HarperCruisers
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2014
- Messages
- 19
We cruised Alaska last year and had a post-stay in Vancouver. IMO, I'd wouldn't do laundry on the cruise again...it took time away from enjoying the cruise for us.
Early morning laundry lady here. As someone else mentioned, I put my laundry in, go run, put it in the dryer, shower (I'm quick in the shower) grab my Kindle and wait for the dryer to be done. This has worked well for me on 2, 14 night cruises on Wonder and I'm planning on the same for our PC in May. On a 7 night I usually do laundry at least 1 time (sweaty work out clothes and anything else that is a must have) probably 3 times in 14 days. With a trip to DL when we finish the Panama Canal I may do it again just before packing to disembark. Tide pods are easy.
I put my laundry in, go run, put it in the dryer ... Tide pods are easy.
I like that idea of putting in a load of laundry before an early morning run. The laundry rooms on the Wonder were not very roomy and, at times, not all of the machines were in working order. So anything I can do to find non-peak laundry times is a good thing. We tried doing laundry on the last sea day of the cruise. That was a mistake. We will plan differently next time.
I was sitting on the floor watching my washer and two women came in and started pulling on my washer door. Hey, that's not yours!! Oops, they had clothes in the dryer which on the DREAM was on the top row. Fortunately the cycle did not stop.. I watched people pulling on doors that were not theirs and on my dryer I had to call maintenance to show me how to reset in the middle of the cycle.I'd like to do the same but on our last cruise, there was some kind person constantly stopping/opening machines that were not theirs, stopping one's cycle. I had a load of wash left soapy and wet I had to restart and dryers were opened on a number of people and not restarted (as if someone was doing intentionally). I ended up staying for most of my 2nd machines cycle reading in the space until all was done. If the group of us found out the culprit, there would have been the need for a forward deck detective agency to solve the kind persons "soap" incident.
I know this doesn't really contribute to the conversation, but I just had to share that I got an image in my head of an explosive dye pack secretly placed in a running washing machine. Then some poor, umm, "kind person" would be scurrying back to his or her stateroom with a huge red splotch covering him or her from head to waist.I'd like to do the same but on our last cruise, there was some kind person constantly stopping/opening machines that were not theirs, stopping one's cycle. ... If the group of us found out the culprit, there would have been the need for a forward deck detective agency to solve the kind persons "soap" incident.

I know this doesn't really contribute to the conversation, but I just had to share that I got an image in my head of an explosive dye pack secretly placed in a running washing machine. Then some poor, umm, "kind person" would be scurrying back to his or her stateroom with a huge red splotch covering him or her from head to waist.
yeah... that might have been an evil thought.
Back more to the topic: With kids and a baby, and all of the layers I keep hearing about needing to pack for the Alaskan cruises, I'm glad that Disney saw fit to include some guest laundry rooms on the ships.
I noticed a discrepancy in prices mentioned. Some say it was $1 per load to wash and a $1 to dry. Others said $2. Were you meaning $2 total ($1/wash & $1/dry) or $4 total ($2/wash & $2/dry). I seem to remember it be $1 each on the Wonder this past February. Is it different by ship or did I just mis-read things?
It's $2.00 to wash, $2.00 to dry a load. That said, the Wonder (at least on our cruises on her) was $1.00 to wash, $1.00 to dry. I can't confirm if it still is. At one time it was $1.00 each on all the ship, but 3 (at least) of them have changed.

