2/28/09 Eastern (St. Croix) Magic Trip Report w/Navigators

Opie100

DIS Veteran
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Feb 17, 2009
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725
We had a great cruise - I think the only way not to have a marvelous time is if you are expecting perfection. Feel free to ask questions.

Background: 5th cruise (2 RCCL, Celebrity, Carnaval); first Disney cruise. Party of five (one five-year-old) and two grandparents in their 60s. We booked on Dec. 1, 2008.

Transport to Hotel: Flew Southwest to Orlando on 2/27, arrived around 5pm. Rented mini-van from Budget (approx. $105 for day). Drove to Cape Canveral

Hotel: Residence Inn Cape Canveral; two-bedroom suite. I recommend this option - clean, quiet rooms, good deal for five people (cheaper than two separate rooms of similar quality).

Transport to Ship: Dropped family off at port around 10:30am using rental van (there is a small fee to use hotel shuttle to the port), returned car to Budget (got gas first). Budget's shuttle back to ship runs frequently. This was a quick process - I was only away from family for 15-20 mins. Hertz location is also close to port.

KEY SUGGESTION #1: Do not forget to bring your passports, even on all USVI itineraries, and do not ever place them in your checked baggage. They are REQUIRED for check in and it is a pain to fish them out of your bags after dropping them off.

Staterooms: We originally booked a Cat. 12 guarantee, and our two rooms ended up in Cat. 9, on the 1st deck (two portholes). We knew this before leaving since that info was updated in the MY DISNEY CRUISE online about 30 days before departure. We looked into upgrading again at the port but there wasn't much left to upgrade to at that point. It appears that Disney gets more bang for their buck to do free upgrades than to hold back more
rooms for potential upgrades at check-in. I think that is a smart strategy - we were happy with our rooms. We had the queen, and our daughter was in the couch single.

KEY SUGGESTION #2: If you are in a room with a bunk on the wall that you aren't using, and your have room rattles (noises), try sticking folded papers in the crevice in the bed.

Planning/activities: We took a spa tour on the first day, and doing so allowed us to enter in a raffle held at 3pm on embarkation day for a free massage. We won, which we upgraded to a couples massage. Time flies and it is hard to keep up with everything going on otherwise. Also: The 3D movies are good - if the first day or two is cooler with the wind, that is the time to try it because you won't want to when the weather is at it's best.

KEY SUGGESTION #3: Do the spa tour before 3pm on embarkation - you have a decent chance of winning the raffle for free services at that time because not that many people do this.

KEY SUGGESTION #4: Earlier rounds of bingo have fewer people, and thus a better chance of winning. Most people that we saw won using the machines.

KEY SUGGESTION #5: Bring a highlighter with you, so that you can highlight each block in the Navigator during the activities each day that you don't want to miss. Sounds trivial, but it helps.

Dining: We had second seating - so our 5-year-old DD only ate with us in the dining room three times. The food on the cruise was good. The best food was in Palo (both brunch and dinner). Honestly, in my expierence on different cruise lines not that much separates the quality of the food. But we were not disappointed.Servers: Evandro and Daniella - really great. The character breakfast was great too - do not forget to check your ticket when you get to your stateroom to see when your character breakfast takes place. DD ate a few times at Topsiders for dinner - servers were very nice and even fetched a hot dog for her when it wasn't being served (it is a service restaurant for dinner, not a buffet).

Shows: The best quality of any cruise line we've experienced. We had high expectations here, and were not disappointed. Come early so that you can see them from the middle front section.

St. Croix: This is not as dynamic of a destination as St. Thomas/St. John, but there are good times to be had. There is a massive oil refinery on the island that you will see on your cab/van ride. Some that took the cab over to just walk around Christiansted were disappointed. This would be a good place to do the mini-boat excursion, that others have recommended.

St. Croix Excursion #1 - BUCK ISLAND SNORKEL
Two of us did the Buck Island Snorkel Disney excursion. I would rate it as good, but could have been better. The boats used for these trips smell like diesel fuel during the trip. I would recommend booking a Big Beard half- or full-day sailing snorkel excursion instead and just cab it over there. It will be more expensive but I think sailing is a better way to travel. Buck Island snorkeling is fun - but is off the boat so it is not for people afraid of swimming (do I even need to say that?). The coral is very interesting but it is not as colorful as it once probably was due to tropical storms. The trip out there allows you to see some beautiful homes that you don't see on the drive over there.

