Benjamin Smith
age 43
Occupation: editorial quality control
Number of Cruises: 7
Cruise Line: Celebrity
Name of Ship: Constellation
Sailing Date: Dec. 7, 2002
Itinerary: Southern Caribbean
This is the second cruise my wife and I did with the Viking Group. This one was
Dec 7-14 on the Celebrity Constellation. Some of the ports we visited were St.
Lucia, Barbados, St. Thomas, Antigua.
Precruise. Just have to mention staying at the Radisson Ambassador in
Puerto Rico. For a purported upscale hotel, and though the hotel had polite
service from what we experienced, the room we stayed in was one the dirtiest
rooms that I've been in. The carpets were filthy and the whole room was dusty.
Had a free drink having sailed with the Viking Group and I chose a screwdriver
but could not drink it because it was made with some sort of powdered orange
juice. Can't recommend this hotel, not at all. Hopefully it isn't always in this
state.
Embarkation: Puerto Rico. Not sure what part of
the pier it was but there was a long, fast-moving line outside going into a
building. It was sort of a pain dealing with it with all of the luggage we had.
Captain's Club (CC) members had to wait in this line until we got inside the
building and then, after filling in the forms, we got priority boarding. I think
CC members should have not had to wait in the line.
Onto the ship:
Fairly positive first impressions. It was new and had a high quality look
to it, furnishings looked expensive. We were escorted to the room by a white
gloved attendant who knew where he was going. Impressions of the ship crew was
very positive. We were greeted with a lot of "how are you today" "thanks for
visiting us and enjoy your day" "I hope everything is OK with your order" type
of comments. The ship is noticeably clean. Our stateroom was the usual Celebrity
stateroom, an inside job, we really aren't that particular about staterooms, and
it was clean and kept that way during our cruise.
Lido: usual Celebrity structure with the four areas to get the food.
Trays with linen and silverware are handed to us, and waiters and assistants
served the food and wore gloves. Food was very good, excellent selection of
fruits, salads, meats and vegetables and desserts. Buffet food was, for the most
part, uniformly tasty and well prepared with items like salmon and crepes
throughout the whole cruise. There's an omelet station
and a pasta station and there's a small area in back that had theme food, a
different theme per day. Every day, including the day of disembarkation, waiters
lined up to carry trays for women and children, and they offered sometimes for
men as well.
We meet Granville: It is in the lido that we finally meet Granville Baily.
I first saw Granville on a show made about the intro of the Galaxy to Florida
that profiled the Captain, at the time Capt. Korras, a lounge singer Jane
Alexander, social hostess Amanda, and Granville, a bar server. His warmness,
sense of humor, friendly interaction with people and making them feel
comfortable, were apparent in the show and we felt great to get him on this
cruise. He lived up to billing, and our group specially requested he serve us,
that he was our "booze doctor" in the dining room, for the duration of the
cruise. His shooters were great, especially one called "Skip and go Naked".
Something's missing: It didn't take long to see that we weren't going to
get some of the things we got on previous Celebrity cruises. On the second day
we noticed that there was no aft-located lounge. There are two lounges that
offer dance floors on the Millennium class ships, the Rendezvous and
Revelations. Those familiar with the Rendezvous know that it is the lounge that
is placed forward of the dining room and usually features a duo performing, and
that it has a dance floor. Revelations is the Millie's version of the forward
observation lounge with huge windows and panoramic views and has a disco area in
the back of it, usually portioned off. However, the Millie ships don't have
portioned off areas, so this is one big room, with some circular areas that have
a bar and a piano, has very slight tiering that goes from the outside in, has
chairs of 3 styles in 3 colors in the 3 not so very well-defined areas, and a
pretty large dance floor in the center. What's missing? The aft-located lounge.
The lounge where people who want to dance to big band music or listen to the
Celebrity orchestra can get together. It is the Savoy on the Galaxy, the
Pavilion on the Mercury, the Rainbow Room on the Zenith, the Crystal Room on
Century and the Zodiac on the Horizon. It is the place where my wife and I have
had some of our most wonderful moments on our 2 Celebrity cruises. It is the
place having the most "period" ambiance, and a place of arrival. Since it is
aft, there is no pass-through sense, and areas are
well portioned off and the feeling is intimate. It is, essentially, not only a
lounge, but a small club, and small club atmosphere. In fact, it feels to me
like a ballroom, popular during the 20s through early 50s. It is the place where
we met ship friends on the Century. What do the Millie class have instead? They
have an area that is very similar in layout to the Rendezvous, but with higher
level appointments, and no dance floor in the middle but a cutout to look down
on the Rendezvous and for its music to filter up into the area, and two bars on
either side at the back of the "lounge". It, in
essence, feels like the upper level of the Rendezvous, it can not be an
independent space with independent ambiance, music as it is connected to the
Rendezvous by music and by the hole in the floor. Can you get from one to the
other if suddenly you are upstairs in the Martini/Champagne area and want to
dance? OK, theoretically one could go over the railing and jump down to it, but
if you want the preferred and less painful way of going you exit the
Martini/Champagne bar "lounge", go down the aft staircase, and enter the
Rendezvous lounge to dance..Somehow, I don't find this
an optimal solution and think since the two spaces are connected then a
staircase should connect them.
