Cruise News

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All the latest cruise news from Captain Greybeard, the man in the know. Recipient of the CLIA Contribution to Cruise Media Award in 2017, John Honeywell is the leading cruise expert in the UK with the ear of the industry’s most important leaders and innovators

Fearless Fain, Chairman of the Board

While we’re talking about Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines’ financial worries, I thought I would share this picture of chairman and CEO Richard Fain, challenging all-comers on the Independence of the Seas Flowrider during the ship’s inaugural last spring. Fearless Fain proved he’s as adept at keeping his feet on the surf simulator as he is at running the second biggest cruise company on the planet, and operating the world’s biggest passenger ships. He’s not bad at crazy golf either, as he showed when he took on the company’s president, Adam Goldstein, and Olympic legend Sir Steve Redgrave. Incidentally, Fain now [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 30 January 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Poor profits mean cheaper deals

It looks like the financial analysts do know what they were talking about, after all. Although not quite as right as they thought they were. Royal Caribbean, announcing last year’s results, have admitted that profit prospects for 2009 are even worse than anticipated. The recession is hitting cruise ship bookings, particularly in the United States, and RCL’s net income in the last three months of 2008 fell 98 per cent to $1.48 million, equivalent to one cent a share. Wall Street had been forecasting a profit of seven cents a share. For 2009, RCL are expecting a drop of 14 [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 29 January 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Royal Caribbean frozen out

There’s a chill wind blowing round Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines this week. On Tuesday it emerged that one of their three ships sailing Alaska itineraries during the summer will be pulled out in 2010 and moved elsewhere. Serenade of the Seas, which carries 2,100 passengers, will sail 20 Alaskan cruises this summer from Vancouver to Anchorage, so that could be 42,000 fewer people visiting America’s frozen north-west next year. Rhapsody of the Seas and Radiance of the Seas – on which I had a spectacular Alaska cruise in 2003 – will continue to operate from Seattle and Vancouver. The company [...]

By | 2009-01-29T12:45:31+00:00 29 January 2009|Cruise Destinations, Cruise News|0 Comments

Everyone’s a winner

Comedian Michael McIntyre must have been ready for a holiday last night after he had finished presenting 49 gongs for the Travel Weekly Globe Travel Awards at London’s Grosvenor House Hotel. Most of the awards are voted for by travel agents: in the cruise categories, Fred Olsen came out on top of the 3-star class, and Royal Caribbean for 4-star. Silversea were named the best luxury cruise line, and Hurtigruten, who run the Norwegian coastal voyages vessels, were the top niche operator. The people who pay for their holidays, and who pay the agents’ commission, thought differently. In the awards [...]

By | 2009-01-28T18:00:59+00:00 28 January 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Epic name for the latest mega-ship

Until now, it has been known only as F3. Tonight, Norwegian Cruise Lines announced that their new mega-ship, being built in France, is to be called the Norwegian Epic. What’s more, she’ll be coming to the UK in 2010 for a series of spectacular inaugural events, before heading to Miami, from where she will sail year-round seven-day voyages to the Caribbean. The 4,200-passenger ship will, say NCL, take their brand of Freestyle cruising – no jackets required, even at dinner – to the next level, with a host of innovative bars and restaurants. There will be five nightlife areas simulating [...]

By | 2009-01-27T21:55:35+00:00 27 January 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Symphony in tune with Wimbledon

Sometimes, a cruise just isn’t enough. Ten days or so of living in the lap of luxury, food and drink constantly available; travelling from one spectacular sight to another without ever having to unpack and re-pack, and still you want more. Cruise and stay holidays take care of that, and there are many opportunities to combine a week on a ship with a week in a hotel, in Florida or Majorca for example. And land tours are a popular add-on to Alaskan cruises. I’ve found a package that knocks that sort of deal right out of court. It’s an 11-day [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 27 January 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Celebrity sisters make a splash

Celebrity Solstice set new standards for luxury and cruise ship design when she was launched last year, and has been impressing passengers on her first voyages from Fort Lauderdale to the Caribbean. A further four ships are planned along the same lines. Work is well under way on the construction of Celebrity Equinox, which will be named at a ceremony in Southampton in July before heading for the Mediterranean and then on to Florida. The third, Celebrity Eclipse, started taking shape at the same shipyard in Papenburg, Germany, this weekend, when the first of 72 hull sections was lifted by [...]

By | 2009-01-26T16:36:43+00:00 26 January 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|0 Comments

Bouncing around on Balmoral

I woke up this morning to radio reports of freak weather and winds of up to 120 mph battering France, and my thoughts immediately turned to Fred Olsen’s Balmoral, which I reported earlier this week had been bouncing around in the Bay of Biscay. It looks like there has been no respite for the passengers who have been suffering at the hands of the elements. I spent two days in winds of up to storm force 10 in the Bay, on board Olsen’s Black Watch a few years ago, so I know what they have been going through. Standing in [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 24 January 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|9 Comments

Safe Passage to India

P&O’s Arcadia was taking no chances when she sailed through the Gulf of Aden this week en route to India. The area has been plagued by Somali pirates, who only last week released a massive oil tanker which had been held hostage since before Christmas. If you want to be safe, there’s nothing better than getting the Royal Navy on your side, and Arcadia was escorted by Type 23 frigate HMS Portland (above), which is armed with Sea Wolf missiles, a 110 mm gun, two 30 mm guns, and four torpedo launchers. The RN even sent a Lynx helicopter over [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 22 January 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|0 Comments

Two injured on Balmoral

Two passengers have been taken to hospital in Spain after being injured when the Fred Olsen cruise ship Balmoral was hit by 50 ft waves in the Bay of Biscay, according to a BBC report. The ship docked in La Coruna on Saturday after two days of rough seas and winds of up to 60 mph. A Fred Olsen spokesperson today confirmed the incident, and said the ship’s itinerary had been amended because of the delays. Calls at Tangier and Lisbon have been abandoned, and the ship, which is due back in Dover on January 27, will instead head from [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:49+00:00 21 January 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|7 Comments