Showing posts with label formal nights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label formal nights. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 July 2016

12 Tips for Queen Mary 2  Transatlantic Cruises

12 Tips for Queen Mary 2  Transatlantic Cruises

Queen Mary 2 in New York

Crossing the ocean onboard Queen Mary 2 with Cunard Line is a unique cruise experience. With a very rich mix of nationalities offering a complete world at sea, the ship is a hive of activities from enrichment lectures and classes to shows in the Planetarium, special meals and celebrations, dancing and much more. Knowing these 12 tips in advance will add a great deal to your clients’ enjoyment onboard.
Cooler Than You Think. All those pictures of passengers wrapped in blankets on deck chairs? At sea, any form of additional warmth is needed. Even if it’s summer, take a warm jacket and hat.
Reserve Ahead. Without port days, everything from spa treatments to dining fills up much earlier on most cruises.
Show Up. Line up at 9 a.m. outside ConneXions to get Planetarium tickets for any of the shows of the day, and be sure to arrive 15 minutes before the start of the show. The Planetarium dome covers a portion of the Illuminations theater, and seats are limited, so it gets filled very early. And if you come just before show time, you won’t be admitted.
Dress Code. Don’t be daunted by the dress code. Women in particular on our cruise were very worried about the frequent formal nights and the nature of informal ones. Cocktail dresses are perfectly acceptable on formal nights, and passengers showed up in all levels of dress on other nights. What is typically referred to as “country club casual” on other lines is accepted on Queen Mary 2’s informal nights.
Theme Nights. Theme nights are similarly flexible. Masquerade balls and other themes were celebrated by a few people on our cruise, mostly at the dancing that follows dinner and not at mealtime.
Casual Only. If you decide to go extra casual on a formal night, you are welcome in two public areas: the Kings Court buffet restaurant and the adjoining Winter Garden.
Bridge Brigade. Bridge is huge on these crossings. If you want to join in, you can be connected to other guests who are similarly inclined, and tournaments are announced in the daily schedule. There are also classes for beginners.
Bring Your Talents. Participation in a guest talent show requires only attending one rehearsal.
Time Changes. The time adjusts by an hour practically every afternoon. This prevents the huge adjustment at the end of the cruise, but it also means being alert so you don’t miss lunch or midday activities.
Todd English. The Todd English restaurant onboard is a bargain, with a la carte pricing and wonderful food and service. But book early, or you’ll also have to be dining earlier than usual.
Healthy Cruisers, FYI. There’s a special healthy corner of the Chef’s Galley at breakfast.
Celebrity-Spotting. Actors and actresses, musicians and artists, scientists, statesmen and more sail with Queen Mary 2, so match your interests to the featured guest, and you might get to hang out with a celeb.

Monday, 20 May 2013

Viking Ocean Cruises: No casino, no formal nights and no NCFs


Viking Ocean Cruises: No casino, no formal nights and no NCFs

By Tom Stieghorst
VikingStar-renderBEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Viking Ocean Cruises will be defined as much by what it is not as by what it is, and one of the things it won’t have is a noncommissionable fare (NCF), Viking Cruises Chairman Torstein Hagen said.

Hagen unveiled the details of his project to expand Viking River Cruises into ocean cruising at a function for travel agents and past passengers here on Thursday.

In a Q&A session moderated by McCabe World Travel President Anne Morgan Scully, Hagen said he will continue the practice of his river cruise line of not charging NCFs when Viking Ocean Cruises debuts in 2015.

“We don’t nickel and dime customers, and we shouldn’t nickel and dime travel agents either,” Hagen said.

Hagen also said ocean cruise lines are trying too hard to be all things to all people. Viking Ocean will be squarely aimed at couples age 55 and older, he said. There will be no third- and fourth-berth accommodations for families.

There will be no casino. Hagen said the plan is to spend an average of 12.1 hours in port each day, so there will be no time for gambling. Each cruise will have just one sea day.

Appearing before an audience of about 300 at the posh Beverly Hills Hilton in a suit with an open shirt, Hagen also said there will be no formal nights and no need to wear a tie.

And, there will be no surcharges in the ship’s specialty restaurants. Reservations preference will be determined by cabin category.

Hagen said the ship’s best food will be reserved for the main dining venue, The Restaurant.

Travel agents interrupted Hagan several times with applause and appeared enthusiastic about the new line.
“You can sell it,” Vicky Garcia, Cruise Planners’ chief operating officer, said of Viking Cruises in general. “This is such an innovative company. They’re not stuck in the old ways of doing things. They’re nimble.”

In addition to building the 928-passenger Viking Star, Viking expects to take delivery of 10 more Longship river cruise vessels this year and 12 in 2014. It also has a firm order for a second ocean ship for delivery in 2016.