A Travel and vacations forum. TravelBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » TravelBanter forum » Travelling Style » Cruises
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #31  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 02:39 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
telepathic trees
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

Rosalie B. wrote:

It wasn't so much that the room was actually small. But the furniture
didn't fit very well. The sofa was nice, but the table was very small
(smaller than the breakfast tray), and the little stool at the dresser
was more for show than for sitting on. It could have been left off
altogether.


I just got back from an Eastern Caribbean cruise on the Westerdam. We
used the little stool as an extra table whenever we used room service.
I balanced the loaded tray on the stool and put the dishes on the
table as needed. This worked pretty well.

Other than that, we never used the little stool. Or the desk, for
that matter. I would have preferred the desk was a chest of drawers.

Totally irrelevant side note: my goodness but they hired some handsome
men as casino dealers. Yowza.

Emily
  #32  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 03:23 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Surfer E2468
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,757
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

In our inside cabin on dolphin deck on the volendam in our bathroom we
had a corner cabinet with several large shelves,to store our
things,plenty of room,we kept our meclizine,aspirin etc,on our
nightstand where we knew we could find them easily.right by our travel
clock,and flashlights.


cruise lover


  #33  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 04:04 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Rosalie B.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,575
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

(Surfer E2468) wrote:

In our inside cabin on dolphin deck on the volendam in our bathroom we
had a corner cabinet with several large shelves,to store our
things,plenty of room,we kept our meclizine,aspirin etc,on our
nightstand where we knew we could find them easily.right by our travel
clock,and flashlights.

I keep my pill keeper in the bathroom where the water is to take the
medicine. I take 8 pills a day of various kinds (blood pressure, and
arthritis medication mostly). Never unpacked the meclizine or the
candied ginger either although I had a severe vertigo attack about a
month before the cruise and I did take it for a couple of weeks then.
There was hardly room for it (the pill keeper) on the sink and the
shelf was too narrow for it. The other side of the sink was taken up
with that little plastic thing with the soap and shampoo bottles.

I've about given up on having a clock. I can't see it without my
glasses anyway. If I want to see what time it is I put on my glasses
and turn on the TV to the bow camera (with the sound muted).

Ditto with the flashlight - I can see enough to go to the bathroom
with the light under the door (to the hall), and it is enough so I can
get around without turning a light on or using a flashlight. In our
first room, the message light on the phone was broken and kept
blinking, so Bob put his hat over it - otherwise it would have driven
him crazy.

The table by the sofa had a basket of fruit on it, and the dresser had
3 or 4 wine bottles in addition to the soda and water and ice bucket -
all of which I would have liked to dispose of. I guess I could have
stowed them in the shoe basket in the closet, if I had thought of it
at the time.

But I really would have rather had a dresser with more drawers rather
than that 'dressing table'.



  #34  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 04:29 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Nonnymus
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 160
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)



clint wrote:
OY VE!
"Sue and Kevin Mullen" wrote in message
...

Rosalie B. wrote:
Sue and Kevin Mullen wrote:
In the bathroom we had a shelf under the sink, don't know if you had one
or not.

No we didn't. There was a small shelf above the sink, but that was
all. I think shelf or cabinet space under the sink would be an easy
way to get more storage.

In addition to the shelf under the sink, we had a corner cabinet with
three shelfs on the right hand side of the sink. Same cruise line,
diffeent ships, different layouts.

It wasn't so much that the room was actually small. But the furniture
didn't fit very well. The sofa was nice, but the table was very small
(smaller than the breakfast tray), and the little stool at the dresser
was more for show than for sitting on. It could have been left off
altogether.



The stool by the dresser/desk opened for more storage and I used it to sit
on at the desk. Also our table was a little bigger then the breakfast
tray, so it worked fine for us.


We had a similar problem on our last cruise. The stool by the
dresser/desk was ideal for the storage of my booze, medicine and shaving
equipment. Then, Mrs. Nonnymus flushed the darned thing and I lost it all.

