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No AC Or Toilets, Crippled Carnival Ship Splendor Needs Tow
CBS4.com ^ | 11/8/10

Posted on 11/09/2010 3:57:32 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta

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To: sitetest

I’ve always been told Carnival caters to a young crowd.


81 posted on 11/09/2010 8:01:15 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
Dear Dr. Scarpetta,

Well, I don't know what the definition of “young” might be. The cruise was for my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary, and thus, we had folks all the way from 23 months (my younger son) to well over 80. I guess there were roughly 20 of us, including some aunts, uncles and a couple of cousins.

Everyone had a good time except for my family (myself, my wife, my then-four year-old son and my then-23 month-old son).

We were the “whiners,” LOL.


sitetest

82 posted on 11/09/2010 8:07:59 AM PST by sitetest ( If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: 1010RD

A differnce between men and women?


83 posted on 11/09/2010 8:09:10 AM PST by Oystir
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

As I get seasick in the bathtub, Carnival or any other cruise line will not have to worry about me as a prospective client. Stuck on a ship with no ac or working toilets is to me a vacation from hell.


84 posted on 11/09/2010 8:26:02 AM PST by driftless2 (For long-term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: sitetest
"If you'd like the boring details, I'm happy to share, but don't want to inflict them on an unsuspecting audience."

Feel free to share. I have only been on one Carnival Cruise, but it was much better than I expected from all of the reports and Carnival's general reputation. I think they are trying to change their product and go for a somewhat older audience.

85 posted on 11/09/2010 9:05:15 AM PST by Truth29
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To: Truth29

I also know people who took a Carnival cruise to New England and Canada and loved it. They’re about 50.


86 posted on 11/09/2010 9:28:17 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: driftless2

The ships are so huge you don’t hear much about people getting seasick anymore.


87 posted on 11/09/2010 9:29:12 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
Sounds like things are getting a little better. Even an aircraft carrier is getting involved.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101109/ap_on_re_us/us_cruise_ship_fire

88 posted on 11/09/2010 10:53:00 AM PST by Truth29
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To: Truth29
Dear Truth29,

Well, don't say you didn't ask for it. ;-)

Anyway, my mother wanted us to all go on a cruise for my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary. She tells us about the idea in early 1998, scheduled for June 1999. My wife is very skeptical initially. Our younger son at this time isn't quite a year old, and he's a crawler! He's also an escape artist! The idea of him at not-quite two years old and running around on board a ship where there's ocean overboard doesn't thrill her.

My mother replies, it will be so much fun! The food is so marvelous! All gourmet!! And, ALL YOU CAN EAT!! And they have movies in the rooms!! First-run movies!! It's right here in the brochure!! Sure enough, it says, “first-run movies.” And there's shows, there's gambling, there's all sorts of activities - port calls, shopping, tours!!

So, we ask, what are we going to do with the kids while we're at the shows at night, or in the casino? How will our life be any different than on dry land, in our own home? You guys (my parents, my uncles, aunts, siblings, cousins) will be off to parties and shows, etc. while we're back in our cabin changing diapers.

Oh, my mother says, there's Kamp Karnival for the little kids. I note that the literature specifically says absolutely no one in Kamp Karnival under the age of two. My younger son will be 23 months exactly the day we board.

And it will be so much fun! They have so many activities! And everything, EVERYTHING is included in the price of the ticket, except for alcoholic beverages. When you're out on the deck, you can get any water, iced tea, sodas, all for free. If you want to get a snack between meals, all for free.

I also note that the staterooms for which my mother is paying are rather cramped for two adults and two very active children. You can upgrade, she tells me (on my own dime, of course).

So, we talk to her travel agent who assures me that “absolutely no one under two” doesn't mean that 23 months isn't acceptable, and he persuades us that we'll find the suite, at an extra $4000+, very, very spacious and comfortable.

Okay - but we'll need a crib. We ain't puttin’ the little guy in a bed. He'll just get up, walk out onto the balcony, and dive into the sea. No problem, we're told, we can guarantee a crib. Remember, this is nearly EIGHTEEN MONTHS in advance.

So, we get talked into the whole thing, fork over $4000+ in addition to the $2000+ my mother forked over for the basic stateroom, and we all plan to fly to Florida to board the boat on June 7, 1999.

The hellacious night in the hotel the night before the cruise is not the fault of Carnival, but it doesn't help. The shady character providing the towncar service isn't the fault of Carnival, but that doesn't help, either.

