Coral Princess
Linda
Age: 52
Occupation: Manager
Number of Cruises: 3
Cruise Line: Princess
Name of Ship: Coral Princess
Itinerary: Panama Canal
Booking: We booked this cruise in
the spring of 2002 with our local travel agent and selected the mini-suite
because we liked the balcony and size of the cabin, which was similar to what we
had on the Rotterdam a few years ago. We were confirmed in that cabin in a few
days and did not change or allow an upgrade. We completed the online
registration on Princess.com web site as soon as we had our booking ID and we
also booked all of our excursions online prior to sailing. We had also
registered our credit card for onboard purchases. Our tickets and “express
check-in” designation arrived about one month prior to sailing.
Travel to ship and embarkation: We chose to handle our own air and hotel
since we were sailing from and returning to Fort Lauderdale. The price Princess
wanted for the air and a night in the hotel prior to sailing was about two to
three times what we could book ourselves. We got round trip air on US Airways
direct from Philadelphia to Ft. Lauderdale for $194.00 apiece, booked about 6
months prior to the cruise. We used some frequent flyer miles to upgrade to
first class, so it was an effortless flight for us. We also had our TA book a
room at the Marriott Harbor Beach resort for one night at a rate of $239.
Princess wanted over $300 apiece for us to stay in the same hotel for one night.
We flew to Ft. Lauderdale on Saturday, February 1 and arrived around 4:00 P.M.
We had our luggage in a matter of minutes and took a taxi from the airport to
the Marriott and were in our room around 4:45 P. M. The cab cost us $10. We had
dinner in the hotel and after walking on the beach awhile, we were in bed early.
In the morning we had breakfast in the hotel and then gathered our suitcases and
got a taxi to Port Everglades. We arrived there around 11:30 and turned our 4
bags over to the waiting porter. There was no line for checking in and there
were deck designations over the counter where about six representatives were
waiting. We handed in our tickets and signed one document and were given our
room cards. These cards had our names, our room number and listed our dining as
personal choice. We headed up the escalator into a waiting area where about 100
other people were already waiting. At about 12:00 noon they began allowing us on
board and after the stop for the photo, we were on the gangway. Our picture was
captured as we entered the ship and swiped the cruise card, and there were
agents at the elevators escorting people to the appropriate floors. We were
taken to deck 9 (Dolphin) where another representative pointed us in the
direction of the room on the port side, but did not escort us any further.
Cabin: Our cabin was a mini-suite and was over 300 square feet in size.
It was larger than the one we had in the Rotterdam in 2000. The bathroom
entrance on the right as you enter the cabin is also the entrance to the closet.
It is sort of a ‘walk in’ affair with a closet at one end, with open shelves
from floor to ceiling. The safe is in this closet, and we found it adequate to
hold our passports, some cash and travelers checks. There is a shelf along the
top of the closet. The closet is probably about 6 feet long. The bathroom in the
mini-suite has a full size tub with shower. The countertop where the sink is was
about 4 feet in length. There are glass shelves (3) above the counter, and a
mirror is behind the counter for the full length. There are also two glass
shelves in the corner of the bathtub. Under the sink/counter, there is a shelf
that runs the full length. The beds were placed in the king arrangement as we
had asked, and there are night stands with lamps on either side of the bed.
There are two Televisions, one that is viewable from the bed and one from the
sitting area. Next to the bed there is a desk with four drawers on either side.
There is a hair dryer in the wall next to the desk and there are two electrical
outlets on the desk top. There is a full mirror on the wall behind the desk.
Across from this desk is a counter with shelves and a small refrigerator is
behind a door. Inside we found a bucket of ice already waiting. There are
glasses on the shelves as well and there are more shelves above this cabinet. In
the seating area there was a full size sofa that could be opened for an
additional bed. There was also an upholstered chair and a coffee table. The
balcony doors opened to a balcony that had a round table suitable for eating and
two chairs that were adjustable.
Our housekeeper was Edwin and he showed up just a few minutes after we arrived.