--
---Nonnymus---

TINSTAAFL
There Is No Such Thing
As A Free Lunch
  #35  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 04:40 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Jean O'Boyle
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,354
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)


"Rosalie B." wrote in message
...

snipped

But I really would have rather had a dresser with more drawers rather
than that 'dressing table'.



On the Volendam, our desk had six drawers on one side and three on the
other..plenty of space....So much that I did not use all the shelves and
drawers and I tend to overpack everytime.

--Jean


  #36  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 05:19 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Rosalie B.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,575
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

Nonnymus wrote:

clint wrote:
OY VE!
"Sue and Kevin Mullen" wrote in message
...

Rosalie B. wrote:
Sue and Kevin Mullen wrote:
In the bathroom we had a shelf under the sink, don't know if you had one
or not.

No we didn't. There was a small shelf above the sink, but that was
all. I think shelf or cabinet space under the sink would be an easy
way to get more storage.
In addition to the shelf under the sink, we had a corner cabinet with
three shelfs on the right hand side of the sink. Same cruise line,
diffeent ships, different layouts.

It wasn't so much that the room was actually small. But the furniture
didn't fit very well. The sofa was nice, but the table was very small
(smaller than the breakfast tray), and the little stool at the dresser
was more for show than for sitting on. It could have been left off
altogether.



The stool by the dresser/desk opened for more storage and I used it to sit
on at the desk. Also our table was a little bigger then the breakfast
tray, so it worked fine for us.


We had a similar problem on our last cruise. The stool by the
dresser/desk was ideal for the storage of my booze, medicine and shaving
equipment. Then, Mrs. Nonnymus flushed the darned thing and I lost it all.


We looked for the seats in the elevators and didn't see them. There
was a lady in the DR on a scooter who ran over our tablemate's feet on
the way out on the first day - after that his wife (who was facing her
line of travel) always warned him to pull in his feet.

  #37  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 05:21 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Rosalie B.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,575
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

"Jean O'Boyle" wrote:


"Rosalie B." wrote in message
.. .

snipped

But I really would have rather had a dresser with more drawers rather
than that 'dressing table'.


On the Volendam, our desk had six drawers on one side and three on the
other..plenty of space....So much that I did not use all the shelves and
drawers and I tend to overpack everytime.


We weren't so lucky. There were three drawers in the dressing table
and two small drawers in each of the night tables, and that was it for
drawers. One of the four closets had shelves and one of the shelves
was taken up by the safe, and of course the top ones had life jackets.



  #38  
Old February 2nd, 2007, 09:54 AM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Charles[_1_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,112
Default HAL Maasdam Review (back to back cruises)

In article , Rosalie B.
wrote:

We looked for the seats in the elevators and didn't see them. There
was a lady in the DR on a scooter who ran over our tablemate's feet on
the way out on the first day - after that his wife (who was facing her
line of travel) always warned him to pull in his feet.


That seems to be a big problem on HAL.

--
Charles
  #39  
Old December 11th, 2008, 10:37 PM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Rosalie B.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,575
Default HAL Statendam 26 day Ft. Lauderdale to Peru and back Nov 10 to Dec 6, 2008 (first part)

Rosalie B. wrote:

Previous Cruises: (just me - age 71- fat and cheerful)
HAL Nieuw Amsterdam 1950 transatlantic NYC to La Havre
HAL Nieuw Amsterdam 1950 transatlantic Southampton to NYC
NCL Jade - Med cruise Barcelona to Venice '08

Previous cruises (Bob - age 72 - fit and grumpy) - various US Navy
ships 1956 to 1973.
Together - other than cruises to the Bahamas and Florida on our boat
04- NCL Crown to Bermuda
05- NCL Crown repositioning -Phila to Miami.
06 - HAL Maasdam back to back Caribbean and repositioning
07- RCI Grandeur of the Seas - repositioning Baltimore to Tampa
07-NCL Pearl - Caribbean from Miami

Bob stated after he got off the GOTS that he was never cruising again,
but I wanted to go through the Panama Canal, so he agreed to do this
one. But he said it was like watching paint dry.