So, we get to the dock. Hours-long wait to check in. Already feeling like a schmuck. We get to our room. This is the SUITE?? The LARGEST ONE ON THE WHOLE DAMNED BOAT?? I HAVE BIGGER WALK-IN CLOSETS AT HOME!! I'M PAYING (ALONG WITH MY MOTHER) NEARLY SEVEN THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR A WEEK OF THIS??? Yikes!

And then. No crib. The little vermin who is our steward or purser or something tells me, no, no crib. I tell him, we reserved a crib 18 months in advance. Sorry, no crib. We ran out. I ordered a crib. Too bad. I have to have a crib. I'm not signing for the room unless I have a crib. We'll see what we can do, but no guarantees. All right, I'm leaving, I want a full refund - $7000. Right now. You can't do that. You can't leave. You can't have a refund. Yes I can. I haven't signed yet for my room, we're still in boarding. Here's the contract [out pops the contract from my hip pocket] and here's where it says that if I leave before completing boarding, I get a whole refund...

...You'll have a crib.

...And I'll sign when I get the crib. Oh, by the way, we ordered one double bed, not two singles. Too bad, that's what you got. Okay, let's gather up the kids and the luggage, we're leaving. Mail me my refund check. Oh, and,... what's your [unpronounceable] name? I want to make sure I spell it right when I write to the president to tell him why we left and got a full refund...

...It'll be a double bed in half an hour.

Good, says I! I'll sign your papers when everything is right.

So, we move into the “suite” and lo and behold! There's a big bottle of water on ice! After four hours in line to get on board and then nearly two hours dealing with the moron steward/purser/swine, we're really thirsty! And there's even a nice card on the bottle welcoming us on board! Things are looking up!

Or not... If we open the bottle, $3 will be charged to our room. Well, we were thirsty, and it was just three bucks (although I'd never actually paid three bucks for a bottle of water before in our life).

So, we get everything squared away and go to dinner.

On the menu is filet mignon. Yes! NOW it's starting to get good! I order my filet medium rare. You can't have it medium rare. What do you mean I can't have it medium rare? It's either medium or well-done. Those are the only two ways you can order it. You're kidding me. You won't cook me a steak medium rare? You're going to cook filet mignon MEDIUM OR WELL-DONE?? What type of BARBARIANS ARE YOU PEOPLE??

Well, it turns out that the “gourmet” food is all cooked cafeteria-style. They cook the food without regard to individual order, half one way, half the other. And then they put ‘em under heat lamps. Just like a Morrison's cafeteria down south. Worst “gourmet” food I ever ate in my life. Pure crap. Not worth fifty cents a meal, no less the thousands of dollars this fiasco is costing me.

Oh, and you CAN order seconds,... but it won't come out until after your cattle call, er,... uh,... “dinner seating” is over, and the waitstaff are anxiously waiting for you to vacate for the next herd of cattle - uh,... er,... “dinner seating.”

Okay. Well. It's late. So we turn in for the night. It's sorta cool on the balcony looking at the Gulf of Mexico. But that gets old after a while, so we go back into our “suite,” and try to find a comfortable configuration for the four of us to sit in front of the TV to watch a “first-run movie.”

It's June 7, 1999. Of course, it turns out that they're only playing one “first-run movie” for the entire one-week cruise. And that “first-run movie” is... wait for it... you're gonna love it...

TITANIC!!

Yes!! We're all on our first night on this big-ass ol’ cruise ship, and the “first-run movie” that they're playing is TITANIC!! ROTFLMAO!! I'm thinking, what sort of sick bastard picked this one out???

I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP!

And then... think about it. When did Titanic come out? December 1997! Here we are, 18 months later, June 1999, and they're pawning off TITANIC as a first-run movie!!

The next day, we get breakfast. The “gourmet food,” cafeteria style (Here, there's no pretending; you get in a line, go through the line, folks slap slop on your plate as you pass by them, some of them look nearly human.) sucks. But, the wife and I are gonna enjoy some alone time. We're taking our kids to KAMP KARNIVAL!!

We take them down to the Kamp, and they look on their computer screen, and snottily inform us that we “lied” when we said our little guy was two, he's only 23 months and one day (yes, the stupid little nazi young woman actually added, “and one day.”) and “two means two, not twenty-three months and one day.” But they permit us to leave the two guys with them, promising some sort of fun. We tell the guys we'll be back for lunch in a few hours.

So, my wife and I run off for a romp. First we try to sit up on the deck and sip iced teas poolside. We're not big drinkers, and besides, it's like... 9 am in the morning! But to our surprise, lots of folks are well into their third, fourth, or whatever cocktail. Anyway, we see a waiter passing by and ask for two iced teas. You need, he says, to fetch those yourselves from that line, as he points over to a line that stretches out of view. We only will bring you alcoholic beverages to your chairs, he informs us.

