John Gawne
Age: 63
Occupation:Cruise Travel Agent
Number of Cruises: 28
Cruise Line: Oceania
Ship: Nautica
Sailing Date: August 11th, 2006
Itinerary: n/a
Oceania Cruises
Nautica Cruise Review
Mediterranean
John Gawne
We just returned from our 28th cruise on the Oceania
Nautica, and my wife says it was her best ever. I had booked several
customers on Oceania who raved about the service and we wanted to find
out for ourselves.
We flew to Barcelona a day early to enjoy the city, staying on the
Ramblas in Hotel Royal. $159 plus tax and we had a room overlooking the
Ramblas on the 4th floor. No noise. And it is a short ride to the pier.
We stayed in a category B2 balcony cabin 6077. The next cabin forward
was a B1, and more expensive. All the balconies on the B2, B1, and
A1,2,3 (concierge) are the same size. Only suites on deck 8 are larger.
Balconies are very private. The cabin is typical of balcony cabins, but
no refrigerator. The shower is very small.
Service is exceptional, with 400 staff for 684 guests, and they really
appear to enjoy their work and provide exceptional service. Dining is
open seating in the Dining Room, and Tapas on the Terrace (the high end
buffet style dining), and by reservation in the two specialty
restaurants Toscano and Polo. There is no service charge for the
specialty restaurants. There are plenty of tables for two, and only
twice did we have a short (5 minute) wait for a table, in the Dining
Room. Dinner menus seemed to have a lot of steak and beef, but there was
an ample choice of fish, which included sea bass, grilled tune, corvina,
swordfish, salmon, and a wok seafood dish of shrimp, scallops and
salmon. Desserts were excellent, including crème brulee in the dining
room and specialty restaurants. Tables for two are arranged close enough
to others to talk, but separated enough to be "separate".
The single pool was never crowded and there are plenty of loungers,
including double seating lounges, all with cushions and terry cloth
covers. The casino is small but adequate. We had not expected much
entertainment, but during the 10 days we had three shows by a staff of 4
singers, and we also had a terrific illusionist, and two musical/singing
performances by a husband wife team...the husband is the orchestra
director. There is also a pianist in the piano bar nightly. Dancing was
available nightly in a variety of locations, usually the Horizon Lounge
on Deck 10 forward where a sextet from the orchestra played until 11 or
12 at night.
There are no live "port talks", just a repeating short TV talk by the
cruise director, and it had no port map with the daily newsletter. It
wasn't until the 4th port that we discovered that for a few hours each
port morning there was someone near the purser's desk who distributed
local maps and provided directions and port information. These
passengers are, for the most part, 55+ and well traveled. We heard no
"griping" all cruise!
While advertised as country club casual and the brochures show men in
jackets, there were very few jackets, no ties, and women did wear nice
dresses in the evening, including some cocktail dresses. The day wear
was like any other ship.
Internet service is VERY slow but they do have wireless hotspots all
over the ship. The internet lab had about 24 stations, and there were 2
more in the library for use if computer classes were in session.
They had good TV with CCN, Fox News, BBC, and a number of movie
channels.
There were no lines onboard, for anything, even tenders, except for
embarkation check-in, which was done onboard in a lounge. There was
absolutely no "pushing tropical drinks" and no onboard photographers, at
all. Fine!
In Barcelona they allowed me to go back on the pier, purchase wine,
sangria, and gin and bring it back to my cabin.
Our itinerary was termed Art Reigns Supreme and the ports reflected
that. Sailing from Barcelona, we visited Marsaille, Monte Carlo,
Civatavecchia/Rome, Livorno/Florence/Pisa, Amalfi, Taormina, Valetta
Malta, one day at sea, and an overnight in Athens before debarking. A
smaller ship, we often were in choice berths, with the larger ships
further from the port. Lots of walking! And I think I have now seen all
the churches and museums I could stand for a while, but the art was
superb, including Gaudi in Barcelona, the Vatican Museum, the Accademi
in Florence, St John's in Valetta, and of course the Acropolis, Agora,
and Plaka in Athens. Without doing a travelogue, I will add that I did
use Bob's Limos and Tours http://romelimousines.com/ in Civitavecchia
and Livorno, and we were very pleased with the experience, especially
with the driver in Livorno/Florence/Pisa, who even took us via the
Tuscan countryside at our request. In Athens we did use George Taxi and
Limo http://www.greecetravel.com/taxi/, where George's son Dennis picked
us up in a limo instead of taxi, as his father, the taxi driver, was on
vacation in the islands. He took the time to help me find the house I
lived in there from 1972-75, and at our request took us to la ocal, non
tourist, restaurant for lunch were we enjoyed salata horiatiki with a
giant slab of feta and kalamata olives, tzetziki, moussaka, lamb
fricasse, and swordfish kabobs.
The "free air" included was Lufthansa from Dulles to Barcelona via
Frankfort, and Air France from Athens via Paris to Dulles. Lufthansa was
superb, and both offered multiple meals, and complimentary wine and
cordials. All our baggage made it, leaving a day early, but some
passengers whose flights were through London, never got their luggage
until we arrived in Athens, due to the security scares in London. On the
way back, at our connection in Paris, at gate check-in they researched
all carry-ons and body searched every passenger. Having watched the news
on Fox and CNN we had no problem, but it meant we didn't try to bring
back bottles of olive oil or liquor, as we had planned.
Oceania is a bit pricier than the premium lines (HAL, Princess,
Celebrity), but the service and ambiance is wonderful.
wonderful.