I picked this cruise because it was a smaller ship (Bob didn't like
the crowds on the bigger GOTS and he liked the Pearl better but it was
still too big) and we had liked the Maasdam. We could drive to it
and visit grandchildren in SC. I liked the ports and wanted to see
the Panama Canal.

Initially I thought I would also be able to go to Galapagos or Manchu
Pichu but... HAL's excursion was WAY WAY TOO EXPENSIVE. I could do a
couple of extra cruises for that amount of money (if I can get Bob to
do another one). And I was not sure that I could handle the altitude
within the time frame. So if I go, I'll just take a separate trip.
We've already been to Tikal.

Embarkation in Ft. Lauderdale.

We stayed at the Sleep Inn on Nov 9th and after dinner, we turned the
rental car in at the airport and got the shuttle back to the hotel.
The next morning the hotel shuttle took us to the port. There were no
spaces on the 11:00 shuttle so we took the 10:00 which actually left
the hotel at 9:35 but went to another hotel and the airport first.

When we got to the port, and we all had to show our IDs to get in.
Since the Statendam was first in line at the pier, we got off first We
handed our luggage to the luggage people, and then van drove off
before we could tip the driver. Bob was complaining about the fact
that we were there so early, but that put us into the first group.

When we registered, they took our passports and shot records, and KEPT
them, although they gave us a receipt. We sat in a waiting room, and
then they moved us upstairs, and we sat some more. Anyway when they
let us on about 11:30, we went up to the buffet for lunch.

When we got our suitcases, two of them which had been in perfect
condition when we handed them over to the luggage people were
basically destroyed. Bob had a side pocket torn partly off one of
his bags, although he didn't think he lost anything. And my big black
roller bag had one side of the aluminum pull out handle ripped out and
the other side was twisted around so badly that it could not be
re-inserted.

Stateroom

We had booked a guarantee, and were upgraded to a partially obstructed
ocean view - that meant that the railing opposite our cabin was solid.
It was basically the same room we had on the Maasdam except that we
were in the stern under the dining room which was quieter than the
room we had before which was farther forward and under the kitchen. We
still had the deck walkers circling outside our cabin and some of them
were extremely noisy trampers (some of them 4 or 5 miles a day) - the
people on deck five had it worse than we did though. The same no
storage space in the bathroom and lack of drawers in the cabin. But
at least we could walk around the bed which we could not on GOTS

The BIG BLACK MARK for this room and ALL the ones at this end of the
ship (and sometimes it wafted up to the dining rooms) was that
everything smelled of sewage - especially in the hall but also in the
room. More in port or when there were certain wind directions. This
was due to faulty engineering as the sewage stack odors were
re-entrained into the ventilation system. The toilets worked OK

Muster
Earsplitting It was outside on the walking track under the
lifeboats. This time I was prepared and had my earplugs in my ears
and my cane to sit on. We had to do it again in Peru for the return
trip.

Food Dining Service

I liked the food.

Room Service: We never ordered room service because we tried that on
the Maasdam and it wasn't that easy to find a place to put a tray and
eat in the cabin.

Lido: We learned to like the Lido, but rarely ate there. They still
have trays which is MUCH better than trying to balance everything on a
slippery plate. We ate there once or twice for breakfast when we had
a very early tour and the dining room wasn't open. We ate there for
lunch only when the dining room wasn't open on a port day or when we
got back too late for it. I learned to read the menu before I went in
- sometimes there was stuff there that wasn't out on the counter like
Shepard's Pie. They have table service in the Lido at dinner. Bob had
dinner there once.

In the morning the Lido has raisin bread which they don't have in the
dining room, and at lunch they had a sliced white bread with sugar on
the top which also was not in the dining room. Sometimes I would take
slices back to the cabin to have if I felt peckish.

The Lido menu lists the stuff at the hamburger place but it is at the
other end of the pool, so if you want pizza or something you have to
walk forward for it.

