We reserves main dining, but now I’m wondering if we should have gone with the late dining. Please share pros and cons of each time and your own personal preference! Thanks!
Ship is typically on local time, that's all meals so you will have breakfast and lunch on ship at local time or if in port each lunch at local time, you are up with the Sun, so eating dinner adjusted to your home time zone doesn't work. But if you eat at 8.30 pm at home, then Late is for you. So say if you are on ship lunch at Cabanas maybe 11.30 to 2pm, you then may have to go to 8.15 and be served food at 8.30/8.45, that's a very long time.
Fairly good. A lot depends on how far out you are from your cruise when you make the request. And how full the ship is.If you are assigned late and waitlisted for main, what is the likelihood you will be bumped up?
I agree with all of your points except for this one. I had late dining on my cruise in January, and I had a two hour time difference from home, as I came from the mountain time zone. That meant that my 8:15 dinner felt like 6:15. While I would normally adjust to local time within a day or two on a more active type of trip, I found on my cruise that my inner clock did not change to match the time zone! Because I was in an inside stateroom, there was no sun to wake me up, and because the late night activities interested me more than the early morning activities, I never made an effort to go to bed earlier or get up earlier than I was naturally inclined to do. At home, I usually eat around 6:00, go to bed at 10:00, and wake up around 7:00. On the cruise, I ate dinner just after 8:00, went to bed at 1:00 or 2:00 in the morning, and usually woke up around 9:00--which, of course, is exactly the same thing when relocated two time zones over. That did mean that I ate my breakfasts in Cabanas with the other late-wakers, as I would have had to rush to get to Lumiere's before they closed down their breakfast service, but the schedule was fine otherwise.
If you're coming from the western states and you're more interested in evening activities than morning ones, late dining can actually help you stick to your normal schedule for eating and sleeping. I found that not demanding that my body adjust to the time change helped make it a more relaxing trip.
Yes covered - the Fantasy is now doing it on Early / Main as well.I don't THINK anyone on this thread mentioned the service where, if you have late seating, your kids can eat more quickly and then be taken by CMs down to the kids clubs. That can work well for some kids as they can eat a little later, but not TOO late, and get a quicker dinner. Plus that gives the parents time with their children AND time alone.
As for "matching up to the time you eat at home" for me, this was not needed. Life on the ship is so much different than life at home, many of your routines may well be shifted, so too, will your preferred eating times.
At home, I am up early, quick breakfast, early lunch, early dinner.
On a cruise, I get up a bit later, have a bigger breakfast, and thus a later lunch, and thus a later dinner is fine. Plus their are lots of options to get something to tide you over (like the free room service).
So my own experiences would suggest that you look at the activities and base your choice on that. Do you want the show first or dinner first? Do you plan to do a lot of activities after dinner or go straight to bed? (Look at old navigators to help you decide by seeing what is offered). Do you want to do a lot of activities during the day, or mostly relax?
One last thing, some people say that late dinner gives you more time to prepare before dinner. If you have been on DCL before and seen all the shows and don't want to do them again, then that is probably accurate. But if you are new to DCL and plan to see the show every night, then the show starts only like 30 minutes later than Main dining, so when you add 15 minutes to get a good seat in the theatre, Late dining doesn't really give you more than about 15 minutes more time than main dining.
And if up at 9 am and cabanas closes at 2 pm, when and where do you eat lunch?
At the end it's personal preferences but say if your on a early Port adventure what do you do then? As you say you get up at 9 am? Does that mean all port adventures pre 9 am you wouldn't do?
And if up at 9 am and cabanas closes at 2 pm, when and where do you eat lunch?
In the theory of time zones, for thoose from Europe if we go to say Alaska the theory is then we eat dinner at 10am?
I didn't do any port adventures on my trip because they didn't particularly interest me--as I said, it's advice for people who aren't terribly interested in morning activities, which would include earlier port adventures. I usually ate two small lunches/large snacks, one in Cabanas and one from the counter service areas on deck 9, though once I did take a single earlier lunch in Lumiere's.
I'm not sure how a time change from Europe to Alaska relates to this conversation? That would be a very different situation to what I was talking about.
Thanks for the response! Interesting! Both are time zone changes, from home to cruise, so exactly same topic.