Millie class doesn't follow Celebrity precedents: ship to ship, Celebrity
has always modified and improved upon previous ships with their successive
ships. The Zenith is about 1000 tons bigger than the Horizon and improved the
observation lounge's bar area. But, some significant improvements went from the
Century to Galaxy. Some of these are an added foyer placed in front of the
restaurant facilitating an easy way to get to both levels of the restaurant and
adding a meet and mingle area; adding of overhang areas in the lido area
effectively widening the lido; addition of an aft located pool under sliding
glass replacing the very underutilized Sky Bar. Mercury improved on Galaxy with
signage, relocating the champagne bar, and making the observation lounge and
other areas more handicap accessible replacing steps with ramps. The Millie
class makes less extensive improvements, but didn't
change any of the dimensions of the ship and have what I feel are glaring
shortcomings and the list are:
no way to go from the 2nd to 3rd floor of
the foyer without leaving it. Cova is on the 3rd level of the foyer. (not easily
fixable)
library has no writing tables and furniture
is oversized (easily fixable)
dining room's wings are too long before
getting to the main section (not easily fixable)
too many shops (not easily fixable)
placement of conservatory: a quiet, fragrant
oasis. Right near the pool and above the lido? I think not. On Infinity to
Constellation this is the place for it. Doesn't seem optimal to me. I think
Millie actually placed it into a better space for this purpose in one of the
forward glass towers.
Better on the Century class: thellasotherapy pool was an intimate space
on the Century class, peaceful, quiet, exclusive feeling and the fee was fairly
nominal. Millie has it as an open area. It has loss its feeling of peacefulness
and exclusivity.
Lounges: the key to so many spaces is how they are portioned off. Tricks
for creating intimacy is in creating small areas including groupings and tools
are chairs and tables of various sizes and shapes, also used for separators and
quite stylish can be railings, different flooring can designate different areas,
different lighting as well, and a very good tool to separate spaces is putting
the sections on different levels. Celebrity did a fine job of this in the
Century class. Not so well in the Millie class. Martini/Champagne whole area is
on the same level, flooring doesn't separate it, the same sort of chairs are
used in most of the area. There's only 2 highback couches per side, stylish,
could use more IMO, and the whole room sort of looks like a hallway with chairs
on the side and in the middle of it. The Rendezvous isn't as bad, the outer
areas are circular and higher than the middle area with the dance floor. The
observation lounge has the same problem as the Martini/Champagne bar area. It is
one huge room and not really portioned off. There are slight differences in the
heights of the areas but it really isn't well defined. On the Galaxy the 2
levels of the Stratosphere are very well defined and
the disco is in the back, and a small area near the bar that feels intimate. The
Mercury also has plenty of different sections in her Navigator Club. But the
Millie ships, all pretty much the same old observation lounge, have a very open
disco and no matter where you sit you feel like you are in a huge room. The
seats are different in style in the 3 areas, but that's just not as much as what
you get in the Century ships
Restaurant: two long wings on either side have plenty of tables for those
seated in the restaurant. They seem away from the main restaurant. This is just
not a design that I find well thought out.
Space utilization: for some reason the Millie ships have a lot of meeting
areas near their cinema. For the most part they won't be used much on sailings.
So why? Why only 2 dance floors on a 91,000 ton ship, on a line that's supposed
to be more romantic than fun?
The area around Michael's Club. Michael's is too big, doesn't feel
intimate but feels like a large room in a house. Then there's a lot of area in
this rather RCI styled photo gallery. Seems this could have been put to better
use.
Why is shore excursion area so large?