Dining Room - 85% of the time we ate breakfast and lunch in the main
dining room. The service was good, and I like sitting down and having
food brought to me. Even though the cruise was 26 days, they did not
repeat the menus - not even the breakfast specials - although
sometimes it was quite a stretch what they did with the menu items to
make them different. (Kiwi pancakes, marshmallow pancakes and Egg Fu
Young Omelet for breakfast for instance). The man at the front desk
who asks your number soon could tell us ours before we told him. They
always asked if we would eat with other people at breakfast and we
always did.

Initially we had been given table 140 in the lower dining room at 5:15
for dinner, with a grace period of 15 minutes. I thought that was way
too early. On embarkation, the man who scheduled dinners for personal
choice was up at the buffet and he said the options were 5:15 or 5:30.
I thought that was still too early.

Eventually, I tracked down the fixed dining guy for the upper dining
room. I wanted to sit at the aft tables. But he said those tables
and all the large tables were fully booked by large groups. The best
he could do for me was a table for four. But the first night we ate
alone. I didn't think much of that.

So I switched to Personal Choice Dining and that really worked out
very well. I guess they assigned as many as possible to the upper
level dining room at 5:45 and 8:00. Then all the people that didn't
'get in' for those times were assigned tables at off times in the
lower dining room. But they didn't hold your table more than 15
minutes - so if you didn't show up they'd give it away. We actually
usually went up to eat about 5:30 and were usually seated at a table
for 6 or 10 people right away. So it was all the advantages of fixed
dining (no waiting in line, or at least not at that time) and talking
to other people.

There were 5 formal nights altogether. Some people always ate at the
Lido on formal nights and I never saw the dining room so full that
there weren't extra tables available at any time.

We did not eat at the Pinnacle Grille because we tried it on the
Maasdam and there was too much food. It was nice food, but not worth
it to me to pay extra for.

Entertainment/Activities

This class ship seems to have gone to enormous trouble to make SURE
that no one can see the stage except from the front row. Anywhere
else there is someone in front of you that you have to look around or
there is some kind of bar or something that you have to duck down and
look under it or stretch your neck to look over it. This is the same
as on the Maasdam. Bob went to most of the shows by individual
performers and bought a couple of their CDs (the harpist and the John
Denver clone person). He didn't usually bother with the production
number type shows. We didn't go to any movies.

We did Team trivia a lot of the time with the same people each time,
and that was fun. We came in second a lot and actually won once. We
got key chains. Most of the port lectures were VERY good, but I
stopped going to them after I realized that they would play them on
the TV. The shopping person was no good - all pre-recorded stuff.
They didn't have much of the normal quiz show activities (Newly Wed
Game etc) on this ship that they have in the Caribbean.

Bob was pretty disgusted with the TV. He wanted to watch Fox News.
There are no broadcast channels at all - just CNN, ESPN a cartoon
channel, and TCM (Turner Classic Movies). All the rest are ship
channels. They did show the professional football games (which I
liked and he didn't) and some of the college ones I think, although I
didn't really pay much attention to those.

Although he thinks CNN is biased liberal media, he insisted on
watching it anyway. He wrote on the interim comment card that they
should have an unbiased alternative to CNN. When I took it to turn it
in, I added to it the comment that as far as I was concerned I'd be
happy if I never ever saw Fox OR CNN ever again.

Excursions: I will do these separately as it was a long cruise and
there were a lot of them.

Ship

The ship wasn't as pretty as I remember the Maasdam being, but they
had nice flower arrangements everywhere. The Maasdam defaulted to big
arrangements of poinsettias which was disappointing I thought, so I
was glad to see actual different flowers here on the Statendam.

Didn't use the casino at all, but I did buy some local crafts at the
shops (like a Panama hat and some of the San Blas Indians work). The
shop personnel were helpful. I had to get the Panama hat out of the
display case as it was the last one.

The internet cafe and library was large and the lady that ran the
internet cafe was quite good and the connections were good. There
were also a lot of terminals and they worked (a lot of them didn't on
GOTS). We got a NY Times every morning (for free - NCL charges), and
the Canadians (of whom there were many) got The Canadian in addition.
Bob of course thought the Times was also biased liberal media. But he
always read it.

