disneywonderfun
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 5, 2010
- Messages
- 761
After much effort to secure reservations, my family decided against finalizing our plans on the Wish. We had a 3 night reservation in August in a Royal Suite and a 4 night reservation in July in a Royal Suite. Beyond the cost issue ($26k and $35k for each cruise respectively for our family of four), we struggled with the entire concept of being on the Wish for only 3 nights and/or 4 nights (non back-to-back).
My wife has always frowned on a 3 night cruise. Her points are well taken. The first day on the ship is mostly frenetic. Rush to port, wait at port, get on ship, run to lunch before too crowded, run around with some carry-on until room ready, get to room, unpack maybe carry-on, look in elevator stairwell area for bags not yet delivered, more unpacking, the entirely useless evacuation drill, back to room, get ready for dinner, wait in longest lines ever which is dinner night #1 as everybody shows up exactly at their time, panic to get to the first show and find seats, etc, etc. So, what you are left with are two full days (the final one including time needed to pack and get everything outside your cabin for port bag delivery). Point being, and I agree with my wife, the 3 night cruise is just too quick.
That left us considering reservation #2, the 4 night version. Certainly more appealing. However, in the end, we just wanted something more extended. I kept thinking 3 full days would just not be that relaxing either. With the new ship, I would WANT to visit each of the new main rotation restaurants. That would only leave one day for either of the premium dining experiences. Again, I would think I am sacrificing my relaxation time by feeling I need to pack so many things into a tight schedule.
We have done several 7 night Disney cruises and tend to prefer them. You get settled. You have time to even go to a rotation restaurant twice if you enjoy one in particular. More easily scheduled spa times, etc, etc. Everything being more calm makes it more pleasant for us.
So, if there is a question, I am curious what other people think? When I see a Platinum with 25+ cruises, I always think about it from my perspective. I presume (probably incorrectly) that they have been on 25+ 7 night cruises. I guess there are a lot of people that prefer quantity of cruises or, at least, more opportunities spread out to enjoy DCL (i.e. 3-4 cruises a year on DCL but shorter ones).
Just curious on other's thoughts.
DWF
My wife has always frowned on a 3 night cruise. Her points are well taken. The first day on the ship is mostly frenetic. Rush to port, wait at port, get on ship, run to lunch before too crowded, run around with some carry-on until room ready, get to room, unpack maybe carry-on, look in elevator stairwell area for bags not yet delivered, more unpacking, the entirely useless evacuation drill, back to room, get ready for dinner, wait in longest lines ever which is dinner night #1 as everybody shows up exactly at their time, panic to get to the first show and find seats, etc, etc. So, what you are left with are two full days (the final one including time needed to pack and get everything outside your cabin for port bag delivery). Point being, and I agree with my wife, the 3 night cruise is just too quick.
That left us considering reservation #2, the 4 night version. Certainly more appealing. However, in the end, we just wanted something more extended. I kept thinking 3 full days would just not be that relaxing either. With the new ship, I would WANT to visit each of the new main rotation restaurants. That would only leave one day for either of the premium dining experiences. Again, I would think I am sacrificing my relaxation time by feeling I need to pack so many things into a tight schedule.
We have done several 7 night Disney cruises and tend to prefer them. You get settled. You have time to even go to a rotation restaurant twice if you enjoy one in particular. More easily scheduled spa times, etc, etc. Everything being more calm makes it more pleasant for us.
So, if there is a question, I am curious what other people think? When I see a Platinum with 25+ cruises, I always think about it from my perspective. I presume (probably incorrectly) that they have been on 25+ 7 night cruises. I guess there are a lot of people that prefer quantity of cruises or, at least, more opportunities spread out to enjoy DCL (i.e. 3-4 cruises a year on DCL but shorter ones).
Just curious on other's thoughts.
DWF