John Gawne
Age: 59
Occupation: Faculty Administrator
Number of Cruises: 13
Cruise Line: Princess
Name of Ship: Golden
Sailing Date: March 30th,
2002
Itinerary: Eastern Caribbean
We booked this cruise in November 2001 for
the kids’ spring break. Princess wouldn’t take the booking for a quad room, as
they were trying to limit the number of children and teens on the sailing. They
were happy to book the same kids as long as we booked two adjacent cabins. We
did and got a good price. We flew Southwest for the first time from Norfolk to
Ft. Lauderdale, less than $100 each way. Called the Holiday Inn Express,
Convention Center, shuttle and were delivered about 1115pm the night before
sailing.
Saturday we had breakfast at the hotel, walked 1 ½ blocks to the bridge
overlooking Port Everglades and could see Golden Princess, Celebrity Century, A
HAL ship, and RCCL ship. Walked back to the Publix which was on 17th, a block
from the hotel and purchased 12 packs of soda for the kids to carry aboard. We
took the 1230pm shuttle to the pier (a 5-minute ride) and were through check in
by 1:10pm. They x-rayed everything, and took a photo which is used to check
faces and ship ID cards. They were confiscating for safekeeping all hard liquor.
We were on Caribe deck 725 and 729, two adjacent inside rooms, but not
connected. Refrigerator with filled ice bucket, ample space, end tables,
dressing table with drawers, mirrors give the room a feeling of spaciousness.
There is a closet with 7 feet of hanger space, a cabinet with 8 shelves and a
save, and the entrance to the bathroom. No trouble storing all luggage under the
bed, and the case of wine under the dressing table, with several bottles of
champagne in the fridge. This was the largest three inside cabins we have had on
Princess. Muster in cool lounge where they instructed everyone on how to put on
lifejackets.
We had opted to try Personal Choice dining. We have normally been traditional
late seating on all previous cruises, with or without kids. We had read that
7-8pm was the busiest time so we sent down at 8:30pm and were told there was a
15-20 minute wait in both PC dining rooms. We got to a table at 9:05. The show
was a comedian who toned down the late show due to the large number of children
in the front rows. The Princess pools are fresh water and open 24 hours, so we
did a late night dip before turning in. Many of the hot tubs are closed and
emptied, however, at night.
The first at sea day was Easter Sunday. There were Protestant and Catholic
services at 9, and huge chocolate eggs decorated in the atrium. I attempted to
make a dinner reservation for PC dining but was advised at 10am that only one PC
dining room was taking reservations and had only 5:45-6:15pm available. With
that, I went to the dining room captain in the traditional dining room and
request late seating. He said if we had not heard from him by dinner, just show
up at 8:30 and he’s find a place. From that point on, everytime he saw us all
week he was able to call us by name. 16 years with Princess, starting as Asst
Waiter. We checked out the four pool choices: Terrace Pool, aft, which is adults
only, the spa pool which is a lap pool with artificial current, the Calypso Pool
with the retractable roof, and the Neptune Pool. Family preferred the more
secluded Calypso Pool, but seldom could find an empty chair due to inconsiderate
passengers marking their spot with towels and disappearing literally for hours.
This was the first formal night. Ordered rose corsages for my wife and daughter
for $8 each, delivered to room. The 11 year old was thrilled! Captain’s Welcome
Aboard reception, formal photos. The dining room seated the four of us and two
others at a table for 10, and by the next night had us at a table for 6 with a
good wait staff, Jun from the Philippines and Flavio from Acapulco. They were
great. The show that night was Lights, Camera, Action, a Vegas style show.
Afterwards we tried out Skywalkers, the disco suspended high above the stern,
accessed by escalator from deck 17. Lots of current top 40 hits, a conga line,
we had it all.
The second at sea day we had made a lunch reservation in the Desert Rose, the
southwestern theme restaurant with an $8 cover charge. We had ample salsa,
chips, guacamole, fajitas, empanadas, quesadilla’s, and the first drink free
(great Margarita’s). Much of the day as spent at the pools, but I spent time
exploring the library (not only books, but computers with games, and other
programs), shops, the exercise gym where I rode stationary cycles and they had
many other machines, walking track. Tried out the pizza, which is available by
the slice on Lido Deck only 11am –6pm. Also great burgers, hot dogs, brats,
etc….all just off the Neptune Pool area. The evening show was Shake, Rattle and
Roll, an anthology of music/songs from that era with singers and dancers.
We took our own wine each evening to the dining room. The first three nights, we
were not charged the $10 corkage fee. We had heard that it was sort of up to the
waiter to write it up. They wrote it up the 4th and 5th nights, because they
said it was apparent that the ship did not carry these wines, and the dining
room captain would notice. I told them we would be bringing champagne the 6th
night and they said to wrap in it something and they wouldn’t charge us. We did
and they didn’t. Nor the last night. So we paid $20 corkage and had 7 bottles of
wine of our favorites that I had purchased at discount wine shops and had
shipped as luggage. Total expense for 7 bottle: about $91, which would have cost
about $26 each, or more on board for a total of $182. We saved 50%. While we did
attend wine tasting ($5 each refundable if you purchased dinner wine), the
ship’s wine list is poor. Sure they have a few $60-110 wines, but most are $10
wines that cost $28 each onboard.