St. Croix Excursion #2: CRUZAN RUM DISTILLERY
I'd recommend this - it's about $13/pp roundtrip to get a cab to take you and stay there while you do the tour. The tour is $5.00. Afterwards, all the rum you can drink. Really. We brought back a case (6 bottles) - they had all kinds to choose from, with cases with different varieties from $25-85, which we wrapped good in newspaper and tried to check on Southwest. WARNING: airlines may tell you to put it in another bag. We were lucky to have one and the bag/box combo made it without breaking.

Pirate Party: Fun dancing and fireworks (only night of fireworks on the ship - 10:30pm). Good viewing on Deck 10, but you can view them from the dancing area on top of the pool as well.

St. Thomas/John: Beautiful. Even the cab ride views are awesome, although spooky at high speeds.

St. Thomas/John Excursion: TRUNK BAY
We took a cab/open-air truck to Red Hook, and took that ferry to Cruz Bay for the cab ride over to Trunk Bay. Awesome beach and sand. Good amenities. Good snorkeling off the beach. We spent $200 round trip for a family of five, so not cheap. $10/pp from port to Red Hook. About $6/pp for ferry. Another $6/pp to get back and forth between beach and Cruz Bay. Vinow.com is a good source of info on transport details. Doing this ourselves was cheaper than through the cruise line, allowed us to leave later than 7:15am (don't wait until after 9am, however), and allowed us to stay there until 1:30pm (about three hours). You want at least 3 hours here.

KEY SUGGESTION #4: Seriously consider a beach day at Trunk Bay, St. John.

Castaway Cay - lots have been written on this already. It's really beautiful. The water was chilly, but not enough to keep people out of it in the afternoon. The tide was out in the morning, so the water was low, particularly at the adult beach. Food was good.

Kids Clubs: Our daughter is 5, but she liked the Club better than the Lab at first until she got familiar with both. For borderline 4-5 age kids you can swap back and forth between clubs if there are events in one or the other that you think they will like better. We changed her wristband for the different age groups a few times. DD spent most dinner times in the club as she's not much fun at a late dinner.

Days at sea: We were going quickly to stay ahead of a big cold front that dumped snow even in the south. As such, it was a bit rocky down to the islands, and rocky again returning to Castaway Cay. Didn't bother me at all, but one of our party had a hard time sleeping one night.

Pool: The big LED screen above the family pool is genius. All cruise lines should have this. It is really fun. If you don't want it, there are other pools to choose from. Kids pool gets crowded, but kids really don't care. The wind during the at sea days was enough to make it chilly if you didn't stay underwater.

Disembark/Post Cruise: We took the Budget shuttle back to get the van again and we had about 5 hours after the cruise to work with - not enough to do a park IMO, so we drove to Downtown Disney and had lunch and horsed around.

I'll keep updating this as I think of things. Feel free to ask any questions you like.

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Thanks for the great report. How did you like DCL compared to Celebrity? Celebrity is our favorite, but we are trying the Magic to Tortola next month. Our kids (9 & 5) liked Celebrity's kids program but didn't love it. We never had to drag them out.

We love Celebrity's food and lack of crowds, so am wondering how those two things compare to DCL. TIA
 
Hi Bracy - it sounds like you have a terrific cruise coming up. We've only taken one Celebrity cruise, an awesome week-long trip to Bermuda from NYC, but from that experience we feel DCL compares very favorably. The food choices and quality were similar, and DCL provides more environmental variety via three different dining rooms. There are a LOT more kids on the Disney cruise, as you would expect, but there are fewer smokers and more people interested in promoting the family atmopshere on DCL. And the Disney shows are infinately more interesting and technically sophisticated.

As for the kids shows, I think the older the kid the more engaged they get establishing a cohort and wanting to stick with them during the cruise. Our five year old liked the club, but wasn't kicking and screaming when it was time to check out. Swimming was still her favorite thing, more than the club. However I will be surprised if you come back saying that they didn't enjoy these clubs more than Celebrity's.
 

Thanks for posting the Navigators. We go in 3 weeks 3/28.
How was the weather on sea days? Do we need a jacket?
Anyone do Snuba at Coral World in St Thomas/St John?
How about the Jeep adventure in St. Croix? We are on the afternoon excursion. How was the walking up to the tidal pools. My daughter hurt her foot last week, hopefully it will be better by then. Counting the days!!
 
Hi Weedy - during our trip the sea days were warm but very windy. I had a jacket but never wore it. It was primarily cold only getting out of the pool - by the time you go it should be warmer yet.

