fixed dining and table option so that you will have stable company at dinner. 

     

    Yes, the single supplement is pricey but the entire trip will be a waste if you have an incompatible cabin mate.  Remember that this is not an weekend trip by car and you cannot pack your bags and leave early if things go badly.

     

    When I last sailed two of my table mates were widowed ladies - long time friends who were sharing a cabin.  Later one confided to me that although they often traveled together, this was the first time that they had roomed together.  Long story short, her friend had annoying and disruptive habits at night and she was now going to have to endure another seven days of that while sailing back to their home country. 

  17. According to the Port of Rotterdam website, the refit is thus described: "This concerns an operational 'refit'; both technical maintenance and renovation of carpets and staterooms." (Machine translated from Dutch.)

    The Damen Verolme Rotterdam dock 7 is their largest: maximum of 405m length, 90m beam and 11.6m draft.  I'm hoping that once she arrives some images will show up on social media. 

     

    There are not too many drydocks in the world that can accomodate her.  On the US east coast Newport News - which builds aircraft carriers - appears to be the only place if she ran into serious trouble on this side of the Atlantic.

     

    • Like 1
  18. On 10/3/2023 at 8:43 PM, mattR said:

    Would the Cancellation Fee Waiver Program enable some of my group to cancel last minute if they put in new Covid restrictions last minute? 

    As I read it, No.  As of this writing the "At Ease" program brochure reads, " ..there is no protection from cancellation fees within 72 hours of sailing date." 

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