We asked for robes and he promised to get them immediately. He also told us how
to request a bowl of fruit and showed us how to use the phone, thermostat,
television, and breakfast order form. The TV showed CNN, CNBC, ESPN, TNT, and
had several Coral stations showing the web cam, the bridge report, and
information on the Princess station that covered port talks, and other
information.
The Ship: We saw no luggage yet, so we took off to explore the ship and
make spa appointments. I knew from experience that often spa appointments are
fully booked on the first day, so I headed there first. It took us awhile to
figure out how to get into the spa. It is in the aft of the ship and we took a
mid-ship elevator, so it was confusing. We did not find anyone at the main desk
when we did find the spa, but after wandering around I ran into someone who
worked there and she agreed to find the appointment book and make appointments
for me. So, I got the first appointments of the cruise, and scheduled a massage,
manicure and pedicure all for the next day, our first sea day.
Then we kept exploring. On the same deck as the spa we found the Horizon Court,
the buffet. This buffet advertises that it is open 24 hours a day. It was
already busy with folks who were eating lunch. We took some fruit and coffee and
kept exploring. There are two pools on this deck: the Lido pool is outside the
buffet and has glass walls along the sides, but an open air top. There is
another deck running around the sides of the pull, and you just walk up stairs
at the end of the pool to reach this area. On the main area of the pool there is
a bar and the pizzeria. On the next level up, there is the Princess grill that
serves hamburgers, hot dogs, fries, etc. There were hundreds of lounge chairs
with blue and while striped pads on the chairs. From this deck you can also walk
up to the sun deck and there is a small “splash” pool there. It’s just a tiny
pool that is only about 8 inches deep. There are lounge chairs up there as well,
and it’s the only place you can look out over the bow of the ship. Heading
toward the aft past the lido pool, you come to the Spa Pool. This pool has a
retractable cover, and also has a lower and upper seating area around it. Both
of these pools also have several hot tubs on the sides, if one prefers the
warmer water. All pools have fresh water only. Past the spa pool is the spa and
the fitness center. Further past the fitness center there is a children’s area
and the Pelican pool.
We kept exploring. Below the Lido deck there are four deck that house only
staterooms (Aloha, Baha, Caribe, and Dolphin). The Emerald deck has about half
of the deck for staterooms, but there is also a library, card room and the
internet café there. This is the top deck that also has a view of the atrium.
The atrium runs from deck 5 to 8 and there is also a glass elevator running
between these floors only. The atrium was beautiful with winding staircases and
little lights along the entrances to rooms and lounges. The lights changed
colors, and it was all very beautiful. The wood used throughout the ship made it
appear very warm and the carpet was all coral and turquoise colors.
Continuing down from deck 8 we saw there were two large boutiques, as well as
one that only sold fine jewelry (Facets). There were several very unique
lounges: Churchill’s is a cigar bar. This lounge is completely closed in by
frosted glass walls and doors and I can honestly say I never smelled any cigar
smoke coming from there. There is Crooners which specializes in martinis. There
is La Patisserie that specializes in coffee drinks of all types. They also serve
cookies and pastries free of charge throughout the day. There are two large
lounges: Explorers lounge and the Wheelhouse Lounge. Explorers had leather
furniture and murals on the walls showing big game and African grassland. The
Wheelhouse also houses a sort of maritime museum with items from ships past and
the P&O history. There are beautiful wood furnishings in this lounge, as well as
beautiful mermaid statuary. There was also the casino, which is made to look
like London, complete with wax figures of the Grenadier guards outside, and
double decker bus replicas inside. Two huge theaters were also in the public
areas, the Princess Theater and the Universe Lounge. The theater was simply
theater seating with a large stage at the front. But it was huge, and could seat
about 800 I’m sure. The Universe lounge was truly unique. There are three stages
and they rotate. They also have several screens that can be used on these
stages. There are cameras that can be used overhead, and show demonstrations.
This lounge was filled with small sofas and upholstered chairs and tables, and
there are additional seats on a second level around the edges of the theater.
This theater also has a bar.
Two dining rooms are also in the public areas, one on the 5th floor and one on
the 6th. The Provance dining room is used mostly for folks who had been assigned
traditional early or late seating. The Bordeaux dining room is for those who
selected personal choice dining.
