Number of Cruises: 7
Cruise Line: CCL
Ship: Destiny
Sailing Date: March 14th, 2004
Itinerary: Southern Caribbean
This was our seventh cruise, the second with CCL, departing March 14, 04. The
itinerary was San Juan, St. Thomas, Dominica, Barbados, Aruba, San Juan. Our TA
at Cruise Magic called CCL and got us an immediate upgrade to a guarantee 4A
inside at a 1A price of $555 all-incl, and on arrival we got another free
upgrade to 6A outside on the Riviera deck.
EMBARKATION
We flew in about 5pm, and airport to cabin took a little over an hour, very
slick, no line longer than a couple minutes. A taxi dispatcher at the a/p curb
gets you a cab and gives you a paper stating the cost of the trip to avoid
“misunderstandings” between passengers and drivers ($16 plus 50 cents per bag,
tip not included). Others arrived about 1pm, previously the worst time for
embarking with 2 hour lines, and said they pretty much walked on the ship, no
lines. And others arriving mid-afternoon got on quickly. The people who arrived
at 7pm had to waited the longest of any we talked to, about an hour.
THE CABIN
Our 6A outside Riviera deck cabin was great, long vanity counter and mirrors,
free safe using any magnetic strip card like a drivers license, 4 foot square
window, king bed, large sofa, chair, table, tons of storage space, 2 outlets on
the counter, ice and pop machines down the hall. People with thick hair will
likely want to bring their own hair dryer, the cabin one will take you forever.
Don’t trust the telephone wake-up call system, it failed for us as well as our
friends. Soap and shampoo in the shower, adjustable shower height, slow drain,
we were standing in water at the end (foot bath?). Nice bag of toiletries and
thick robes. You can view your account and book tours on the TV (press Menu).
THE SHIP
We thought the ship was lovely, any signs of wear were very minor. We really
liked the Sun and Sea lido buffet, it seemed classier and less noisy than the
ones on other ships, perhaps because there were no clattery trays, and it has an
upper level away from the crowds where you can always get a window seat because
most people probably won’t or can’t climb the stairs holding food. A lovely
peaceful place to eat.
The Happy Valley always had an interesting Oriental dish or 2, and the NY Deli
made great sandwiches with all the fixings, pastrami, corned beef, etc. Great 24
hour pizza just out the back of the Sun & Sea, about 8 choices. Ice cream and
frozen yogurt cones near the pool by the drink machine on the port side.
As on all our other cruises deck loungers near the pools go fast on sea days,
and everyone breaks the rule and saves them, so you might as well too. Here’s a
tip if you want to be near the pool to hear the music and also need some shade
like we do (it’s very hot). First, there is shade at the pool level on either
side of the deck, but these areas are full of tables and chairs. But there is an
overhang on deck 10 above the pool behind the band, where you can move your
lounger in and out of the sun. There is also shade for about 4 chairs under the
radar globes (?) on the small deck where you walk up the stairs to the water
slide. If you get out to these places by about 7:30 you’ll probably find empty
chairs. If you don’t check on them frequently your loungers could get pushed
around by other people jockeying for positions (as happened to our deckmates)
and you’ll find your chairs pushed way out in the sun or back against the wall.
Pool chairs in full sun are available until about 8:30. If you don’t need to be
near the pool there are lots of chairs in other places.
The dining rooms were lovely, food and service great, got the wrong dinner time
and table size, but the maitre d’ fixed it. Take your camera to dinner, lots of
“waiter” shows, even a Backstreet Boys show, quiet a riot. Entertainment was
good, floor shows, comedians, a magician.
Nice rubberized jogging track, nice gym, 3 or 4 ellipticals, maybe 10
treadmills, about the same bikes, several strengthening machines, free weights,
no pulleys, surround windows, lovely change rooms, lockers, showers (no shampoo
here (?). You walk through the spa to get to the gym.