After waiting 45 minutes, I finally get my wife and I an iced tea each. It appears to be an 8 oz glass, and about 75% ice. I make my two oz of iced tea last a good three or four minutes. Not wishing to get back into the line from Hell, we decide to try the hot tub on the upper deck. Filled with short people (as in, under 16 years of age, as in, not supposed to be in there, as in, nobody from the cruise line really gives a damn). We wait nearby for an hour or so until they depart. We approach the hot tub. We recoil at the sight. More mildew and mold in one place than we've seen cumulatively in our entire lives. YUCK!! I'm pretty sure that last group of kids will all have VD by the morning.

So, we walk through the boat until it's time to pick up the guys at the Kamp. It's a very big boat.

We get to the Kamp to check our guys out for lunch, and find them in a corner together, crying. The younger one is inconsolable, the older one is trying to keep it together, trying to comfort the younger one.

WHAT IS GOING ON? I ask. My older son relates that a little while after we left, the younger one started getting mopey. He missed mom and dad. The “counselors” were having none of this, and put him in a corner by himself. Then, he started to wail. They ordered the older guy to go take care of the younger one, because, after all, he's not even two years old and he doesn't belong here in the first place!!

You'll need to wait for me to continue as I work to get a grip from the memory of this. I hope the two filthy verminous little whores of Satan came to an ugly death in some back alley of some verminous Mexican village at the hands of a gang of filthy, dirty, illiterate thugs.

They let my sons sit like this for the better part of three hours.

We took them and proceeded to [an atrocious] lunch. My older son begged us not to take them back to Kamp Nazi - uh,... Karnival. He really didn't need to beg. We had no intentions otherwise.

That night, after we choked down more cruise ship slop that they labeled “dinner,” while sipping iced teas that came at a severe emotional cost in the lounge, they had a bunch of the other prisoners - ..., er,... children - being held hostage - er,... uh,... being..., uh,..., ... ... “entertained” - THAT'S IT - THEY WERE “ENTERTAINING” THE LITTLE TYKES - put on a little “show” for us adults. The looks of fright and horror in the eyes of the prisoners nearly brought us to tears. My younger son cried hysterically at the sight. My older son wept silently. I assured them that we would never, ever put them back in that hellhole ever again, and this eventually comforted them.

Obviously, without the services of the Kamp Koncentration - uh - Karnival - we were unable to visit the casino or go to the shows or anything like that. So, we stayed in our suite every night of the cruise save two and read books with the guys. My father babysat one evening so we could go to a show. Yeck. Pure crap. Dancing girls who sang out off-tune and off-key. My nephew and his girlfriend sat for us when we went to the grand and glorious Midnight Buffet! What a waste of time. More glop and poop, just served in limitless quantities. And besides, who really wants to pig out at midnight?

The next day, we were hanging out on board the ship in the mid-afternoon, and we got kind munchy. After all, we could barely stomach the crap they were serving at meal times. We decided to check into the “limitless and wide array of snacks.” Which turned out to be pizza that saw its heyday sometime during the Korean War, and frozen yogurt. Vanilla or chocolate. Oh, and pudding. Or at least, that's what the sign said. I won't say what it actually looked or smelled like. No one was permitted to eat the pudding. Our “suite” was, as noted, rather tiny, and we didn't want to worsen the conditions by inducing gastrointestinal distress on the part of any of us.

We did have some nice times together as a family. We saw a show in a town on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. I bought an onyx and some other stone chess set for my older guy, there. We did the glass-bottomed boat in the waters of Grand Cayman Island. New Orleans was sort of a bust because it rained the whole time, but we were together, and on the bus, no one tried to make us eat ship food. What a relief!

However, I will note that our “all-inclusive” trip didn't cover the cost of anything at all at the ports of call. Every show or tour we saw or went on was extra. As well, the pre-negotiated “discounted” prices we paid on shore at shops (the cruise line required that we identify as Carnival cruisers) was laughed at by the locals, as we saw them sell the same stuff for half the price to folks not from Carnival. When we looked again at the brochure that Carnival gave us listing “approved” shops, we found the fine print that indicated that 1) the “pre-negotiated” “discounted” prices were not necessarily cheaper than what we could get on our own and 2) all the merchants listed paid a “nominal” promotional fee to Carnival for the privilege of being listed in the guide.

The Carnival thieves get you coming, going, going forward or backward, up or down, or inside out.