The 7th floor is the Promenade deck and we
saw there was a teak deck and additional lounge chairs here. This is a nice
walking area, but the life boats also hang overhead around the whole deck.
After this tour and a little snack, we decided to head back to our room again,
and when we arrived back there, around 2:00, three of our four suitcases had
already been delivered. We spent the remainder of the afternoon getting
unpacked. Shortly after we started putting things in drawers the fourth bag also
arrived, so we were fully unpacked prior to dinner.
Personal Choice Dining: We like to
sit alone when we cruise. Or, I should say, my husband likes to sit alone. He
considers himself an introvert, and doesn’t want to be rude and ask to change
tables if he doesn’t like someone, so he prefers that we just sit alone. So, we
though Personal Choice would be good for us, as we would not be forced into a
specific time and could try different waiters too. The first night we showed up
around 7:00 for dinner and there were a couple people already in a short line.
We asked for a table for two when we got to the front of the line about five
minutes later. The head waiter, or whoever he was, told us he was not sure one
would be available very soon, but said he would check. When we asked, we were
immediately escorted to a table for two. Total wait time, 7 minutes. The waiters
were not memorable that night. The next night was the first formal night and the
captains welcome aboard cocktail party. We did not go to the party, but when we
arrived at the dining room at 6:45 we saw that everyone else had just come from
there and were now in line for dinner. There were around 10 people in line. We
waited about 10-15 minutes and when we got to the front of the line it was just
like the night before. At first we were told we would have to wait if we wanted
a table for two. We said ok, and within a few seconds we were escorted to one.
We did not remember those waiters either. On the third day, I called early in
the afternoon about a reservation for 7:00. I was told the earliest reservation
I could get was 8:00. We decided to just go wait at 7:00, and we did. That night
we had almost no wait and we ate at table 10 where our waiter was Fernando Ruiz
and the assistant was Makko. They were a wonderful team. Both were from Mexico
and were just delightful. They were friendly, funny, and service was excellent.
We decided to ask for them again the next night and we liked them that night
too. So, on the 5th day we asked for a reservation for table 10 in their
section. We were told that table was already reserved at 6:00 each evening and
we could not have it until 8:00. So, we took that reservation. However, the
maitre’d told us that if it was ready early, we could have it early. So, every
night after that we showed up between 7:15 and 7:30 and it was always ready. In
fact, Fernando told us that many nights the other people did not even show up so
it was empty until we showed up at 7:30. I wonder how many other tables were
reserved but then the passengers didn’t come, and the dining staff still held
the tables open for them, causing others to have to wait longer?
Food: We enjoyed the food on the cruise. I would not say that it was
spectacular, other than maybe the soufflés they had for dessert. My husband ate
beef about 8 of the 10 nights and he enjoyed it always. I had lobster that was
very good, and also had grilled chicken, shrimp cocktail several times, and
pasta on a few occasions. We also ate most lunches and breakfast in the dining
room. We did not find the Horizon Court worked well for us. We found that the
food was good, probably as good as in the dining room. But, the people crowding
the serving areas and serving themselves were not always courteous to others.
They were sometimes just slow, sometimes sloppy, and sometimes just rude in
bumping into others and not even excusing themselves. I also found it difficult
to balance a plate full of food and a drink while circling the dining room for
five minutes or more looking for a table. Also, the Horizon Court seemed to
always have the air conditioning running on frigid. The few times we did get a
snack from there, we usually took it outside near the pool where it was warmer.
We often went there in the afternoon or evening for a snack or cup of coffee. It
was very convenient for that and was not crowded at all other than at the main
meal times. On one occasion we left really early for an excursion in Costa Rica
and we ate breakfast there. Because it was 6:30 AM it was not crowded at all and
the food was good. The variety was vast there. They usually had everything the
dining room served, and then some. There were lots of fresh fruit and salad
selections, as well as many hot and cold desserts. There were plenty of
sugar-free desserts as well, I noticed, but I never found any sugar free yogurt,
which is what I prefer for breakfast.