Promenade deck: it doesn't wrap around the back of the ship like the
Century ships. Also, though cleaned fairly often, the light non-skid surface on
this ship takes on a soiled appearance. I don't like it on the Century ships as
I find it tends to look soiled, but at least Century ships don't use it on the
promenade. I don't buy the non-skid safety argument either. Teak is grippy
enough, especially if one wears boat shoes. HAL and Carnival provide teak here,
Princess questionable appearing fake teak, Celebrity is premium, teak is nicer,
IMO. And on RCI ships the promenade deck wraps around the back, why not on
Celebrity ships? In fact, on RCI, the promenade deck completely encircles the
ship, as they do on Princess and HAL. Don't let the cruise lines get away with
getting rid of this aspect of cruising, use them or not, ships should provide
promenade decks that encircle the ship.
Is Millie class really designed to be a Celebrity ship and facilitate a
Celebrity cruise? I don't think it is, I think it is forced to.
Getting back to the thellasotherapy pool this area reminds me a lot of something
I've seen before. The Solarium on the Explorer of the Seas. Different theming
and decor but in a similar spot and a similar sort of blueprint. That's telling
me that Celebrity had to use this space and thought a bigger, free,
thellasotherapy pool would be a good idea. Well, it wasn't. Celebrity had the
place overrun with kids and crowded. So, they tried charging for it to make it
less crowded and feeling more intimate. But, that did not go over well which led
to a sort of embarrassing apology and Celebrity admitting they made a mistake.
Galley below the restaurant!!! Some folks that know Celebrity personnel know
that some wait staff hate the new ships due to this feature. These poor men and
women have to go down high speed escalators to get the food and then go back up
to the restaurant. The galley is not right next to it. Now some think this is
great, don't have to go up and over the galley. Turns out you may have to go at
least up anyway. And here's why. Many of the public areas are on the second
level of the dining room like the Cova and Martini Bar. And the Mercury and
Galaxy did a great job of providing access to the lower level of the dining
room. One could either go through the dining room and make a descent down the
stairs in the dining room *or* they could use the aft foyer, right in front of
the dining room, to go down to the lower level of the dining room. The crew has
to use the ship more than pax. A galley next to the main dining room, not below
it, makes for more efficient movement to and from, faster delivery for the food,
and less worn out wait staff. Based on this I consider the galley placement a
terrible design element.
RCI elements: glass towers, glass areas protruding into the promenade area,
round windows, photo gallery style, glass areas on either side of the ship
housing glass elevators on one side and staterooms with huge windows on the
other side, cots in the stateroom rather than Celebrity type of beds, spiral
notebook document instead of vinyl billfold Celebrity
used to use, silly "Save the Waves" name badges, kiosks used in the shops,
placement and function of library and Notes.
Constellation decor: I like this ship less than other Celebrity ships
I've been on. The ship is pretty, but I don't like Celebrity's ships because
they are pretty. I like their understated elegance, chic, period, art deco
inspired environment. The Constellation, while quite pretty, didn't have that
Celebrity thing that makes me enamored to other Celebrity ships. It didn't have
the Millie's richness and elegant, period simplicity, either. It just seemed
like a Celebrity-decorated ship but based on a formula, with no soul, no
emotion, no New York City connection, no sense of nostalgia, colors more
tropical and less vibrant and/or rich than what I like in Celebrity. I didn't
care for the foyer carpet, finding it too busy and a fairly crude pattern for
Celebrity, and I didn't like the fairly heavy use of gold leaf on some of the
seating surfaces on the first level of the foyer. That's a bit too obvious
luxury nicey-nice for Celebrity, IMO. Finally, I don't like the cookie cutter
approach that Celebrity took with the Millie class regardless of whatever
business advantage it may have. They showed different aspects of their style in
the Century class, I'm sure glad the Galaxy and Mercury are their own ships and
not the Century with the same spaces using different colors and patterns.
Millie class advantages: better space ratio; better flow aft to forward with few
if any bottlenecks; nicer pool area; food available in the T-pool area; and I
think the most important feature is the high quality
specialty restaurant.
But, hey, people do stuff on a ship. What happened on this ship that I
find poorly designed?
I mentioned the Viking Group. This really are folks that celebrate the wedding
anniversary of travel agent Sue Whitfield and her husband Dave on a cruise ship.
We are her clients and friends and there are around 50-60 or so of us in the
group. The group usually does RCI ships but did 2 Celebrity ships in 2002.
