I appreciate the compliment but it's really not just the
way I think. It is the state of that industry and it has been for many years, including the boutiful ones. These cruise ship holding companies filled the open seas with so many of these huge ocean-going cities that they saturated the market. It began a game of on-upsmanship between the holding companies.
What they ended up doing was oversaturating a marketplace that had a finite set of potential buyers. You might be surprised how many people still think that cruising is only for the ritzy rich, though the cruise industry still actively markets to dispell this misconception.
My wife and I actually learned about the Miami Port thing after cruising for several years on
RCCL. We were actually sitting with a couple one night at dinner on a RCCL cruise. They were from a small town just outside Miami. We made an offhand comment that we went 1-2 times per year but would probably go more often if we could afford it. They sort of laughed at us and explained what several friends they had had told them about the industry and what THEY did. They went on 8-10 3-4 day cruises every year by doing exactly what they suggested we do.
We must have taken 5-6 more cruises this way before my wife took me kicking and screaming to WDW and I got HOOKED on WDW instead of cruising, but that's another story for another time.
Look. It's real simple, once you think about it. It's the same reason you get substantial upgrades to your cabin in-port just prior to departure. It's FREE money to the cruise ship. Think about it...
The room is EMPTY.
All the food is onboard for a full sailing. It has to be, and it won't keep forever.
It takes EXACTLY the same staff at sail time to man a ship with 500 rooms full as it does to man a ship with 1000 rooms full.
For all intents and purposes, it takes essentially the same fuel oil to power the ship no matter the "load" as far as passengers are concerned.
Empty rooms=lost revenue.
I would be willing to bet you that
DCL does exactly the same thing on sailing day that ALL the other lines do. I Can't prove this because I have never actually tried it at Port Canaveral (though I certainly intend to soon) but I do know I upgraded one time to a veranda stateroom from an outside porthole cabin for virtually NOTHING. (And this was a "free" sailing because of a
DVC add-on purchase!)
It's been years since I paid discounted rates, much less retail, to take a cruise and I don't intend to ever do it again (pay "going rates").
That industry is hurting right now, especially in this economy. I don't care if it is Disney, with 4 HUGE ships and all those rooms, eventually the captive audience willing to continually pay retail PLUS for those rooms dries up. They have a cottage audience INSIDE a cottage industry. That makes for a pretty small potential draw.
RCCL ain't shabby. Not by ANYBODY's standards. People, even Disney people, are learning this, and they are
jumping ship from Disney to other lines after getting their feet wet on DCL. I know this from my industry contacts over the years. Disney knows this too. People are going, "Dang! I Can take the same crusie on RCCL for half the money even through a
TRAVEL AGENT."
They will adapt or they will fail. You're going to see some significant drops in DCL pricing over the next 12-24 months to become much closer in line with the industry standards. Wait and see. You can mark me on that one.
For the naysayers on my prediction, I offer you this. They never had this problem with only two ships. Now they have those plus two more MASSIVE vessels. It matters. I would bet my bottom dollar that they have over extended and I know people smarter than me decided to build the Dream and the Fantasy. Remember too that the decision to build those two ships were made a LONG time ago in a very DIFFERENT economy. We ain't ever going back to where we were. Disney knows that too.

If Disney had known what the economy was going to do, they would have NEVER built those two ships and they would be the richest company in the world. Nobody saw it coming. It wasn't just Disney. RCCL did it too, which even further discounts the marketplace.