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The Other Rivers

russianrivercruiseIt used to be that when you did a tour of Europe, you would fly to Amsterdam, and haul your oversized luggage from the motor coach to a somewhat marginal hotel room, only to be ordered to have your bags outside your door for 6pm so you could do the same thing all over again the next day.

You would work your way from Amsterdam, across the Benelux countries, through France, and then fly home from Rome, completely exhausted, and vowing to throw away your massive suitcase for good.

Needless to say that river cruising is a significant improvement over those days.

Most people going on a European river cruise still fly to Amsterdam, and then hop on one of dozens of potential river ships and take a 7-day trip to Switzerland, or a 14-day trip to Budapest.

These trips are the most popular, but the Rhine and Danube trips are not the only routes in Europe!

  • For those with a particular love of the Dutch, you can sail round-trip from Amsterdam on the Rhine, Mosel, and Elbe rivers
  • If France is more your speed, you can sail on the Rhone, Saone, or Seine Rivers.
  • Italy is also a river cruising destination, often round trip out of Venice on the Po.
  • German river cruises are available on the Oder and Elbe Rivers.
  • If you prefer to be further south in Europe, you can sail on the Douro River through Portugal and Spain.
  • You can even take a river cruise to Russia

There are also river cruises in Asia, South America, and even the United States.

Most of these trips are between 7 and 16 days long, and have a wide choice of itineraries. So, while the Amsterdam to Budapest route is definitely worth considering, don’t feel bound by just one option.

Thinking of a river cruise?  I’d love to help!  Click here to get in touch today.

Stimulate Your Curiosity With These Cruise Enrichment Programs

wine_tasting_lisbonmax340If you’re like most people, you could hardly wait to finish high school, and then perhaps College or University.

After a few years went by, however, you realized that maybe those days with your head buried in a textbook weren’t so bad after all!

One of the key differentiators between luxury ship cruising and mass-market cruising is the number and quality of celebrity and expert speakers. The nice part about being on a smaller ship is that you tend to run into these fascinating people around the ship.

A few years ago, I attended a corporate event, and the guest speaker was Chris Hadfield, who we now recognize as a celebrity – the singing, social media-ing former commander of the International Space Station. Besides giving a compelling series of lectures about his experience in the military and the space program, he generally made himself available to those of us in attendance for informal casual conversations.

I not only got the benefit of Chris Hadfield’s enriching talks, but also a real sense of the man himself. It was truly a memorable experience both in terms of learning, and a great vacation.

If a similar experience is of interest to you, most of the luxury lines have an impressive roster of destination experts and guest lecturers. Some you would recognize, while others have less star appeal… but just as much to offer in terms of learning and enrichment.

Scientists, former politicians, diplomats, athletes, business personalities and artists are all accessible to stimulate your curiosity.

Browse through Silversea’s enrichment programs and you’ll see what I mean:  http://www.silversea.com/onboard/enrichment/

Similarly, river cruise lines often have ‘themed’ voyages, where you can experience your destination from the perspective that interests you most, in the company of others who share you passion.

Examples of special interest cruises include:

• Art & Impressionist Cruises
• Beer Tasting Cruises
• Culinary Cruises
• Festive Time Cruises (e.g. Christmas markets)
• Golf Cruises
• History Cruises
• Jewish Heritage Cruises
• Music Cruises
• Wellness Cruises
• Wine Appreciation Cruises

The opportunities for learning while travelling are unlimited!

Planning a Cruise?  I’d love to help!  Click here to get in touch today.

I look forward to hearing from you!

Sue Bradley

Is a Tahiti Cruise on YOUR Bucket List?

The first time I saw them must have been in a Bond film.

You know what I’m talking about – luxurious private, thatched bungalows built on stilts over turquoise, 80-degree ocean water.

Such an outing has been on my bucket list ever since.

The good news is that these resorts are not just the purview of the James Bond types any more. While typically selling for more than your standard Motel-6, such adventures are generally within reach of those of us trying to get this tick in the box.

This type of experience moved to the top of my bucket list a couple of months ago, when my sister moved her young family to New Zealand for a 2-year stay.

As a former resident of Australia, I have always loved New Zealand, and now have an even better reason to visit Middle-Earth. My only issue with New Zealand and Australia is the magnitude of the distance between there and North America (and I live on the West Coast!!).

Now I’m planning a trip to New Zealand, and I decided that any trip I make down-under will have to be a bit longer in length, and allow me to put several ticks in the box… because who knows when I’ll get back to that part of the world again?

There are lots of different places to experience the James Bond style floating hotel rooms that I dream of, but there’s no doubt that Tahiti is the top of this list.

Tahiti also happens to be the home port of Paul Gauguin cruises.

As a travel agent, I can tell you that when I first started to market luxury cruise lines, Paul Gauguin really stood out to me.

Each of the luxury lines has their own claim to fame, but Paul Gauguin is very clear in their unique offering: a high-end, truly Polynesian experience, with a high level of adventurous water-based activities like snorkeling and scuba diving.  Oh yeah… and a pre-cruise stay at one of those James Bond resorts.

This experience is going to cost about $500 per person per day. This INCLUDES my airfare from Los Angeles, all beverages (including alcohol), gratuities, non-motorized water-sports, and perhaps most important – my pre-trip accommodation that would make James Bond envious.

At this cost, a Paul Gauguin cruise is likely to be a once-in-a lifetime bucket list trip to recognize a personal milestone or celebration like:

  • Big birthday or anniversary
  • Retirement
  • Promotion
  • Honeymoon
  • Wedding vow renewal
  • Family reunion

While I’m definitely looking forward to seeing my sister (and niece and nephew) in New Zealand, a 7-night Paul Gauguin cruise in French Polynesia is likely to be the highlight of my upcoming trip.