Viking Group and Celebrity Constellation--not the right mix: The Viking
Group is a fun group. Fun for the Viking Group is wearing silly party hats into
the dining room to see how the crew and pax will react , this involves them in
the festivities. Fun is drinking a fair amount of booze from time to time. Fun
is calling one member President, because he looks like Bush Sr. Fun is liking
pool games and having guys well built for belly flops to compete in them. It so
turns out that Celebrity thought the Viking Group was fun on the Galaxy, hats
were encouraged, belly flops provided, they even came up with the idea for the
musicians in the dining room to play music to the theme of the hats worn.
Constellation. Said it was OK at first then said No, not appropriate for our
brand transformation. So far Millennium has undergone a brand transformation.
She's painted differently, is doing the champagne thing, chilled towels,
piano bar. But Connie isn't, she's doing some of the enhancements, sometimes,
but she officially isn't undergoing the brand transformation. So, they were
sending mixed messages, the group was resistant because they thought they were
getting things that Celebrity later rethought. So, this cruise wasn't going to
be like the Galaxy. Now, some of the group found the Galaxy pretty lively where
others thought it was dullsville. Celebrity is quite sedate in some ways
compared to RCI. The style is different, few if any announcements, no towel
animals, no singing waiters, fewer pool games, no toga party, more formal
nights, more formality. Some in the Viking group are formal type of folks, but
most aren't, and the group dynamic doesn't favor being so formal. Celebrity does
have some funloving, interactive staff members. Granville sure is. Swings the
hips and dances. But, the directive these days is make Celebrity more formal.
Hmmm.
The group is going back to RCI, more activities, looser staff, food not as good,
well as good or better, usually not as good. Who knows? More on this later.
My friend Tom: We met on the cruise newsgroup and Celebrity is both one
of our lines of choice. Tom's a big snorkeling fan and travels to the islands
quite a bit. What I enjoyed about Tom was that he immediately struck up a good
relationship with the island residents and supported them by buying their goods.
He recognizes for them it is their livelihood and doesn't dismiss them as being
an annoyance to his good time or peace. He was game to wear the hats with the
group. He's a talented painter and painted a portrait of the Constellation that
he presented to the Captain. The Captain loved it.
Tom brought all sorts of snorkel gear for us. He suggested we get sand shoes and
these probably saved our feet. He guided us to the best areas of ports that he
was very familiar with.
The crew member from various countries: Tom told us about this worker
that he always finds on the same ship he's cruising, no matter what Celebrity
ship or itinerary. And he's always from another country. One cruise he's from
Ecuador, the next Costa Rica, the next, who knows? On the night of the sock hop
in Reflections I saw Tom talking to an animated young man. Turns out this was
the fellow from the country of his choice. He told us that his job was very
easy, just mingle with people and have fun. He's going to do quite well methinks
with that attitude.
Meeting the Captain: We've heard of Ioannis. Those that have sailed with
him love him and have stories about him. Peg and Derek are great friends
of his and have many stories about him. When we
met him and presented gifts to him he greeted us warmly and we were then invited
to see him on the bridge.
Ioannis on the bridge: He's the Captain. You know that. It is his bridge.
Really, men like their toys, and the Connie is a big toy. It has lots of buttons
and computer screens. Push the right buttons and it programs itself. But it
takes the instincts, the gut instincts, of the Captain to know how to make it
feel comfortable and to compensate and to put it a little off course to make the
pax more comfortable. Ioannis, who speaks Greek Ioannis English, speaks more
with his fingers than his hands. He loves telling stories, both funny and
moving. He told us of the difficult-to-maneuver Amerikanis and picked it because
it was the biggest challenge to a Captain but also that he had a not so kind
name for her (he was asked if he had any nicknames for his ships), he told us
the moving story of where he was on 9/11 and how he heard about it, he showed us
pictures of the wondrous scenery of the Norwegian fjords on the Northern
European itinerary, he served us Greek coffee. He's quite a character, very
warm, very welcoming, yet a proud Greek Master. Good guy.
Captain's table: Service was fantastic. Attentive, ladies first, all
sorts of sauces brought, fresh pepper out of the pepper mill. Food presentation,
very nice, much better than at our table. Then fantastic wine. 1994 Port. When
the server asked Ioannis if he should have the gentleman (me!!!) taste it
Ioannis says, No, just pour it! This was a flavorful wine, yet pretty light. We
got a nice picture of us the next day of us at the Captain's table. And my wife
sat to his right, the honoured guest.
