dolphingirl47
In Search of the Tag Fairy
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2007
- Messages
- 31,283
but this is great Corinna, thank you for all the info.
We are booked to sail on the Liberty of the Seas out of Galveston next April. It goes to Rotan and Belize, so places we haven't been to on DCL, and we can see how we like it.
I have been on IOS sister ship (same layout). It's a fine ship. Nice facilities. There is no FE, but you can "meet" some of your fellow cruisers on cruisecritic.com "mix and mingle" forum. They do have some limited tasting classes. They do not have the same level of organized daily activities as DCL, IMHO, but they have putt-putt, climbing wall, ice skating, flow rider. There is no movie theater, but they usually show a movie or two in the show theater on sea days. As long as you realize it's not DCL, and go in with an attitude that you probably saved a lot on the IOS cruise, and are going for family time, fun, sun, sand, and some good ports and you'll have a great time. No need to be worried.[/Q
Thanks for the help everyone! I enjoyed IOS, but similar to other posters, I still prefer DCL. However, it seems like I haven't been able to find a good deal on DCL in quite a while, and RC is much less expensive, so I am doing RC again next time; we booked while on board. We felt the Windjammer buffet was not as good as Cabanas. And the shows were not particularly good. The performers were excellent, but the shows were lacking. I also missed the movie theater. The dining room staff was not nearly as attentive as Disney, and I missed rotational dining. Those are the cons. The pros were that we ran into some really great staff on IOS. I would almost have gone back on the same ship just to see them again. The drinks are better on RC (not that that probably matters to most Disney folks), and I tried gambling for the first time, which was a lot of fun. Our room (balcony) was more spacious than the balcony rooms on Disney, or at least the layout made it feel that way. I really liked that the bed was right next to the balcony so you could lie in bed and look outside. The ice rink and show was amazing. We enjoyed doing some 'non-Disney' trivia. The elevators never seemed as congested as the main elevators were on Disney. So, IMHO, RC is well worth it for the price.
We did anthem last year, strangely enough bumped into Mandy mouse and loved it
Loved the choice of food in the buffet, entertainment, ship itself, solarium
We are trying the harmony this year
That's surprising and totally opposite of what I've read on these forums. I did hear of the more staff attention on RCCL. Thanks for the info on the RCCL teen clubs only staffed after dinner. Do you still lean towards DCL even as their prices outpace RCCL?coutner view: we love DCL. But, my kids under 10 loved RCCL's kids clubs and preferred them to DCL. Once they were tweens+, they strongly preferred DCL and now as teens like DCL better for activities, movie theater, etc.
When they were 4-5, they liked the more structured kids club and really liked the kids club on Coco Cay. At 9, DS even stayed in kids club instead of going on an excursion. I felt there was more staff interaction and attention on RCCL. Granted, we usually cruise at peak times and there were probably more kids on DCL than RCCL. Also, for 12+, RCCL clubs are usually only staffed after dinner vs. all day on DCL. RCCL will have activities around the ship, like putt-putt tourny, basketball, scavanger hunt, etc., but it is not secure programming.
Love this thread. It convinced me to book with RCCL!![]()
Very helpful, thanks! Our kids are young (under 5). I read that DCL is better for the very young kids like ours, but RCCL is better for the 10 and above set. Is this true? Any thoughts on this?
Are you saying that there were only 74 people under the age of 18 on the entire ship?!I am glad that I could be of assistance.
Unfortunately I cannot help with this as we do not have kids. On our recent cruise we only had 74 people under the age of 18.
Corinna
Are you saying that there were only 74 people under the age of 18 on the entire ship?!
so I am already booked on Rhapsody out of Tampa in Jan 2017 - my two "fears" (not sure that is the right word- comparing it to my amazing Disney cruise) is that the nighttime shows are not Broadway caliber and are just magician or jugglers or something boring. I know I don't have to go to the shows but I loved them on DCL. Also, are there lots of daily activities - there are only two sea days but on DCL, I liked to do things such as trivia, animation classes, etc , I never even went to the pool
Since i did this comparison, I have done a 16 night cruise on the Ovation of the Seas. Now the Ovation and her sister ships Quantum and Anthem is a very different animal from the rest of the fleet and we had an absolute ball. There is some stuff that the Ovation has that the ships that do not belong to that class of ship do not, but I still got a good idea on activities. There was plenty of trivia, lectures, craft classes, dance classes, a choir, sports competitions, Zumba, etc. In terms of entertainment, there were the variety type shows (comedians, magicians, etc.), tribute bands and three production shows. I went to two of them. What they were both missing was a coherent storyline, but the singing, dancing, acrobatics and special effects were top notch and I enjoyed the shows for that reason. The ships that we are going on for the next two cruises have ice shows and I cannot wait for this.
Corinna