We ate one lunch at the Grill on the Lido deck and I had a hamburger and Larry
had a beef hotdog. Both were excellent. We also ate Pizza one day and it was
great pizza as well. We often got cappuccino or latte from the La Patisserie
bar. It was really good, although you could also get these free of charge in the
dining room after dinner.
On several occasions we had room service for breakfast. There is an order form
to hang on the door when you go to bed at night. It has “continental breakfast”
type items such as cereal, yogurt, breads, Danish, fruit, coffee, juice. On the
message boards I had been checking I heard you could write it other items and
they would bring them. On all days we ordered room service I wrote in Fried Egg
and bacon and they always delivered it all. The room service food always arrived
at the time we specified and it was always hot. We could not have asked for
more. It was especially great to eat on our balcony while transiting the Panama
Canal!
Tours: We booked all of our excursions online at the Princess Web site.
We considered booking some independently, but we haven’t had good experiences
doing that so stuck with Princess. When we got on the ship, our tickets for all
excursions were in our cabin already, so we never had to visit the tour desk.
However, we also had a letter in our mailbox stating that our first port call
was changed from Ocho Rios Jamaica to Montego Bay. Our excursions had been
cancelled, and we were given a credit for them. We also had a list of excursions
we could book in Montego Bay. The destinations and prices of these excursions
were listed, but there was no description anywhere or what they included. We had
wanted to go to Dunn’s River Falls, but the price for that from Montego Bay was
significantly higher and it did not seem to include a Plantation tour. We could
not find anyone who could tell us about these tours. When we went by the tour
desk it was crowded or not open. We decided to just take a cab into town that
day. Later when I had my spa appointment I noticed that nail technician (Simone)
was from Jamaica. So, I asked her about Montego Bay. She told me there is
nothing to do there, and that to go from there to Ocho Rios was about a two hour
trip one way. So that explained why the price went up and did not include a
Plantation tour.
When we were called for our tours, we were asked to gather in the Princess
theater at the time designated on our tickets. This worked fairly well. We were
sent to places in the theater where a member of the tour office held a sign
designating our tour number. We would wait there until called to head out for
the gangway or tenders and then we would meet up with the tour guide and get on
buses.
The tour office handled this very well until we hit Cozumel. For some reason,
the tickets for Cozumel excursions had us meeting our tour on the pier, rather
than in the Princess Theater. We were going to Tulum that day and we knew it
would be one of the first tours out as we had to take a ferry to the mainland.
We were to meet the ferry on the pier at 9:20 AM. The ship was scheduled to dock
in Cozumel at 9:00. So around 9:00 we headed for the gangway area on deck 5,
even though we had not yet heard an announcement that the ship had been cleared.
When we got near the deck and lobby where the gangway was we saw hundreds of
others also waiting there. It seems that everyone going on a tour was told to
meet on the pier. Even though some were not going on tour till 10:00 or later,
they were all waiting to go down the gangway and perhaps do a little shopping
first. There were also many who were not going on tours at all but just wanted
to go out and shop. Plus we began noticing that there were many from the crew
who were obviously not in uniform and had the day off and were also waiting to
leave the ship. By the time the gangway was opened, around 9:30, it was a mad
house in this hallway, stairwell, and foyer. The elevator doors could not even
be opened as so many people were jammed up against them. We were afraid some of
the elderly were going to be trampled. It took us about 15 minutes after the
gangway opened before we could get to the pier. They only had one person
checking people off the ship. We asked a member of the tour staff why they had
done it this way, rather than use the theater which had worked well in all other
days. She told us there would not have been a problem if the ship had not been
late docking. I’m not sure I buy that answer.