They volunteered me: They had karaoke one night. Some of our group
performed, but no one solo. Well, I was sitting there listening to people
perform. As the evening progressed performing was this guy from New York, that
guy from New Jersey, that woman from New York, that guy from New Jersey. I was
up earlier with some in the group as part of the President's Men. I thought that
was it. Sitting I heard that the next performer is Ben from New Jersey. I
thought, some guy with my name from New Jersey. No, it was my group. THEY
volunteered me. I had Greek coffee earlier with the Captain. I had 2 martinis,
specially made for me, the first one weak, the second one strong, the bartender
named them "come back to me" martinis, and I had 2 shooters after dinner. This
is the perfect combination, the perfect elixir concoctions to put me in the
state to perform "Just a Gigolo" , a song I barely know. I'm up there, the words
are on the screen, and whatever words I could make out flashing by, I sang.
Others I made up. When there were no words I sang my own or sounds that seemed
like words of a nonexistent language. I moved to whatever spirit hit me, and the
aforementioned spirits were hitting me inside. The whole thing was a blur.
Somehow the audience applauded when it mercifully ended and wanted me to take
some extra bows. What the hell did I do up there? I still don't know.
Food and dining service: Michel Roux was aboard. We first saw him at the
Ocean Liners specialty restaurant. Not sure what he was doing but we saw him
only at the oceanliners restaurant, around the ship, and on the bridge. We
didn't see him at the main restaurant though hopefully he visited the galley
there and observed things. OK, I mention that buffet food was fine. All was not
well in the dining room. First of all, the silverware wasn't always set
correctly, one table placement always had something missing. There were no
orchids on the table until the 3rd day in the entire dining room and none on
last night of the cruise, our guy forgot. Secondly, our waiter did not follow
Celebrity serving style. He did not take ladies orders first, he did not always
serve from the right, he didn't always bring a fish knife for fish and steak
knife for steak. The assistant did not keep our glasses full of water, did not
bring fresh pepper around for salads though he was OK with the salad dressing,
did not bring coffee to those that requested it. The two were not in sync. The
food, itself, was fine on the first two nights, good presentation, tasty, cooked
to order. Now, in Celebrity's defense we were on the ship the week the CDC
ordered that meat be cooked at least at medium doneness. But most of the meat
was dry, overcooked. Lamb, fish, beef, pasta, on 3 nights were all not
representative of the menu. Presentation was not
uniform, baskets for potatoes were soggy, the food looked thrown on the plate
but perhaps got out of place from galley to table. Our food usually came later
than others in the dining room. This was the poorest service we've received not
only on Celebrity, but on any cruise, and some of the poorest service we've
received, anywhere. Celebrity touts their dining food and service. This needs
fixing, fast. Hopefully, most of Celebrity's service isn't like this now and
more like what we've received from them previously, which has been superb.
Ocean Liners: yes, we found this to be a taste of luxury. We were seated
at our table for two, but not facing each other, the seats were arranged so that
we were a quarter distance from each other, like an incomplete table for four in
a sense. Everything was superb, the service wasn't overbearing, we had plenty of
time for ourselves between courses, everything was impeccably timed, plates
arrived to both of us simultaneously, waiters informed us of everything we were
eating, the main waiter was respectful yet friendly and humorous. My wife was
escorted out of the restaurant when she went to the ladies room. Ambiance music
was provided by a very able duo, pianist and violinist. The decor in the room
was refined and the room was intimate. Food itself, I'm not an expert in
gustatory delights, I'm a layman and I'm not even a big eater. But, I found the
sauces delicate yet complex, the appetizers all flavorful, our Steak Diane's
were medium and especially nice because of the sauce, my wife raved about the
goat cheese soufflé. This felt like fine dining, very
civilized. Is it what Roux serves in his 3 Michelin Star restaurants? Probably
not but probably most couldn't tell the difference. This was a hell of a value
at $25 per person. One thing I will mention is that every material quality was
stepped up a notch or two. Silverware, wine holders, wine glasses, china, and
the silverware was brought with the course, there was not a huge amount of
silverware on the table as there is in the main restaurant. A really fine
experience.
Music, entertainment: I can not comment on shows. Yes, an important part
of cruising but we did not attend any of them. Music is important to us on the
ship, a huge priority. Many people enjoy cruising, but not for the same things.