PORTS
One general tip about ports, have lots of small bills, you always need them so
you have the correct amount for cabs, tips, snacks, buying small things. Getting
change is often a hassle. Take about $40 in ones, lots of fives, and a few tens.
Twenties are only good for paying for large things like private tours. Most
vendors, even little market vendors will take travellers cheques, but often
can’t make change for 20's. The ship will cash your traveler’s cheques, and
fortunately had lots of 1's and 5's when we ran out.
ST. THOMAS
Port side cabins view the bay and hills, starboard ones view the port. This was
our second time in St. Thomas, and for the morning my wife shopped the
Havensight stores at the dock while I found a good internet place to find out if
our kids had wrecked the house yet. Internet on the ship is expensive, 75 cents
a minute, and in most ports you can get about 15-20 minutes for $2-3. Havensight
has a good internet place at the main intersection where the cop (?) has a
booth, across the street and up the stairs, I think it was $4 for 15 minutes,
very fast connection, professionally run, about a dozen computers.
In the afternoon we wanted to hang out at a resort with a pool and beach, we
like to go back and forth between the two, where we can order drinks and snacks,
so we went to the Ritz Carleton near Red Hook, a $9 p.p. cab ride. You can also
do this at the Bolongo Bay Resort for $15, or the Emerald Beach Resort for free
(a local told us). The Ritz was lovely, email us if you want the details on how
this works.
DOMINICA
The locals pronounce it DOM-in-EEE-ka. Here’s a link to a good map we found, the
only thing missing is Titou Gorge, put a dot just below the town of Laudat for
that (www.avirtualdominica.com/images/bigmap.jpg ). In Roseau we docked right at
the town, port side cabins facing the town, starboard facing the bay. When you
walk off the ship to the end of the pier you find all the tour reps, both ship
and private, and you get tons of propositions as in most ports, but they aren’t
pushy and accept “no thanks.” The going rate for a non-ship tour is $30 for 2
major stops over about 3 hours, and the ship charges $45-50 for the same thing.
We like active tours and booked River Kayaking privately with Wacky Rollers,
it’s not offered through the ship. But the ship does offer Wacky’s river tubing
tour ($75), good fun we heard. We also booked floating up the Titou Gorge
(between rocks) with Wacky, and got a 2 for 1 deal at $75. Some operators want
you to pay for both a driver and a guide, about $45 pp total for half a day, but
the drivers can “guide” too, just get the 2-guy deal if you want to have
someone’s undivided attention.
However, it was raining that day and the rivers were too dangerous, so both the
ship tubing tour and our kayaking tour were canceled, and people also weren’t
allowed into the Gorge. It rains a lot there, I think we were told 400 inches a
year. So we decided we still wanted to see the Gorge, and also wanted to see
Trafalgar Falls, and got a private tour guy, Louis, (recommended by the Wacky
rep), who agreed to take us to those for $30 p.p. We agreed with him that we
would use the rainy morning for shopping and start the tour at noon, hoping for
less rain by then.
So we started dogging the rain in and out of stores, and found shopping in
Dominica was the cheapest of all the ports. The Cornerstone Café has internet
upstairs, cheapest anywhere, I think I paid $2 for 20 minutes. There is one
classy shop, Lande Leather, a general store selling lots of stuff, just off to
the left of the end of the pier. . They were the only place on the cruise that
beat the ship price of booze by a couple dollars. Know your leather prices,
Wendy thought some were good but others weren’t. And we didn’t know what
knock-off Gucci things and other knock-off brands were worth (you see these in
San Juan too, like leather Gucci purses for about $50). There are many side
streets off the main drag with vendors, little cobblestone alleyways,
construction style reminded us of the French Quarter in N.O., but more run down.