Excursions: We had some wonderful excursions on this cruise. In Jamaica,
we had our only bad experience. The nail technician was right in telling me
there is nothing in Montego Bay. We did take a taxi to “town” for about $3
apiece each way. The port “expert” on the ship, Elizabeth, did a port talk the
day before and told us that there are 80,000 people in Montego Bay and 79,000 of
them are taxi drivers. She was close. These taxis are actually 12 person vans in
most cases. And they don’t like to take trips unless they are full. So we had to
sit at the terminal building until they got 12 of us to go to town before
leaving. It’s only a few miles to “town” which is really sort of a strip of
small stores on two floors in a severely congested area. The shops sell coffee,
jewelry and t-shirts predominantly. The shop employees loiter in the doorways
and on the sidewalks and follow the tourists down the streets begging you to
come to their shops. There are a few residents who are willing to pose with
baskets of fruit on their head in hopes you will pay them to take their
pictures. The whole thing was very sad. After walking the length of the twenty
or so shops, we had enough and decided to return to the ship. There were
hundreds of taxi drivers soliciting us to take us on a tour or back to a ship.
We saw one van with already about 6 people in it, so we joined them. We still
had to wait another 15 minutes or so until the driver solicited another 5 or 6
before he finally started out down the narrow streets and returned us to the
dock.
In Panama the most thrilling part of the tour is going through the locks
themselves. In our case we were up at 6:00 AM to be ready. But, we did not
really enter the first lock until around 7:30 AM. We were finishing our
breakfast on the balcony while we were watching the process. Lots of others were
also on their balconies. In fact, they offered us a $25 Panama Canal breakfast
that included champagne, but we opted for the regular stuff. While we were in
the locks, some ships photographers were down on the lock itself and they took
pictures of all of us on our balconies. Those were interesting pictures, and of
course we took the bait and bought them later! We really enjoyed seeing the
canal process from all areas of the ship though, so we wandered up on to the top
decks to see from there, and also went to one of the lower lounges on the 5th
floor where we could actually see the inside walls of the lock when we first
entered it, and then watch the wall ship away as the ship rose when the water
entered underneath us. That was really neat to watch from that perspective.
When we completed the Gatun locks we sailed into Gatun Lake. We dropped anchor
there and those of us on excursions were taken off the ship on tenders. We met
up with out tour guides there and got onto buses. Our tour was the train trip
from the Atlantic to the Pacific on the Panama Canal Railroad. We had booked the
Deluxe Executive Dome car. We rode about 15 minutes on a bus to the Train
Station at Colon and we boarded the restored train car. It had booths with
tables in between and each booth would seat two people on each side. There were
booths on both sides of the aisle. The side windows and the ceilings were one
continual piece of curved glass. The upholstery had obviously been restored
recently. It was very pretty. Our tour guide was Marty, a man in his late 50’s
with no Spanish accent that was noticeable. In fact, we thought he was American,
but he did say he was from Panama. He told us later that he’d gone to Prep
School in Minnesota for many years as a young man, and he’d also worked for
Braniff Airlines in Miami for about 20 years before retiring back to Panama a
few years ago. He was very knowledgeable about Panama, the people and culture,
and the canal and its history. He kept us entertained and informed. The train
heading toward the Pacific Ocean side of Panama and paralleled the canal as it
went. We saw the lake formed when the dam had been built to create the canal
waters. We saw wildlife and old military bases that the Americans had used prior
to turning the Canal Zone over to the Panamanians on December 31, 1999. The
train stopped in Mira Flores and we again boarded buses. These buses took us to
the Mira Flores locks. There we were able to climb about 20 steps to a small
observation platform where we were able to look down on to the lock. A ship was
going through this lock while we were there so it was quite interesting. We also
entered a small museum there and were shown a short film on the canal. We had
another few minutes to walk around this observation area where one of the “mule”
locomotives is on display. Then we were back on the bus. We then drove on to the
Pacific Ocean near Panama City. We could see the Bridge of the Americas that
crosses the canal and the skyline of Panama City, which looks like any modern
city with sky scrapers. When we returned to the train, we went back to our domed
car and there were box lunches for each of us. We had a sandwich, chips, banana
and we were offered coffee or lemonade to drink. When we returned to Colon, we
again boarded buses and were taken back to the ship where it was docked in
Cristobal. At the pier there was a small group of shops in a mall area where
many Panamanians and some of the native Embrea Indians were set up selling
crafts. There were also Panamanian dancers performing there. After shopping a
few minutes we went back on the ship.