Our priorities are different, some of us love to stay on deck and "get sun",
some love going to shows, some go for bars, some go for casinos. We don't do
casinos, we don't lay out in the sun and feel it is a destructive thing to do to
oneself. One of our biggest priorities is the lounge life and specifically
opportunities to be where folks who know how to do ballroom dancing, dance. We
love the standards of yesteryear. We love Rosemary Clooney, Ella, Sarah, Duke,
composers Richard Rogers, Jerome Kern, George Gershwin, we love the whole milieu
of a Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers movie and like ships because they offer some
of this in a designated room made for this and with the romance of being on the
sea. We have had opportunities to find this atmosphere on our cruises,
especially the Holland America and previous Celebrity cruises. As mentioned
earlier the Savoy and Crystal were our hangouts on the Galaxy and Century,
respectively. We didn't have this room, so did we have it at least a bit in the
Rendezvous? No. The duo in the Rendezvous played 60s and 70s music, Rolling on
the River, stuff like that, and they had a very limited repertoire. Once you
heard them the first two nights you heard pretty much all they knew. One of the
biggest matches to the ambiance of a period room like the Savoy or Crystal is
the opportunities to hear big band jazz and the standards of yesterday, sip
wine, meet and greet friends, enjoy the dancing. Didn't get it on this cruise,
we had on our eveningwear, we were in the mood for it, we didn't get it. For us,
and I understand others feel differently, this strongly impacted our enjoyment
of this particular cruise. None of this atmosphere and no venue for it.
We did enjoy the harp player that usually performed in the Cova and the quartet
as well. There was a pianist that played some of the standards but we didn't
care for his style of playing them. So, we didn't care for two out of the five
main performers. We found the party band, that we've found to be excellent all
purpose bands on previous Celebrity cruises, to be excellent. These musicians
played pretty much only at poolside and in Reflections. We sure would have like
it if they played in Rendezvous a few nights and we sure would have like it if
the Celebrity orchestra played there as well. Sorry, when you have two dance
floors on a 91,000 ton ship, the least you can do is offer different groups for
those that were not into the music of the duo that is stationed there.
Another thing missing from previous Celebrity cruises were the a cappella
groups. They serenaded the pax on the ship and sort of roamed around and
performed unexpectedly. I think Celebrity getting rid of them is a loss,
especially since so many enjoyed them. Also missing were roaming musicians in
the dining room. We enjoyed them on the Galaxy, another one of those touches
that was missing on this cruise.
Another missing element was the line dancing. Again no aft located lounge, so
maybe it was done upstairs. What's annoying about this setup is that it takes
longer to get to this lounge at the front of the ship and upstairs. It was much
easier to go, on the Century ship from the Rendezvous and then one flight up and
a bit aft to the aft located night club than to go from the Rendezvous to the
observation lounge. So, when I did venture up to the observation lounge, I
usually did not find many people there, it was usually fairly empty, until
night, where it turned into a disco or where Latin music was played. Line
dancing was done a lot on Galaxy and Century, in the night club and on deck, and
was fun. Predictable Electric Slide, Macarena, etc.,
but it is still fun, especially when you know how to do it. On the Century we
actually had a country one that was impossible for so many and people ended up
falling over each other. Very funny, lots of fun, couldn't find it on this
cruise.
So I find the musician interaction aspect of this cruise wanting. Some of the
reasons are personal for sure. But others aren't. Others are legitimate missing
aspects. I also didn't like that most of the musicians
played at the same time, every day.
Now one of the most annoying things I found was sitting in Cova, a nice
spot for coffee and tea, centrally located, and hearing recorded piano
music being played. There's nothing wrong with recorded music, and the
selection agreed with me. The problem was it was so limited, at the most 15
songs, and I don't think it was that many, played over and over, in the same
order. Day after day, this became so monotonous. The least they could do is
alter the order of the songs but they severely needed to have a much bigger
selection. I swear I heard "My Heart Must Go On" from the Titanic, 20 times
during the cruise sitting in the Cova. For me, there's something cheap about
this.
There was a wonderful Classical pianist that performed one day. He also had a
nice manner with the audience. Dry humor. Some self-defecating (you know, I'm
going to leave this typo in there), that is,
self-deprecating humor. The first night of the cruise there was plenty line
dancing and activities and food. A fun night. But, even though this was a port
intensive cruise with only one sea day, I think there should have been more in
the way of Celebrity live music and interaction that I at least received on
previous Celebrity cruises, especially in the livelier
Caribbean.
We were regulars: even with the not to our liking duo downstairs my wife
and I still enjoyed the Martini bar/champagne bar area most and visited the
nonsmoking Martini Bar almost daily (we are not smokers). Bringing us back to it
was the feisty Dorota, as well as her martinis. We always enjoy
chatting with crew members and on this cruise it was Darota that
we visited often and here we met a few people
who were also regulars. Claudine sampled the various
martinis and her favorites are the apple and French.
