DVC Jen
Wigs out even the biggest circus freaks.
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2004
- Messages
- 6,091
Yes, it is provided in the cruise booklet sent to you about 30-days before your sailing.
Make sure they know to keep any calls short and to the point as it is expensive.
They do have to enter a credit card. Still no guarantee they’ll get you. Hubby spent $200 trying to get me on the Dream in September. Took that + about 7 hours for me to even get a message to call him.This. And I am pretty sure the person calling has to enter a credit card number. I doubt a dog sitting facility is going to be doing that.
Seems like email might be faster. Even email onboard a ship.They do have to enter a credit card. Still no guarantee they’ll get you. Hubby spent $200 trying to get me on the Dream in September. Took that + about 7 hours for me to even get a message to call him.![]()
I was out of mbs & getting off the ship the next morning. But, yes, email would’ve been exponentially faster even at DCL’s speeds.Seems like email might be faster. Even email onboard a ship.
They do have to enter a credit card. Still no guarantee they’ll get you. Hubby spent $200 trying to get me on the Dream in September. Took that + about 7 hours for me to even get a message to call him.![]()
They will if they have our credit card number to do soThis. And I am pretty sure the person calling has to enter a credit card number. I doubt a dog sitting facility is going to be doing that.
We had people communicate with us via email. You can log on and check your emails for 1-2 megabytes. You get 50 free ones which equals lots of checking in.
Just a suggestion but when we cruise we give the dog boarding the name of a local friend that we trust to make any emergency decisions for our pet. Short of approving an emergency procedure/medicine there’s not much you can do from sea if they need you. We let the friend know what we’d be comfortable with and he’d go and get our dog if there was some freak emergency where you couldn’t stay anymore.
Yeah, we board with our vet and they have blanket approval to provide emergency treatment without calling to confirm. Similarly, when I'm leaving my pets in my housemate's care next fall I'm going to contact the vet and let them know that she has the authority to make those decisions on my behalf. OP, can you make arrangements between the boarding facility and your regular vet to pre-authorize care? It sounds like they may not be able to reach you in a timely fashion even if they have your permission to charge it to your card.
Just a suggestion but when we cruise we give the dog boarding the name of a local friend that we trust to make any emergency decisions for our pet. Short of approving an emergency procedure/medicine there’s not much you can do from sea if they need you. We let the friend know what we’d be comfortable with and he’d go and get our dog if there was some freak emergency where you couldn’t stay anymore.