I've heard good things about the Jeep excursion - we also heard people saving money by renting their own vehicle and driving around themselves. Driving on the left looks a little challenging to me but others said it wasn't a problem.
 
Thank you so much for all the Navigators. :thumbsup2 I have printed each and everyone out and will plan each day to the hour so once we get to the ship my family can look at me and say no we don't want to do anything you spent hours planning, let's just wing it. :confused3 Which will be fine by me, I just like to plan and think I am in charge. :rotfl2:
We will be traveling on 3/28 and I can't believe that we leave two weeks from tomorrow!
We are scheduled for the buck island snorkel on St. Croix but may try to change once on the ship to just a beach day because we are doing a private full day snorkel tour on St. Thomas. It will be my two girls 11 & 7, myself and my husband. My girls are both good swimmers as they are on a swim team and we have been practicing swimming with snorkels so I think it will be ok of we can't change. The beach excursion I am looking at is full now.
 
One thing about snorkeling - I found that the flippers cut into my feed and toes some - I would recommend bringing some water footies that would go on before the flippers, for better comfort. Cuts on feet/toes in salt water stings!
 
My family wil be on the 28th Eastern and will be doing the jeep tour in the morning on St. Croix. I hear it's really fun!! We are snorkling on St. Thomas. I can't believe it's only 2 weeks away. :scared1:
Thanks for the navigators. I always look to see what I want to do. It's more than a small army can accomplish. Oh Well. LOL :confused3
See ya onboard!
Angie
 
We will be there in just less than 10 days? We are currently signed for one of DCLs (Barefoot) trip to Trunk. We are considering doing it the way you did (on your own). Do you think you were better off doing it on your own?

Another uestion: Is there anything to eat or drink at Trunk Bay? Should we go to one of the other bays? Our idea of "beach" time is to have access to both adult and kid beverages and lunch somewhere down the line......
 
Hi PS17 - I used to live in Eden Prairie!

Anyway, yes, there is a decent snack bar at Trunk Bay that sells hamburgers, hot dogs, chicken sandwiches, and so forth. It's decent. They also sell beer and daquiris. It's not resort style, more like government style (it's a national park). But the beach is worth it.

I think the choice of going there on your own versus taking the excursion depends on how much time you want there as well as what time you'd like to go. Also, there is some cost savings doing it yourself (I think we spent $200 for the five of us for transportation - about $40 a person). We had three hours there, leaving the boat at 9am and getting back to the port around 3pm. We could definately have left an hour earlier in the morning to be there four hours and enjoyed it even more, if you can get your group going earlier.

Trunk Bay is marvelous, a must-see. I have heard that Cinnamon Bay is nice too, but if you haven't done either, I'd try Trunk Bay first. HAVE FUN!
 
Nice, Where in Eden Prairie did you live? We are right by the high school. This is our 4th Disney cruise minus our teenage son who will be playing baseball with EPHS in Florida.

Anyhow, another followup question regarding St. Croix. We are currently booked on the snorkle excursion. We think that we are going to cancel it because 1) It doesn't go to the beach 2) We have a 5 year old that may appreciate snorkling practice from the beach instead of the boat side.

We are considering BigBeards. They have a full day and a half day. The full day trip is differrent from the half day in that there is an afternoon stop at a beach to cook up a lunch. Our question is this: Should we do the half day and then add an alternative excursion in the afternoon in St. Croix (on our own - either beach, or lunch, or something). Is there some other worthwhile lunch place, activity, or whatever, in St. Croix that makes it worth it to select the half day over the full day?
Thanks in advance....
 
Unless I missed it, I didn't see any Galley Tour listed on the Navigators. Did they offer the Galley Tour during your cruise?
 
We used to live near the Water Tower restaurant near Crosstown.

I personally would consider a full-day with Big Beard. You're not missing anything spectacular being gone all day, and his boats are nice. We enjoyed the Cruzan Rum tour but it's not interesting for young kids.

I don't remember the Galley tour advertised - I'll look through my stuff to see if I can find anything about it.
 
Thanks for the TR, and the Navigators are SO helpful! That took some work and I appreciate it!:thumbsup2
 
Unless I missed it, I didn't see any Galley Tour listed on the Navigators. Did they offer the Galley Tour during your cruise?

I just checked the Voyage Personal Navigator brochure and apparently there was a Galley Tour that you could pre-book at Guest Services before Thursday (limited availability). I assume the tour was Thursday. "A guided tour of one of the Disney Magic state-of-the-art kitchens." Sounds cool - sad I missed it!
 


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