Milton: yes, I was told that Milton made wicked drinks. Yes, Milton was very
obliging. Describe the drink and Milton would make a custom version just for
you. I requested a "wicked citrus vodka martini with spice". I received, from
Mr. Milton, a citrus vodka martini with a slice of jalepeno. It was wicked,
really cleaned me out, in a liquid plumber sense. Well I asked for wicked, and
that's what I got. Milton is another of Celebrity's bar server standouts.
Sonia: Sonia is the future cruise consultant. We saw her on the Galaxy
and thought she was very generous and helpful. I saw Sonia almost everyday for a
consultation and told her, diplomatically and hopefully constructively, of the
shortcomings I found on this cruise. She thought my comments would be helpful
and I should let them be known to the hotel manager and to some at Celebrity.
She told me all about the brand transformation and thanked me for supporting
Celebrity and to look for improvements in the future.
Back to Barbados: Much of my family are from Barbados. I last went there
at around age 9 or so. At this age the sense of community and the culture of
Barbados could not be appreciated by me, a boy from New York City. I thought it
was fairly uncivilized and poor at that time. It so happens that Barbados is
relatively prosperous compared to most Caribbean islands, it still seems more
British than American and not overrun with American establishments like some
other countries. My wife first tried mauby, the very popular drink of the
Caribbean made from tree bark. Her initial response was positive, but she
couldn't deal with the after taste. Mauby is an acquired taste, but once most
people acquire a taste for it they can't get enough of it. Bridgetown was pretty
dull, some shops and slightly run down looking. But, while walking around my
wife, obviously tired, gave the OK for an inquiring cab driver to give us a tour
of the island that went through many sections of the island.
One wonderful thing about our visit is that we have friends in Barbados that we
were trying to hook up with but did not get in contact with before we got there.
We had a partial address and the personnel at the pier
tried their very best to get us in contact with our friends and we appreciate
their hard work and effort.
Snorkeling for the first time: I'm not a beach person or water person. I
never go to beaches in the summer. So, we decide to go in Antigua. We
snorkeled in ??????? (don't know the name of it, Tom picked it out) in
fairly clear and shallow water. At first I had to get used to being in
the water. I went into the water and it felt cold. It wasn't but I'm not used to
it. So I screamed like a small child as each part of my body became submerged
into the water. Next, fit the snorkel. After a few tries Tom's provided snorkel
fit on my head comfortably enough. Next, put head in water. Panic. I'm trying to
breathe through my nose and I'm suffocating! Help! I hoist my head out of the
water. Tom's saying, keep trying, just get comfortable. I try again, breathe
through my mouth a few times then back to nose. Panic
again. Took a few tries but finally I was able to put my head underneath for
awhile. But, from time to time water came into the mask so I had to learn how to
blow it out. We go near some rocks, I see a few small fish. Excitement. I don't
move much but they seem to come near me. Yes, this is pretty cool, I can see how
people can get hooked on it. Water feels warm now. I'm between walking and
putting my head down to occasionally full-body floating. In the meanwhile my
much more adventurous wife is floating and seeing much more. Tom takes her out
to deeper water to see coral. He demands that I stay
in shallow water and just stand up when I feel a panic attack. He's
right of course, I don't have a clue of what I'm doing, I'm only semi
comfortable in the water and he's like a fish in comparison. But I
stay and see my two or three fish, my friends at this point. But then,
boldness sets in. I'm ready, I'm ready to go into 5 feet water, I'm ready to not
go into the coral. I wave out to Tom and then I go meet them. And yes, I did see
coral, and yes, I didn't bump into it thankfully, and I saw a few more fish,
bigger fish. Don't ask me what they were, Tom told me what they were, I don't
remember, they weren't big enough to scare the hell out of me, that's all I
know. After awhile we both came back to the shallow
part where Tom fed the fish some bread. Wow, they all flashed by and devoured
the bread in seconds. What a site! This was a good experience. Claudine
snorkeled the next day in deeper water and saw huge fish in Trunk's Bay, St.
Johns. I stayed on the ship but I can say now that I snorkeled. Give me my
medal.
Celebrity and the Caribbean: I came to this cruise not having sailed
Celebrity in the Caribbean before. I did Alaska and Europe. Thought the
ship/cruise style felt wonderful there. In the Caribbean they just feel too
formal for me. Going from the Caribbean ports to the posh ship feels strange. I
know I'm one of the few that feels this way but somehow I felt Royal Caribbean
just felt better suited for the Caribbean. I'll only
sail Celebrity again with friends in the Caribbean. As a couple, it is West
Coast/East Coast United States, Canada, Europe, Alaska, and perhaps other
itineraries for Celebrity. For a premium cruise in the Caribbean I think
Princess may be the choice, though we haven't tried them yet. So we'll see.