You bargain off about 20% of the asking price. Wendy got a lovely sun dress
there for $16 that she later saw in San Juan for $34. And we got an oil painting
about a foot square stretched over a wooden frame ready for a show frame for
$18. That size in Aruba was $40, and in Barbados it was $300. CDs were $12,
everywhere else they were about $18. You can do the main drag and all the side
streets in a half day if you keep moving. Different vendors will often sell the
same stuff, but their bottom price is never much different, so if you find what
you want there’s not much point in wasting time getting a better price from the
next guy, get your 20% off and take it. Don’t miss the little shopping enclave
roughly behind Lande Leather, bunch of vendors in an enclosed area, very good
selection here, and cafe where you can leave your DH with a $2 beer. The rain
was not very heavy, off and on all morning, easy to jump from one vendor’s
umbrellas to the next one’s, you don’t need to carry one unless you think you’ll
melt.
Luckily the rain had mostly stopped later in the morning, and we grabbed lunch
in the lido at 11:30 and were back on the dock at 12 where we met Louis. With
the ship not leaving till 6 you could start a tour as late as about 2, but a
flat tire or accident could make you miss the ship. The roads inland to the
sights are narrow and winding, up hillsides, frequent stops to let oncoming
vehicles by. If you get car sick easily you shouldn’t do these tours. One toot
on the horn means “I’m approaching the corner”, a toot from another guy means
“so am I”, and 2 toots means “I’m coming through.” We wondered what would happen
if both vehicles gave 2 toots, but it never seemed to happen.
The scenery was lovely, very much like Hawaii, and Louis was great at explaining
all the local sights. First stop was the Titou Gorge (
www.kenshinterlandtours.com/titougortraf.html ), where the last 50
yards of the road were under a few inches of water, a river flowing down a
gravel road, where we had to park the van with a couple other cars on a high
spot and start walking up the flooded road. To walk to these sights you need
footwear that can get soaked and muddy, like old gym shoes. Wendy had her
rubberized slip-on beach shoes (Walmart and Sears, $8), and I had my old but
sturdy sandals. When they get muddy there’s always some clear water nearby to
swoosh off the mud. The Gorge was too fast and dangerous from the rain to do the
swim-up between the rocks, as we’d been told, but it was fun poking around,
getting some jungle/trail/water shots, there might have been 10 people there,
and then back to the van for Trafalgar Falls.
Trafalgar Falls (
http://ruthtanner.tripod.com/wf/trafalgar.html )has a $2 entry fee,
from which you walk about 10 minutes to a viewing platform. This walk is over
slippery roots and rocks, and you have to be careful picking your way along,
it’s not a stroll. You can also walk further past the platform to the base of
the falls, perhaps a 5 minute walk that’s even trickier, steeper, wetter. Near
the base of the falls there is a “jungle hot pool” which you can climb down to
and sit in like a hot tub, but again it’s over slippery rocks and we did it but
not many others tried to get down. Louis said it’s much easier when the water
isn’t so high, the water was covering up the rock “steps.” Louis often took our
picture with our camera, or we traded cameras with other tourists and took each
others pics. I bought beers for us and Louis back at the ticket place, $2 for
the small bottles, local brand, and we headed back to town, got there about 3:30
I think, tipped Louis an extra $10, which he really appreciated, he was great,
did a bit more shopping, and then back on board. People who went to the Emerald
Pool said they could get into the pool even with the high water. We didn’t talk
to anyone who went to the Sulphur Springs. If you like intense hiking, Ken’s
Hinterland Tours offers a river hiking tour, crossing some rivers and really
seeing the rain forest. Forget doing a beach, they aren’t good on this island,
but the rain forest and mountains are wonderful.
Although Wacky Rollers Tours if very professional and reliable, you might prefer
not to use them if it’s raining, because they use the open army vehicles like on
their web site (www.wackyrollers.com ). We passed them on the road several
times, and the people looked rather miserable wearing hooded ponchos in the
rain, we were glad to be in a dry van.
BARBADOS
Port side cabins face the dock (industrial view), starboard ones face the bay.