The third day was St. Maarten. We berthed at the new pier, across from Disney
Magic, with her crumpled, fire marred funnel and smokestacks. We took a taxi
from the pier to Orient Beach on the French side for $6 per person, found a
beach vendor, Pedro’s, where we got four chairs and 4 drinks for $20, and he
tossed in a free umbrella later. Despite SPF 50, I got quite sunburned while
swimming, sunning, snorkeling (got three nice conch shells). They have
parasailing, jet skis, etc. Also visited the clothing optional end of the beach,
although the kids remained in the more public side in the chairs. The joke back
on the ship is always: “Gee, I didn’t recognize you with your clothes on.” Back
by taxi to town to the Guavaberry Emporium, the local liqueur, and a little
shopping. Ended the day by being at Every T’ing Cool until last call, which
comes early since the ships are leaving. Two beers, a rum punch, and a soda for
$8.25. Taxi back to ship was $3 per person. There was a nice sail away party
with two bands, and that evening was Island Night. Starting about 1015pm the aft
Terrace Pool was covered over with a bandstand, There was dancing, limbo
contests, a Mr. Golden Princess contest, in which at the asst. cruise director’s
urging I joined. A great night under the stars. This venue, right below the
Skywalker’s lounge, is superb for this kind of evening.
The next day was St. Thomas. We were berthed at the West India Co. dock at
Havensight, and walked to the pierside shopping mall to make our liquor
purchases, and some other souvenirs. There is also a drug store for those who
might want something not available onboard. We went back aboard with all our
purchases, had lunch in the Horizon Court on Lido. The rear section of Horizon
is very quiet glass all around, and my favorite place up there. After a king
crab dinner was the crew talent show, with the “If I were not upon the sea”
skit. Alistair was the cruise director. He and his assistant did a good job
during the week.
Thursday was an at sea day. We ate in the dining room where they had and
outstanding Cioppino seafood soup, and glasses of Italian wine for $3. That
night was the second formal night, and the Captain’s Circle member reception. I
was surprised at how relatively few were present, and with 3 or 4 exceptions,
most were, like us, on about their 3rd or 4th Princess Cruise. After lobster and
Beef Wellington dinner there was a champagne waterfall put on by the matre’de,
with photos’ available for those who chose to get up and help pour, as my wife
and daughter each did.
Friday was the visit to Princess Cay, by tender. It was beautiful, and I liked
it much better that HAL’s Half Moon Cay. The snorkeling was great, with coral
fans and lots of fish. The sand was a bit rocky, the picnic lunch was a typical
picnic lunch. Some local crafts, bars, music, etc. were available. But the scene
must have been cut out and pasted from the Corona’ “change your whole latitude”
commercials where they skip their pages across the water. The green water, white
sand, sun,…it was the best! But it was Friday, and time to begin filling out
forms, luggage tags, and packing. They wanted bags all but one bag in the hall
when you leave for dinner, with the other to be out when you turn in. Prime rib
and turkey dinners highlighted American Landfall night. Wish they would spread
it out more instead of having multiple stellar entrée’s on the same night.
Saturday we returned to Ft. Lauderdale. Breakfast was 6:30 – 8:30 in the dining
room and 5:30-9am in Horizon Court. They called the first tags away about 8:10,
and we were called about 9:30, with about 30% still waiting. We had chosen to
wait in the Vista Lounge after vacating our room after breakfast. Hardly anyone
there. They prefer to clog the stairwells and passageways for an hour and a half
in the belief that somehow that will speed their departure. Customs and
immigration was painless and the bags were waiting. We hustled them to an Alamo
bus and rented a van so we could store the luggage and go to the beach strip.
You can’t check luggage at the airport anyway until 4 hours before you flight.
We drove by the Elbow Room I had visited on my own college spring break many
moons ago. We parked in a lot for 75 cents and hour and walked to Sloppy Joe’s,
of the Key West Sloppy Joe’s venue, and enjoyed lunch overlooking the beach,
then off to turn in the car and to the airport for a return home on time.
A few general comments. Food is available 24 hours a day in the Horizon Court.
It typically parallels what is being served in the dining room. However, sitting
on a buffet line, it is usually overcooked and drying out. There was lots of
steamed and pealed shrimp available on several days. There are 3 identical
dining rooms. Two for Personal Choice and one for traditional dining. We did not
use the cover charged Sabattini’s Trattoria. Maybe if it had been a steak house.
But not for Italian. The dining room food was medium, at best. It was not up to
our prior two Princess cruises, and was more on a par with RCCL: good, but not
exceptional. It was better on Carnival Sensation last spring. Lots of fish.
Steak, Caesar salad, fettuccini alfredo are always available. Desserts did
include banana flambé and cherries jubilee. Coffee was okay to me, and I drink
it black. I know lots of people complain about cruise coffee. Maybe 20 years of
black Navy coffee helped me adapt to any kind of coffee. They were not pushing
alcohol. It was available, period. Soft drink stickers for your ship card were
$17.50 for unlimited soft drinks by the glass. Same with photos. The only
candids were upon arriving, leaving the ship in port (but only till 1030), and a
few on Princess Cays. 8x10’s are $21.95, and 5x7’s are $7.95. I found not so
many quiet little corners. The ship is huge. There were over 2900 people aboard
but it didn’t seem like it. There were laundromats on every deck: new equipment,
$1 wash, 50 cents dry. Soap and bleach $1 each, 4 irons and boards in each. It
cost $3.75 to have my tux shirt laundered and pressed. Motion of the ocean was
greater on this ship than I would have expected. Is it top heavy? Even in mild
seas it rocks and rolls.
My teenager had plenty to do with virtual arcades, miniature golf, internet
café, and lots of teens to hang out with.
All in all, a nice week on a nice ship. But it is nicer with just me and my
wife, than supervising the 11 and 14 year old, who thinks he is 20 and dad of
course knows nothing, and times to check in are optional. We’ll cruise as a
family this summer, but looking forward to anniversary cruises with my wife.
More romantic.
Oh, must have been a good week, as I did put down the $100 per person fully
refundable till Nov 2004 deposit on a future Princess Cruise. How can you lose
on a deal like that? The Love Boat……….strains of music
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