Cruise News

/Cruise News

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

Ships that go bump in the night

UPDATE: For a detailed first-person report and pictures of the coming-together, take a look at John Heald's blog. You'll have to scroll through his opening remarks, his answers to dozens of questions, and an interview with fellow-CD Ryan Fitzgerald, but it's well worth the effort. Regular readers of the informative blog compiled by Prinsendam captain Albert Schoonderbeek will be well aware of the problems that winds, tides and currents can cause when a cruise ship is entering or leaving harbour. And those problems became apparent last night when Carnival Legend was leaving port in the Mexican resort of Cozumel. Caught [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 1 October 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|1 Comment

Design secrets of Queen Elizabeth

It's still more than a year before Cunard's newest ship, Queen Elizabeth, is scheduled to make her maiden voyage, but the publicity machine is already being cranked into gear. Alastair Greener, entertainments director on board sister ship Queen Victoria, has visited the Fincantieri shipyard at Monfalcone, in north-east Italy and reported back with a selection of pictures and video clips on his We Are Cunard blog. Intrepid Alastair even climbed a 200-ft crane to get some good pictures. "Everywhere you looked you could see parts of our new ship. Each carefully numbered block will eventually become part of this massive [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 26 September 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|0 Comments

Final farewell to Saga Rose

There's still time to get on board the final cruise of the much-loved Saga Rose, which is being retired in December. Capt David Warden-Owen will be at the helm and the entertainment includes Des O'Connor, Ronnie Corbett, Katherine Jenkins, Nicholas Parsons and Tom O'Connor. The full 37-night cruise, departing Southampton on October 30, costs from £7,199 a head, while a 19-night sector as far as Limassol, Cyprus, is priced from £3,899. Alternatively, fly to Barcelona on November 4 and sail for 22 nights before flying home from Malta, for £4,599, or 18 nights from Limassol on November 18, sailing home [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 25 September 2009|Cruise Deals, Cruise News|0 Comments

Carnival profits surge ahead

It's been a busy week for Micky Arison, chairman and CEO of the biggest cruise company in the world. He's in Italy, having taken delivery of his company's newest ship, the Carnival Dream. Meanwhile, back at Miami HQ, the Carnival empire, which includes Cunard, P&O, Princess, Holland America and Costa, was announcing its latest financial results. Third-quarter profits of just over a billion dollars were better than expected, thanks to lower fuel costs and stronger advance bookings. Arison said the drastic price-cutting which has helped fill ships across the industry may not continue for much longer, and that early bookers [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 23 September 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

P&O confirm sale of Artemis

The future of Artemis, P&O's smallest cruise ship, became clearer today. I reported a couple of weeks ago that there were rumours the 1,200-passenger vessel was about to be sold to German cruise line Phoenix Reisen and at that time P&O confirmed they had received an enquiry from an unnamed source. In a statement today, the company confirms the ship has been sold, and that it will continue to operate under the P&O flag until it has completed all the cruises currently listed in P&O's brochures. An initial statement reads: "P&O Cruises can confirm that it has signed contracts for [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 22 September 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|3 Comments

I vote to take a teabag to Venice

It's National Cruise Week and we are being deluged with surveys drawing our attention to all aspects of cruising. First was one which revealed that, given the choice of sharing a cabin with Johnny Depp, in his Pirates of the Caribbean role as Captain Jack Sparrow, or Penelope Cruz (in whatever role you can dream of), most passengers preferred their own partner. Then we learnt that more than a quarter of passengers take their own teabags on a cruise, and 14 per cent of women take their own pillow. Which is a bit odd, given that on every ship I [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 21 September 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Mystery Epic maiden revealed

Details of that mystery maiden voyage for Norwegian Epic have been revealed. The ship, carrying up to 4,200 passengers and 60 per cent bigger than any other vessel in the company's fleet, will leave Southampton on June 24 next year, and arrive in New York on July 1. And because construction work, at the STX yard in St Nazaire, France, is ahead of schedule, the ship will begin sailing regular Caribbean cruises a week earlier than planned, with the first now leaving Miami on July 10. Passengers who put their names on the waitlist for this "pre-maiden" were given the [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 15 September 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Leafy Oasis poses a problem

Royal Caribbean boss Richard Fain has an interesting problem to tackle as final preparations are being made for the maiden voyage of the biggest cruise ship in the world. One of the many innovations on Oasis of the Seas is Central Park, an open-air leafy garden in the middle of the ship. Climatic conditions in Finland, where construction is nearing completion, are rather different from those in the Caribbean, where the ship will be sailing regularly from the end of November. So it is not possible to plant up the park before the 5,400-passenger, 220,000-ton ship sets out across the [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:37+00:00 15 September 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|0 Comments

Extra charges are hard to swallow

The doyen of cruise ship writers has taken a pop at the Ryanair-style pricing tricks which he says are creeping into cruise fares. Douglas Ward, author of the Berlitz Guide to Cruising and Cruise Ships, claims that extra supplements can bump up the fare and "take the glow off an apparent giveaway price." He adds: "A highly discounted fare may apply only to certain dates and itineraries, while passengers' preferred cabin grades and location may not be available or they may be limited to first seating at dinner." But surely that has always been the case with all kinds of [...]

By | 2009-09-14T23:47:32+00:00 14 September 2009|Cruise News|0 Comments

Red card for QE2 World Cup plans

The England football team may have confirmed their place in next year's World Cup, but there are new doubts over plans to move the QE2 to South Africa to provide accommodation for visiting fans. The former Cunard liner, which retired from service last year, has been in Dubai since November, waiting for work to start to convert it into a luxury floating hotel. The global financial crisis placed those plans on hold, just as they put a stop to other building work in Dubai. New owners Nakheel then announced the ship would move to Cape Town for 18 months, in [...]

By | 2017-06-15T16:00:38+00:00 13 September 2009|Cruise News, Cruise Ships|0 Comments