There are maybe 30 nice stores in the terminal building, and when you exit the
terminal the tour “gates” are on the left, and the $1 van shuttles to Bridgetown
are to the right. You might wait 5 minutes for the van to fill, or you can take
a $3 p.p. cab to town and leave right away.
The shopping in Bridgetown is expensive and sporadic, even the Net in Little
Switzerland was too much, but I found a cheaper one on another street. The
nicest place to go is along the water causeway boardwalk that leads to the main
bridge at the city center park area with the Big Ben clock. An art gallery in a
small plaza wanted $300 for a foot square oil painting that we paid $18 for a
similar one in Dominica. There are more vendors on the bridge. But the best
shopping was in the Pelican Mall 2 blocks outside the main terminal gates. The
shuttle driver will drop you off there, and it was an easy 10-15 minute stroll
from there back to the ship, nice breeze off the bay. Perhaps 30-40 stores with
a/c in a pretty park setting, colorful local dancers put on a pirate show about
10:30 or 11, lots of art, crafts, some clothing, etc.
Then after lunch we did the Snuba and Boatyard Beach tour through the ship ($99
incl admission for the day to the Boatyard and a free drink), they wouldn’t let
us book it privately ($55) because of a deal with CCL. Snuba is diving to a 20
foot maximum while breathing through a regulator on an air hose connected to a
floating “raft” that follows you (and 3 others). It was a fun experience, but
takes some prep. Ocean Adventures runs the tour from the Boatyard complex which
is near the ship.
The tour guys are all fun on the short boat ride to the site, but it’s all
business when they prep you. You have to breath deep, not shallow breaths, and
you have to blow your ears every 3 feet down to equalize pressure, and they show
you how to clear water from you mask while under. The guides have scuba on, and
show you signs to communicate while under. They said you have to relax to do all
this, and that women are better at relaxing and following directions and signals
than men, and are more successful, and sure enough, one guy on the tour kept
freaking out and couldn’t handle it, but his wife did fine. If you can’t manage
it or want a rest, you can surface and hold onto the raft, and float along with
it, still looking into the water with your mask on and see the stuff (like yer
wife below giving you the wussie sign). We thought the hoses would get tangled
but it seemed to work ok, the divers helped with that.
We snuba’d over 3 small wrecks and some coral, and it’s a way different
experience than snorkeling, even being just 10-15 feet down you feel in another
world. It’s bright enough for underwater shots, and you can grab the wrecks to
stabilize yourself for shots. I wasn’t good at clearing water from my mask,
mostly I blew salt water in my eyes which stings, so I surfaced more than some
people to clear my mask. This meant I had to re-do the ear pressure thing on the
way down, bit of a nuisance. The pressure is about 5 times what you feel going
up in a plane, and you have to do it regularly on the way down, or if you wait
too long looking at fish etc it won’t work and you have to surface and start
over. Surfacing doesn’t affect the others connected to your raft. We had enough
air for about 30 minutes, which seemed enough for everyone. We only had 10 brave
cruisers on this tour out of 2900 on the ship. We also had a guy and his 12 y.o.
son from a resort, and the lad did fine. Free bottled water on the boat, which
we used to clean the salt from our eyes and faces as well as drinking. On the
way back to shore we all felt like Navy Seals, just a grinin’ and drinking.
Spent the rest of the afternoon at the Boatyard Party Beach (
www.theboatyard.com ), music pumping, loungers, umbrellas, friendly beach staff
fetching drinks and helping if needed, good snack bar, pretty good booze, patio
café area, water trampoline, climbing iceberg, jetskiis, change rooms, lots of
people (it’s a fav with the ship crews), great sand, long pier to take a walk
out on, lots of hard bodies. Your teens and kids will love to come here, but it
you want a quiet beach nearby, face the water and look to your left, and you’ll
see more beach outside the Boatyard property, where other cruisers said it’s
quiet. In the evening the Boatyard turns into a party bar.