If Tahiti is on your bucket list and/or you’re looking for a special way to celebrate a personal milestone, then a Paul Gauguin cruise might be a good fit and I’d love to help you explore the idea.

Click here to get your questions answered about Tahiti and Paul Gauguin Cruises.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Alaska on a Small Ship

smallshipalaskaThe difference between mass-market and luxury cruising is probably more pronounced in Alaska than any other market. This is not to say that the mass-market lines do a bad job in Alaska, but the contrast between those and the luxury lines is quite stark.

The big mass-market players in Alaska are Princess and Holland America. Princess’s ships are all over 100,000 tons are carry more than 2500 passengers, and as such have a hard time making it to anywhere other than the three stock ports of call: Juneau, Skagway, and Ketchican. HAL has slightly smaller ships, but with a few exceptions, are mostly restricted to the standard ports of call as well.

Take Skagway as an example – this small town has only 800 permanent residents, with a bit of extra infrastructure because the cruise ship industry is such a huge part of their economy. However, if you haven’t been there before, you can only imagine what happens when a town of 800 welcomes 10,000 or more passengers who are disgorged from three or four ships on the same day!

The experience is a lot like Disneyworld at spring break, except with mountains and glaciers.

Contrast that experience with what you’ll get on a luxury line, like Crystal, Silversea, Regent Seven Seas, or Seabourn; or on an adventure-style line like Un-Cruise or Lindblad.

On a smaller ship, you’ll be visiting ports along with a few hundred other passengers as opposed to a few thousand.

Second – smaller ships are able to reach smaller, more interesting ports. If you’ve already seen Juneau, Skagway, and Ketchikan, it might be time to check out Icy Strait (Hoonah), Sitka, Prince Rupert, Kodiak, Dutch Harbor, or Nome.

The scenery anywhere in Alaska and British Columbia is spectacular, but what you often miss on the big ships is the art, culture, and people of the ports. You will be surprised how many of the people working in the shops in Ketchikan are actually university students from Washington State! In the smaller ports of call, you are much more likely to actually meet a local, or to connect with indigenous peoples.

Further, the small ships purposely time their schedules so they are not at a port of call when there is even ONE other ship, much less three or four.

So if you’ve cruised to Alaska previously, and been left thinking, “Wow, what spectacular scenery… but now I know what it looks like to the local cattle herds”, you might want to give Alaska another try on a smaller ship – it’s guaranteed to be a different experience.

Planning a Cruise?  I’d love to help!  Click here to get in touch today.

 

Cruising the Northwest Passage

northwestpassageThe Northwest Passage may be the “final frontier” for cruisers.

With scheduled cruises to virtually every other corner of the world, the Arctic may be the only truly unique experience left. If you haven’t heard of the Northwest passage, it is that route across the top of world – the waters of the Arctic Ocean running along the northern coast of Canada, Alaska, and Russia.

The Northwest Passage was a fabled trade route for ships since the time of Columbus, before it was finally navigated by Roald Amundsen in the early days of the 20th century. To underscore how significant an accomplishment this was, it took 38 years before a second ship was able to repeat the journey.

As an interesting aside, that second ship is well preserved, and is in the Maritime Museum in Vancouver, British Columbia – worth checking out next time you’re on an Alaskan cruise.

Both these expeditions took multiple years, and the ships were frozen into the ice for more than one winter before being able to continue.

Luckily, the Arctic weather is much more forgiving now than it was a century ago. Since 2009, the ice has been clear across the top of the world, making ship traffic much more common.

If you’re not involved in shipping or research, you can still sail the Northwest Passage – and you can do it in style. The Crystal Serenity is scheduled to make this unusual journey in the summers of 2016 and 2017. You can depart from either Vancouver or Anchorage to make the 42-day, or 32-day voyage to New York City.

After leaving Alaska, the Serenity will ply the waters of the Bering Strait – that forgotten part of the world where the United States and Russia are only 50 miles apart. It then follows the northern coast of Alaska, and through the Canadian archipelago before emerging in the Northern Atlantic. Along the way, you get to experience the midnight sun, and have the opportunity to experience scenery and animals not seen in other parts of the world. Polar bears, narwhals, musk oxen and caribou are all present on this unique voyage.

There are several ports of call in Alaska, Canada, and Greenland, but not ports that the other cruise ships call upon. If you want the mass-market experience, you’d be better served taking a regular Alaskan cruise. Much like African safaris used to take travellers to visit the unique people and locations of seldom visited locales, the Crystal Serenity visits villages and communities in Alaska, Canada and Greenland that don’t often get visitors.

This gives you the opportunity to interface with local indigenous peoples, and learn about their culture and way of life, all while being able to retreat to the first-class luxury comfort offered on the Crystal Serenity.

For those who like a more active approach to cruising, you can take shore excursions in zodiac boats, or sea kayaks.

The Northwest Passage could be the last truly unique cruise. It’s worth checking out before one of the mass-market lines buys up it’s own Arctic island to disgorge 3000 passengers at a time.

I’d love to help you create a plan to accomplish the items on your travel bucket list.  Get in touch today.  I look forward to hearing from you!

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Hi There!

My mission is to help my clients accomplish the dream experiences on their travel-related 'bucket lists'.  Often, that includes a small ship cruise.

I look forward to hearing from you!

Sue Bradley

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