They had at least one dance floor and various groups played in the
lounges at night. There were lounge chairs all around the Lower
Promenade deck (in the shade) on the walking track

One elevator forward did not work for the whole cruise, and the first
night I got trapped in an aft elevator with several other people - the
elevator would go up and down, but would not open the doors for us to
get out. We finally forced them open when it was stopped.

There were laundries, which were well used - we did three washes over
the course of the trip with our own detergent which we brought. But
when we ran out of change, we had to go to the front desk as the
casino only had fake money.

Service
Our cabin steward was the good although I heard that they now have
twice as many cabins to do as they did (32 vs 16). We didn't talk to
him much. He did towel animals for the first half of the cruise and
then did a monkey which hung in our stateroom until the last day. The
dining room staff was good too. I didn't think much of the Cruise
Director who was leaving after this cruise. The lady who was to do
the kids club didn't have any work as I saw only about one school age
child on each half, plus a toddler and her pregnant mother. So she
usually did the trivia - I liked her - we could understand what she
was saying.

Disembarking

We did not get any daily plan sheet from HAL for disembarkation - I
thought the dining room would be open (it was), but Bob thought not,
so we ate in the Lido. Then we went out on deck to see what we could
see.

They said that they would announce when the ship cleared (although I
did not hear that announcement) and then would not make any more
announcements - that we should follow the disembarkation schedule on
the TV. We had 'Grey 1' tags and a 9:00 time. They did not say
whether we could stay in our cabins or not.

I went back to the cabin and found the stewards had half made it up,
but the stewards left and we sat there among our carryon bags. About
8:55 we started for deck 5 - the escalator which has been working only
sporadically throughout the trip was running up but not down. Bob
had a little cart with the carryon bags so he waited for an elevator.
Then deck 5 was jammed.

Eventually we made our way off the ship, but when Bob tried to go down
the escalator with the cart, they stopped it altogether and made him
come back up and go down in the elevator. Even so, we were getting
our luggage by 9:15. Bob had put the unattached handle of my black
bag into the little zipper compartment, and the luggage handlers had
apparently tried to pull the handle out, and since it wasn't attached
they threw it away.

We went out to the transportation area, and saw the Auto Rental bus,
but were told to stay where we were and not walk to it. I saw a Royal
bus and asked if that was for us but the HAL lady said she couldn't
see it. I said it was because she was shorter than I was, because I
could just barely see it over the wall. She said she didn't think the
bus was for us. So I wanted to know if we could get the auto rental
bus. The lady tried to take my large bag from me and found it was
quite heavy. She said it was too heavy for me (which it was), but we
did get on the bus.

The bus driver had never heard of the car rental company that we were
using (Royal), but she took us to the correct stop at the car rental
place. It was between Avis and Hertz on the third deck. I had seen
it when we turned in our Budget car. There were long lines at Hertz
and Avis, but none at Royal, so we went right in and got the car. They
said they had no economy cars left so they gave us a Dodge, which only
gets about 22 mpg

After we got to our room in Miami, Bob suddenly remarked that he had
left one of his bags at the cruise terminal. It was the one with all
our dirty clothes and the laundry soap in it. I tried very, very
hard to find a number to call there, but since it was Saturday could
find nothing that would answer. So we set off to drive back there. I
was so discombobulated that I forgot my camera!!! I felt practically
naked.

Bob had been ragging on me about not knowing where I put things (with
some reason as I apparently accidentally mailed my train ticket home
to myself in Key West), and I finally said that at least I had not
mislaid a whole suitcase. We got back to the port, and had no trouble
whatever going to the dock. Bob left me in the car and went in to
track his bag down - they apparently hadn't noticed that it had not
been picked up. They also said it was too heavy, but it was not
nearly as heavy as my black bag.

Ports, Excursions and Overall Impressions to follow
  #40  
Old December 11th, 2008, 11:50 PM posted to rec.travel.cruises
Nonnymus[_7_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 169
Default HAL Statendam 26 day Ft. Lauderdale to Peru and back Nov 10to Dec 6, 2008 (first part)

Rosalie B. wrote:


Bob stated after he got off the GOTS that he was never cruising again,
but I wanted to go through the Panama Canal, so he agreed to do this
one. But he said it was like watching paint dry.