In Costa Rica our excursion left around 7:00 AM for a long bus ride to the
Rainforest. The bus ride was made interesting by Gloriana our tour guide. She is
a Marine Biologist by education, and also has a master’s degree in wildlife
management. She is very proud of her country and shared a vast amount of
information with us. Costa Rica is a beautiful, lush country that grows a great
deal of fruit and flowers for export to the rest of the world. We passed many
fields growing bananas, coffee, chocolate and ornamental flowers. She had our
bus driver stop and buy a bunch of “finger bananas” to share with us. They were
much sweeter than regular bananas we were all used to. When we got to the rain
forest we divided into groups of 5 and boarded the gondolas of the aerial tram.
These tram cars go through the tree tops on cables. Many times we were over 45
feet off the ground. The trip is about an hour and a half in length, and we saw
many types of trees, flowers, birds, butterflies, snakes, and insects. At the
end of the tour we only had a couple of minutes to look in their gift shop and
we were off on the buses again. We stopped at a place where we ate a catered
lunch under a canopy. The food included some tough beef steak, chicken, fish
(all grilled), rice, plantains, squash, and some coconut flan for dessert. There
was also Costa Rican coffee, which was quite strong in my opinion. We were there
less than an hour and then back on the bus for about a 90 minute ride to some
canals and rivers close to Limon. We boarded a long boat with a canopy top that
held all 45 of us in low seats. We cruised along the canals and rivers for about
two hours. We saw much more wild life here, like crocodiles, egrets, monkeys,
iguanas, sloths, and many other birds and butterflies. It was a great trip. Upon
returning to the dock, we were only about 30 minutes from the pier where the
ship was. We had about an hour to visit the craft area near the terminal and we
shopped for some Panamanian wood items, and some clay vases and pots. This was
our favorite excursion.
In Grand Cayman we were only in port about six hours and it was a Sunday. We did
the 100 foot submarine dive and that was interesting, but very short. Then we
took the trip to the sandbar on a catamaran where we snorkeled and swam with the
stingrays. That was great fun as we had never done that before. It should be
done by everyone at least once. However, I will remark that although the water
is shallow there, I was not prepared for how strong the waves are, and as a
fairly light person, I was continually knocked over by waves. Other small women
also commented that they were surprised how hard it was to keep on your feet. I
was not so concerned with falling down, but they warn you not to step on the
stingrays and I was afraid I was going to do just that. But it was a great
experience.
In Cozumel we rode the ferry to the mainland and took another one hour bus ride
to Tulum to see the Mayan ruins there. It was fascinating, but we really only
had about an hour by the time we got there. It was over 90 degrees that day, and
not a cloud in the sky. It was also quite humid. I cannot imagine being there in
the summer. We really enjoyed seeing the Caribbean from the cliff that the
temple is built on. Our guide, Enrique, was very knowledgeable of the history
and showed us all of the features of the ruins. After the trip back on the bus,
and again on the ferry, we also walked around Cozumel for about an hour and
bought some T-shirts for our grandchildren. Here’s another town where the shop
employees will accost you on the street begging you into their store. I’m just
not into that type of scene, so we did not stay long in town but returned to the
ship about 90 minutes prior to sailing time.
Miscellaneous: As a new ship we had been somewhat fearful that things
might not operate well on the Coral, especially since it had been delayed at the
ship yard and two cruises were cancelled. However, there was very little
evidence to us that things were not at 100%. One thing we noticed is that if you
are in your cabin there is no way to hear the announcements over the PA system.
We asked about this, and supposedly we should be able to hear them on one of the
TV channels if you want to, but that was not yet operational. Some early
cruisers had said that the air conditioning or water temperature were faulty. We
did not notice that at all, although some public rooms were too cool for me. We
did not notice any problems with stabilization and in fact even when the seas
were a little rough, the ship seemed to ride fine to me. We did feel vibration
in the Universe Lounge one night, but never in our cabin or other public areas.
Every morning the cruise director and assistant conducted a “morning show” that
was broadcast on the Princess channel. It mostly consisted of them reading
through the Princess Patter and outlining what was going on for the day.
Sometimes another member of the staff was shown visiting an area of the ship,
such as the spa or casino, and once he interviewed the Captain. It was something
to listen to while getting dressed in the morning, but it was not important
information that wasn’t already covered elsewhere.