The main nightlife is at St. Lawrence Gap, a 10-15 minute cab ride from the
ship, but the locals told us of a nice place in Bridgetown, and I checked it out
while shopping. You go across the main bridge at the park with the Big Ben
clock, turn right, first building on the right, walk towards the water along the
building, turn left, walk past several shops and you come to the Waterfront
Café. Pretty location, nice view, evening entertainment. You can sit outside
under umbrellas by the causeway.
ARUBA
It’s easy to see why Aruba is everyone’s favorite. It’s clean, the buildings are
all pretty pastels like Disneyworld main street, and there’s lots to do. As you
exit the terminal take a booklet from the kiosk, it has a good map insert of the
island and of Orangestaad. Walk off the ship, go maybe 100 yards to the main
drag, turn right, go 1 block to Weststraat, and everything starts there. Across
the street is the Royal Plaza mall, three 3-story pink buildings with tons of
shops with pretty interior courtyards, lots of shade. A block further down is
the Seaway Mall, an inside mall. Booze and jewelry were expensive ¼ rum was
twice the ship price, and tanzanite .75 carat earrings with diamonds were $1300,
but a similar pair on the ship at their 40% off sale were $300. But we got a
great beach bag for $5 (saw them for as much as $35 other ports), and got a
wooden hanging face mask bargained down from $45 to $30, never saw them cheaper
than that. Oil paintings that were about $20 in Dominica were $40.
For night life there are 5 party bars at this intersection, 3 in the Royal Plaza
and 2 on Weststraat. Iguana Joe’s and Mambo Jambo are on the second floor at
either end of the Plaza, with a great view of the strip, the harbor, and the
ships. Le Pitit Café is in the middle section of the Plaza, same great view, and
a Latin dance bar is above the café on the third level. Two young Dutch kids who
boarded in Aruba told us the name, something like Doridos J and said it had good
music. The Bahia is up Weststaat towards the ship, and Carlos and Charlies is a
few more doors down. It and it’s sister bar Senior Frog’s have branches all over
the Caribbean, and have a rep as party places. You can see Carlos’s sign from
the gangway. Bahia had a good rock band, playing Eagles etc., and was a classier
place.
Because of the Carlos and Charlies rep we had to check it out. It looks like a
standard roadhouse, plank floors, bar decorations. Before about 8pm there is
canned rock music, no cover charge, and people are drinking at the bars and
eating snacks at the tables. After about 8pm there is a $5 cover charge, and a
DJ comes out to start the action with some bar games like “guess the song” for a
free drink, and he handed out about 10 of these, with everyone shouting and
having a good time. Then he took it up a notch, offering a free shooter of
Tequila to everyone who joined his conga line. In a flash he had about 100
people behind him, wild rock music, dancing past a waiter standing on a chair
who poured a big shot (or 2) in everyone’s mouth as they passed him, spilling as
much down their front.
By now it was close to 9, standing room only, the staff takes away most of the
tables and chairs, and the DJ starts the serious bar games, like bar top dancing
contests for free shooters. The winner got a free shooter down the throat, then
the losers got them, then everyone standing on the floor within the DJ’s reach
with their mouth open got them. Police sirens and whistles going off, lights
dimmed, everyone screaming, dancing, singing along with the songs. He often
killed the volume at the chorus, and 300 people “sang” the chorus. Guess what,
all 300 knew the exact dirty chorus to “Monie, monie” (sp). It was wilder than
the movie Coyote Ugly, more like in front of the stage at a wild rock concert.