Toward the end of our trip, my wife needed to do some laundry. We'd been in Florida, and then on board the boat, for an entire week. So, in went a week's worth of laundry - shirts, undies, socks, whatever. But, out came less than a week's worth of laundry. Five of seven of my older son's underpants were missing. My wife had seen one of the staff, breaking the rules, “doing laundry” in the guests’ laundry room. She felt uncomfortable in his presence, he kept leering at her while she loaded the washing machine, taking inordinate interest in what she was putting in. As best we can tell, he was pedophile and he stole the underwear for purposes unmentionable.

On the last day, we were pressured strongly to leave “tips” for the staff. I didn't want to, and neither did my wife. Tips for this rotting garbage scow? But my relatives didn't want us all to look cheap because my wife and I wanted to leave without tipping at all. And the steward/purser/swine was rather aggressive in “explaining” why we needed to leave these “tips.” I wanted to give him a tip: find a new line of work.

But we relented and parted with several hundred dollars’ more cash on our “all-inclusive” cruise trip.

As we're debarking and getting to the limo, someone shouts out my name. I turn around. A fella with a badge. Local sheriff's deputy. Yes, can I help you, I ask. Do you know your towncar driver isn't licensed to drive commercially, he asks. No, I didn't order the driver, our travel agent did. Well, the driver comes over and silently takes the officer of the law behind the now-open trunk of the Lincoln, and it appears something is exchanged from the driver's hands to the "deputy's" hands, although we don't have a good view because most of the Lincoln is in the way.

Anyway, the "deputy" reappears and says all the paperwork is in order, and we're free to go. It takes me a little while to figure out what just happened, because I can be slow on the uptake when folks are paying other folks extortion money and all that. When I go to ask the driver about it, he tells me to shut and enjoy the ride.

When we got home, I wrote the president of Carnival. He sent us back coupons for a free trip. I burned them with great ceremony.

Never, ever again.


sitetest

89 posted on 11/09/2010 11:14:54 AM PST by sitetest ( If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: sitetest

WOW! Sounds dreadful. Too bad you had to go through all that. We cruise Royal Caribbean and haven’t had any problems. There are always babies on board with plenty of stuff for them to do.

Family Cruising

http://www.royalcaribbean.com/allaboutcruising/familycruising/home.do;jsessionid=0000_LPmuvfVAhZZUkwDqKKM64g:12h3g0fq2?cS=NAVBAR

There is also a program called ROYAL TOTS for ages 18-36 months. I think cruising has come a long way since the late 90’s.


90 posted on 11/09/2010 11:27:36 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: sitetest
Well, thanks, I wanted to hear the detail since my one experience with Carnival was quite good. I can't comment on all of your travails related to kids since we didn't travel with any, but a couple of other things vary, perhaps with more recent practices.

Breakfast was a choice between the main dining room with table service or a buffet on one of the top decks. There was also a separate steakhouse that had superb steaks cooked any way you wanted them and the main dining room had the option of fixed dining times or dine any time we wanted.

We also had a small suite, but it consisted of three separate rooms with full walls and doors that allowed the sleeping area to be completely separate from the rest of the cabin. All rooms were small, but it was like a little apartment.

Lastly for your amusement and relating to your Titanic comment, we were on another cruise line one time that stopped in Halifax and part of the land tour was of the cemetery where the unclaimed and unidentified Titanic bodies were buried with the tombstones in the shape of the bow of the ship with a gap where it hit the iceberg. Now how is that for a cruise tour!

91 posted on 11/09/2010 1:03:48 PM PST by Truth29
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
Dear Dr. Scarpetta,

That's actually the condensed version. I didn't go into the elevators that smelled like puke every morning from the passengers the night before, or the details of the snotty service from ship personnel. Then, the problems with my family - they were all very mad at us because we dared to insist on things we were promised, and to complain when things sucked, etc., etc., etc.

Including airfare for four of us, several nights in a hotel, the “tips,” the money we spent on stuff in ports, this “luxury vacation” cost me personally over $6,000. And my mother spent over $2,000 for the basic stateroom.

“We cruise Royal Caribbean and haven’t had any problems.”

Since our adventure, I've heard that they're a good line, among others, and that Carnival is pretty much scraping the ugly stuff at the bottom of the barrel. Although some folks apparently like Carnival.

But I don't think we'll be cruising again any time soon. The wounds are still fresh in our minds, it only being a little better than a decade since it happened, LOL.


sitetest

92 posted on 11/09/2010 1:16:28 PM PST by sitetest ( If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
Did this strike anybody besides me funny? Does "help" mean they get a $100 voucher or something?

I was on an Alaskan cruise when 9/11 happened. The cruise ended up, as scheduled, in Vancouver a few days later. The cruise line was great about finding everyone places to stay and ways back home again. My wife and I were put on a sister ship... not too bad being stranded on a luxory liner for 6 extra days, especially when they fed us all quite well.

