I guess where I'm at right now is gathering general information.
- The best time of year to go? I am a substitute teacher and my husband gets lots of vacation and we have no kids so we really can go at any time of year.
- Is one ship better than the other?
- I think we would probably go with an Inside Room to save money. How do you choose where your room is at?
- Are most things included in the price?
- I'm leaning more towards Caribbean, but I could see DH saying Alaska. Is there a good price range to expect for those destinations say for 4-5 nights?
Thank you!
1. If you can go when schools are still in session it lowers prices and the amount of people/kids onboard the ship. If you have a specific place you want to sail, (Alaska, Europe etc) those are only offered during the "summer". Look at offered dates though, Disney Alaskan Cruises can run from before Memorial day in May to September. Schools are def. in session then.
2. Everyone has an opinion on ships. Magic and Wonder are basically the same (minor differences) and Fantasy and Dream are basically the same. Magic and Wonder are smaller. This means less people, they do have a few less activities (mainly missing onboard mini golf, sports simulators, mid ship detective agency (a mystery game played as a hunt around the ship) and public spaces can be smaller or different (Spa on Magic vs. Spa on Dream, both haves spas mind you). My suggestion is to pick where you want to cruise to, and take whatever ship that is.
3. I'd suggestion looking at a ship layout map. Look at what rooms you want (or if your cruising soon what rooms are available in each category (which you can do on
DCL site and just act like you are buying a cruise and choose a room and it will show you whats open) ) and then see what else is around, above and below them. Do you want to have a room that has a connecting door to another room even though you don't need it? Do you really want to be right over the Large theater? Do you want to be at the end of a hall way or in the middle? Right next to an elevator? On the Magic and Wonder you really won't be that far away from anything, so you might not need to consider the walking as much. That being said you may consider if walking from deck 2 to deck 9 for free drinks is an issues or not for you? Do you want to be closer to the spa or the night club areas?
4. Main Meals, Breakfast, Lunch, Sit Down dinner (if you choose to go) buffets, non-alcoholic drinks (minus the drink of the day or speciality drinks like lattes) most classes, groups activities onboard the ship, and most room service items are included. Not included are excursions off the ship, alcohol, alcohol classes, eating at the fancy up-charge restaurant, anything at the spa (the gym is free though even though its located inside the spa), some food items like popcorn at the movies (but you can bring a plate of chicken wings from the buffet for free....) canned sodas (but are free at the drink station), a few items in room service, and tipping. Suggested tipping minimum is $12.00 per person per day, so $24.00 per day for the two of you. Plus extras for room service etc.
5. Prices range from how close to the booking window or time of sail you book, how popular or not popular the cruise is etc. Not much help but anywhere from $2000-$13,000 for an inside stateroom exists!
I started looking at all seas travel. Is that a good one to go through? I see that they have some decently cheap prices for October/November cruises this year, but I'm just not sure what a good price really is. I see as low as $1600 for November 2, but it's the lowest category. It says Category 11C and I honestly don't know what that means lol
I believe this was already explained. But in my words, Higher numbers means less desirable (to some people) room types, and A is in a "better" location on the ship then a "C" room in the same number. We loved our inside stateroom (an 11) on our Alaskan cruise. It's all in what you like
Thank you so much for helping me out! DH and I have a lot of decisions to make and things to look through. I have some more questions for you lol
- What kind of things are different on an Alaskan cruise compared to a Caribbean cruise?
- How do you know which room to select? Are there ones that are better in certain areas of the ship?
- How do the meals work? I know you can pick early or late dining. Do you have to pick your restaurant ahead of time?
That's all I can think of for now, but I'm sure I'll think of some more lol
1. Alaskan cruise is the views! You are traveling on the inside passage so you are very close to land all the time other then the first and last sea days. You can see animals, towns etc. The views are stunning all the time. The sun also doesn't set till very late. After 9:30pm. And it isn't dark dark until well into 10:30s. Yup. And the sun is up long before we ever were, so like 5ish? You have some pretty unique Port Adventures (Disney's term for excursions off the ship conducted through them) like dog sledding, helicopter out to walk on a glacier- We LOVED this- flying in a float plane to a remote lodge to eat fresh caught salmon and have lemonade with glacier ice cubes - yup it was awesome- and even seeing a rainforest!
2. See above.
3. You are assigned a dining order something like ALRALRA on the Magic. It's listed on your keycard when you board the ship. For a 7 night cruise you would start in Animators Palate, then go to Lumier's, then Rapunzel's Royal Table. And repeat. Ending in Animators Palate. Your serving team, table number, and possible table mates (you can be assigned to sit with other cruisers) go with you each night to the different restraints. As a note you are not required to eat at any of these dinners. You can go to the buffet each night, eat at the quick service food windows near the pools, or order room service. Most people eat in the dining rooms each night however. Menus change each night so you won't get bored of the same food.
Hope that helps you decide if Disney is right for you. It's a big and tough choice and can be overwhelming. Keep at it.