Fixing the Millennium class: does it need fixing? People seem to like it.
Yet, the T-pool has caused Celebrity grief. For folks that like lounges for
dancing it needs fixing. I'd like to see Celebrity find a way to take advantage
of the Millie's strengths. I'd like to somehow make
the dance floor of the Rendezvous larger. Put one in Michael's Club. Put more
banquet styled seating in the Martini/Champagne bar. Put some lamps on the
tables. Add more charm to it. Perhaps add some window treatment in this area
besides the roman shades. Perhaps even designate a small area where people can
dance if they feel the urge, otherwise drill a hole someplace and put a stairway
down to the dance floor. I'd like to get rid of the conservatories and put some
sort of lounge there, or even put the teen's area
there. I'd like to see them take one of the glass
towers and make it a chic caviar and fine finger food hideout with perhaps a
pianist or harpist playing there. I'd like to see something done to the
observation lounge to make it more intimate in areas, perhaps raise the floor of
the outside area so that the disco in the middle appears sunken in a bit. I'd
like to get rid of half the shops and put in some sort of juice bar or art
gallery, or something. Finally, if it is possible to
put in a Century like, for pay T-pool area for those that want the more private
feeling T-pool area.
Celebrity confused?: I just wonder about the brand transformation
initiatives. For those that don't know it is based on 3 parts.
Rejuvenation, Enrichment and Connections. Rejuvenation will bring longer
spa hours, poolside massage, topless bathing, cafe food upgrade, energy drinks
available, sorbet available, and chilled towels at poolside
Topless is controversial in the US. And all of this sounds pretty
expensive except for the cafe food upgrade.
Enrichment will include art lectures, photo seminars, fashion shows at poolside
and elsewhere, enhanced wine tasting, exclusive shore
excursions, late night comedian and a full time librarian. All of these sound
like upscale enhancements except for the late night comedian. I guess it is how
they pull this off, I lot of expletives won't feel
upscale, "adult" topics done in a certain way, will.Connections includes
officers hosting tables, specialty parties, Executive
Chef cooking, Marine roundtable (?), Sports Bar program, champagne on
embarkation, piano bars and cocktail lounges. Let’s see, don't know what a
marine roundtable is, most Celebrity ships don't have sports bar so I don't know
what this is about either. But these are ideas, some
of these will remain, some won't, all will be tested in the coming months.
All well and good. But, many of Celebrity's current customers cruise Celebrity
for value. They want a big casino, lots of food and available
when they want it, and want to have fun at least in the Caribbean. Where
does Celebrity plan to get the people interested in their upscale
enhancements and even if they do, how many are willing to pay for some of
them? And what about the sense that Celebrity's food is slipping. The old
Celebrity fans are more interested in them bringing the food back to the highest
level for a mass market line than the chilled towels. Also, since expansion, not
all the crew is that well trained. So, some process of identifying the
underperforming staff and getting those capable up to
snuff and getting rid of those that aren't has to be done. Celebrity seems to
recognize this and has hired a firm to anonymously go on the ships and report
back what they find. Bottom line; it'll take time if
Celebrity gets the target clientele they are looking for and many of them won't
be who are on their ships right now.
Yes, this was a fairly schizo cruise. Wonderful time with the Captain,
wonderful crew for the most part, very very clean ship, well appointed
and posh ship, ship with excellent fore to aft flow, best food ever on a ship in
the specialty restaurant with service to match, met Michel Roux,
sat at Captain's table, became an entertaining celebrity of my own
right. But there was the ship that didn't work for me, lack of jazz,
repetitious music played in the Cova, lacklustre evening to night life,
poor dining room service and a few nights of abysmal dining entrees, and
general feeling of being bored and actually being glad when the cruise
was over. Of course, being with my friends on the Viking cruise was wonderful.
But, it was way more wonderful last year where everything
worked and nothing was at odds with the cruise. This one didn't go so
well.
Tidbits: I'd suggested to the hotel manager that Celebrity make a
condensed and smaller version of the dailies. I think the dailies could use
improvement. Also, Celebrity actually did an announcement one day.It started off
OK with the CD giving navigational coordinates and weather conditions but then
went into the scheduling of events for the day and
sales. Boo, this is not Celebrity and this should be axed right away.
Benjamin Smith
benjs@ix.netcom.com
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