I think I like Bob.




When we got our suitcases, two of them which had been in perfect
condition when we handed them over to the luggage people were
basically destroyed. Bob had a side pocket torn partly off one of
his bags, although he didn't think he lost anything. And my big black
roller bag had one side of the aluminum pull out handle ripped out and
the other side was twisted around so badly that it could not be
re-inserted.


I'm afraid that I'd have complained to high heaven about that. Did they
do anything for you?



The BIG BLACK MARK for this room and ALL the ones at this end of the
ship (and sometimes it wafted up to the dining rooms) was that
everything smelled of sewage - especially in the hall but also in the
room. More in port or when there were certain wind directions. This
was due to faulty engineering as the sewage stack odors were
re-entrained into the ventilation system. The toilets worked OK


If you you are saying is correct, the "sewer gas" is a combustible gas
that is potentially dangerous in quantity. Like the luggage, I'd sure
be taking to the airways complaining, if the "recirculating" thing is
correct.


This time I was prepared and had my earplugs in my ears
and my cane to sit on.


Thanks- now I've got to live with that image in my head for the next ten
years. grin





Lido: We learned to like the Lido, but rarely ate there. They still
have trays which is MUCH better than trying to balance everything on a
slippery plate.


With HAL catering to a more elderly crowd, we also found that the
busboys were quick to help folk using walkers or canes. One would grab
a tray and proceed to help Mrs. Nonny through the line and get
water/coffee for her when she was seated.



So I switched to Personal Choice Dining and that really worked out
very well.


Yup, it's great to be able to walk up and be seated. We also liked the
varying people at our table.





Bob was pretty disgusted with the TV. He wanted to watch Fox News.
There are no broadcast channels at all - just CNN, ESPN a cartoon
channel, and TCM (Turner Classic Movies). All the rest are ship
channels. They did show the professional football games (which I
liked and he didn't) and some of the college ones I think, although I
didn't really pay much attention to those.


Like I said earlier, I really think Bob and I could get along. Did they
have professional wrestling? Mrs. Nonny likes to watch that and cheer
on her favorites. grin I think Bob and I could sit around and agree
on politics.


Although he thinks CNN is biased liberal media, he insisted on
watching it anyway. He wrote on the interim comment card that they
should have an unbiased alternative to CNN. When I took it to turn it
in, I added to it the comment that as far as I was concerned I'd be
happy if I never ever saw Fox OR CNN ever again.


FOX is all I watch when there is a choice. They're still far too
liberal for my taste, but at least they're better than the socialist
channels.


Excursions: I will do these separately as it was a long cruise and
there were a lot of them.

Ship



One elevator forward did not work for the whole cruise, and the first
night I got trapped in an aft elevator with several other people - the
elevator would go up and down, but would not open the doors for us to
get out.


This has happened to Mrs. Nonny before. On one cruise, she was trapped
on an elevator for 5 nights before I noticed and reported her missing.
The smell was terrible. We pried the door open slightly and slipped a
pizza in for her to eat while they tried repairing the elevator. They
got her out just as the ship was disembarking passengers, so I at least
got to bring her home with me, and not have her shipped home separately.




--
Nonnymus-

Suppose you were an idiot.
And suppose you were a member of Congress....
But then I repeat myself.

-Mark Twain
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Laundry on Back to Back HAL cruises Rosalie B. Cruises 12 August 25th, 2006 08:32 PM
Back to Back Cruises MrsJamesP Cruises 22 August 9th, 2004 02:31 AM
Back to Back cruises on HAL [email protected] Cruises 0 June 21st, 2004 04:15 AM
Back to back cruises & tipping Mike A. Cruises 8 January 3rd, 2004 08:29 PM
Back to Back Cruises JS Cruises 16 December 5th, 2003 07:21 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:30 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 TravelBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.