Except we didn’t see anyone dump a pitcher of beer on anyone’s head, and to be
fair, there was no nudity like “Girls Gone Wild” in Florida, there were no
fights (gorilla bouncers), and no one passed out on the floor. There were more
girls than guys, about 3-1, and with the Crystal gone it was just Destiny
cruisers, resort people, few locals. Every few minutes large water vapor misters
sprayed the crowd, a nice touch, and sometimes the staff shot clouds of paper
clippings all over. Several times we were going to leave to check out other
bars, like The Cellar, Club 2000 in the Royal Plaza (couldn’t find it while
shopping), E-Zone on Weststraat for Euro music, La Fiesta, and the three places
the Banana Party Bus stops, Tumazu, La Ronda, and Choose a Name. But then some
new game started and we just couldn’t stop watching, and stayed until the ship
sailed. Small local beers were $4, regular size beer like Coronas were $4.50,
and liquor was $5, or just follow the DJ around with yer mouth open. What a
scene. The young hotties told us the Aruba Carlos has a “badder” rep than the
one in Cozumel; imagine, the conservative Dutch out-partying the Mexicans.
There’s hope for us Canuks.
About our tour, we love catamaran cruises, lots of deck space and more stable
than the yatchs. We took the Aruba Sailaway Beach Cruise run by Pelican Tours
through the ship which was terrific. Large 73 foot cat, the Fun Factory 1, free
booze. First stop was snorkeling the WWII wreck of the Antilles, a fascinating
scene. We anchored behind the wreck and then snorkeled from the stern of the
wreck towards the bow, with the wreck getting closer to the surface the closer
we got to the bow until it was only a few feet underwater, covered in golden
coral, beautiful, tons of fish. You can stand upright and touch the wreck with
your fins. Bubbles rise from the divers inside the wreck. A great snorkel
whether you arrange it yourself or through the ship. Next stop snorkeling a
brain coral reef, lots of fish.
Last stop a chicken and ribs b’b’cue at the Pelican Company pier on Palm Beach,
stores and café on a large pier, lunch or dinner in the café depending on your
tour time, then free time on their section of the beach. Water equipment, great
sand, papillas thatched umbrellas and loungers, over an hour there. Then sailed
back to the ship pier laying on the webbing with our drinks. Our other favorite
spots are sitting in front of the windshields or dangling our feet over the side
holding the railing. A fun crew.
DISEMBARKATION
Disembarking was fine, we did immigration about 7, buffet breakfast about 8,
color called to debark around 9, and on the pier at 9:20. The last color was
scheduled to be called at 11. Luggage pickup was well organized and efficient.
Our flight was at 3:45, so we had time to do San Juan. CCL won’t store your
luggage, but there is a luggage holding business across the street and to the
left of the pier, at the end of the yellow/green/red awnings (“Self-Audio
something”). They also rent the audio players ($5) which play a description of
the sights around San Juan, press the number for the sight you are at. Luggage
storage is $3 per bag, and the dear girl allows you to strap your carry-on to
your luggage and counts it as one piece, so we left 2 luggages and 2 carry-ons
for $6.
Then we walked the 2 blocks along the bay past the Wyndham toward the park area
at the town square where the horse drawn buggies are, and then headed into old
San Juan to shop and explore. Pretty blue cobblestone streets, no place for high
heels. Could have walked up the hill to the fort but didn’t. This was Sunday,
and a few shops opened at 10, but most were open by 11. Shopping prices were up
and down, you had to know your stuff. Lots of knock-off labels, Gucci etc.
A lunch suggestion is the Baccachina, 1 block in from the bay, on the street
parallel with the bay, street name starts with Forte-xxxxx, green awning. Pretty
hacienda style courtyard area with trees and umbrellas, another area with a/c,
and another area with fans, your choice. We waited 10 minutes for a seat at
lunch time. Big platter of nachos/cheese/ham bits for $6.95, big Caesar salad
for $6.95, local beer for $2.50, Bud for $2.75, great prices in general, dinners
for $15. Finally had to go, walked back to the luggage place, $20 cab to the a/p
incl bag charges and tip.
This was the best Caribb cruise we’ve ever had, you’ll have a ball. Hi to our
new shipmate friends Kim, Rose, and Lena! Email us if you want.