The “port expert” Elizabeth provided talks prior to each port call, but these
were primarily advertisements for stores that Princess endorses. We had never
experienced such blatant selling on any other cruise line. She actually had
products displayed from the shops and went on for an hour about them. We had
gone to many port talks on the Rotterdam when we cruised in the Mediterranean
and there the expert spoke only about the countries and cities we were going to
visit, the culture of the people, and he often mentioned the types of products
that might be a good buy in that country, but there was never any showing of
goods or suggestion that we should use a specific shop. After the first talk, we
tuned her out and didn’t go to any of her presentations.
The new Universe Lounge is truly a state of the arts multi-media center. We
attended shows there that were excellent, and we also attended two food
preparation presentations by the Executive Chef and Maitre’D. The cameras they
have there show the food preparation projected onto large screens from above the
work surface. There is a complete kitchen on the stage with a working stove,
refrigerator, and it was excellent. I felt like I was watching “Emeril” on the
Food Network. We also went on a Galley tour at the end of the last culinary
presentation. The kitchen is spotless and enormous. The kitchen on the 5th deck
provides food for both dining rooms, with an escalator for use by the waiters
who are serving in the 6th floor dining room.
My husband attended several photography classes that were offered as part of the
Scholarship at Sea program and he found them to be very informative for him.
They were presented by photographers from the ship and also by a computer
expert. There were other classes on navigation, communications, and computer
applications, as well as daily programs on pottery making. There is a working
kiln on the ship and an expert on board to assist those interested. We did not
participate in these so I cannot comment. There were fees associated with these
classes.
Disembarkation: We had booked an 11:30 flight out of Ft. Lauderdale and during
the first week on the ship we were asked to complete a form outlining our plans
since we did not book transfers or flights with Princess. Because of our early
flight we were then issued Red 1 tickets for disembarkation, which was scheduled
to be the first group off the ship. It was planned for 8:00 AM, but we did not
actually get cleared by customs and start disembarking until about 8:45 AM. We
were waiting in the hall way near the gangway when they started calling folks so
we were about the 10th and 11th people off the ship, literally. We barely
stopped at immigration and arrived in the luggage room where about ten porters
were waiting for us to arrive. We quickly found our 4 bags because of the hints
we had picked up on the internet message board to put yellow duct tape on our
luggage. The porter had our four bags on the cart in less than five minutes and
we did not really stop at customs at all. We were out the door and into the
first taxi waiting and heading down the road before 9:00 AM. It’s just about 15
minutes to the airport, so we were there before 9:30 and had plenty of time to
drink coffee and moan about having to fly home to the snow!
Summary: All in all this was a great cruise. We were tentative about
trying Princess because we really loved HAL’s Rotterdam. I would have to say
that most things about Princess are comparable. Where I think HAL has the edge
is that the service is more personal and the staff are more friendly and cordial
overall. On the Coral our waiters were wonderful, once we found them. But some
of the others we encountered were just “ok.” Never rude but not overly friendly
either. Our housekeeper was just great, too, but others often did not even speak
when you passed them in the hallway. We also found that tour office, purser, and
other staff were “ok” but nothing special. I think having the person with the
white gloves escort you to your cabin when you first arrive on a HAL ship just
set the tone for the whole cruise, and on Princess we had someone (who was not
even smiling) just point and say “go down the hall that way and it’s on the
right.”
Also, we like the size of the HAL ship better. The Rotterdam was made to hold
about 1,000 passengers, and there were 1,900 on Coral. That in itself means more
crowded conditions. We stood though one show on the Coral, and I can’t see doing
that ever again.
However, the mini-suite was considerably larger on the Coral, and we really
enjoyed that extra space. The closet was also bigger, so if the suite is
important, then Princess gets the edge. The food was comparable, as were the
tours. The shows were much better on Princess, both in variety and the quality
of the performances from the on board staff.
I hope this is helpful to those who might be considering cruising of the Coral.
It’s a beautiful ship and well worth the cost we spent for the ten days in the
sun!
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