93 posted on 11/09/2010 1:24:31 PM PST by Cementjungle
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
The ships are so huge you don’t hear much about people getting seasick anymore.

Modern ships all have stabilizers on them, which really help in rough seas. I did a cruise around Cape Horn in April, and it felt smooth as silk... even though the seas were pretty active.

94 posted on 11/09/2010 1:28:01 PM PST by Cementjungle
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To: Truth29
Dear Truth29,

Well, for all the millions upon millions of dollars they take, I'm glad that SOMEONE has had a good time on a Carnival tub! ;-)

I believe that the main dining rooms were available for breakfast if you wanted to go during your scheduled “seating.” But it was the same food, and it WAS NOT GOOD. Imagine army food during wartime, but not nearly so tasty or elegant.

That was part of the difficulty - these “seating” times. Very inflexible. If you missed your seating, you had to go eat in the lounge, which, except for breakfast, had this substance marked as pizza, the frozen yogurt - your choice of two flavors - and the stuff marked “pudding.”

We continued to get advertising in the mail from them for years, and I remember at some point they announced with fanfare the ability to go to the dining room without having to abide by the seating schedule.

A steakhouse! Wow. Cook to order? Wow. That was a big part of the problem. With the whole scheduled seating thingy, everyone would shuffle in at, say, 6:30 pm and take their assigned seats. The waiters would come by, take massive numbers of orders in a short period of time. Then, out would come massive numbers of salads and things, all pushed out on these huge multi-level carts, then a little later, all the entrees would come out all at once, in those little covered-dish thingies they use in cafeterias.

It took me a couple of nights to put two and two together (like I said, I can be slow), but the night that my nephew came late and ordered manicotti, and it came out burned at the edges, but only on the top - unlike manicotti that came out just fifteen minutes earlier - I figured out that they cooked up all the food right before and during the first part of the “seating,” without regard to who ordered what, and then just dished out what was already cooked as folks ordered it. Because he came a little late, my nephew's manicotti had been warming under a heat lamp. It wasn't prepared to order. Yech. Disgusting.

Our suite had, I think, two “sections,” with a sliding partition to turn it into two “rooms.” Which was pretty uncomfortable, as the whole thing was only something over 300 sq ft - about the size of my family room. With a double bed, a couch, a couple of chairs and a crib. And dressers. Very cheap dressers made out of very thin particle board.

And the colors were so garish on the ship! Loud pinks and purples! Florescent greens. It was so damned ugly.

Unclaimed Titanic victims - Yikes! LOL! I wonder who thought that would be a treat. Maybe it would be on one’s fourth or tenth cruise.

Oh well. I live near Annapolis, and we go out on short boat tours a few times a year - very enjoyable. But it may be a decade or two (or three) before we're over our Adventure of ‘99 and we try another cruise.


sitetest

95 posted on 11/09/2010 1:38:35 PM PST by sitetest ( If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
"don't hear much"

You'd hear me when I was leaning over the rail depositing my lunch into the briny.

96 posted on 11/10/2010 8:38:25 AM PST by driftless2 (For long-term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: Cementjungle
Modern ships all have stabilizers on them, which really help in rough seas. I did a cruise around Cape Horn in April, and it felt smooth as silk... even though the seas were pretty active.

What cruise line was that? Sounds very nice...

What were the excursions?

97 posted on 11/10/2010 9:21:00 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: sitetest

Your account of this cruise is accurate.

Carnival Cruise Lines are the worst in the business.

I took the one to Halifax and Maine in 2005.

The food was atrocious. The lobster tasted like rubber; the steaks were more like pot roast. I skipped the midnight buffet.

The entertainment sucked; the movies were old; the gamblers were obnoxious, and there were more drunks than at Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

Never again.


98 posted on 11/10/2010 9:37:14 AM PST by Palladin (PA. Goes Republican! Gloating feels good!!)
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

I was on the Norwegian Sun. It started in Buenos Aires, hit Montevideo, the Falkland Islands, around the Cape, in and out of the Beagle Chanel, Patagonia, the Magellan Straight, 7 stops in Chile, a couple in Peru, through the Panama Canal, then Costa Rica, Jamaica and ended up in Miami.

There were all sorts of excursions… I did one to go see the penguins on the Falkland Islands (froze my butt off), but mostly went out on my own at the other stops. They even had an Antarctica excursion which I passed on since it was too expensive.


99 posted on 11/10/2010 12:41:45 PM PST by Cementjungle
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To: Cementjungle

I wouldn’t mind doing that one.


100 posted on 11/10/2010 3:08:05 PM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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