Lesverts
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2014
- Messages
- 1,661
Background:
- I have only sailed the Caribbean and only on Celebrity. So like the vast majority of the ship I was a first time DCLer
- single guy that loves Disney
- first time in both Australia and New Zealand
Cabin:
I had an inside cabin (only sailed verandah before) on deck 7 aft. 7619. Principle drawback was the noise on the final morning from the crew access point beside my cabin. The cabin was in good shape except for the sofa and coffee table. The sofa was so run down and worn. So was the table. They need to be replaced probably ship wide. Bed was the best I’ve had on a cruise ship. The bathroom, while small, was serviceable. The water pressure and water temperature were excellent.
Cabin steward/attendant was excellent as well. Very fast and it seemed like he got to know our schedules because I never had an issue with running into him doing up my room. Only slight complaint is that I tipped him on the second to last night a bit extra and then he mentioned the tips to me again the next day. I know it is important to him and I am not making a judgment call on tipping. Just I doubled your tip. Leave it at that please.
Common Spaces:
It was like there was an army of crew just there to fix and paint and clean. There was so much painting and varnishing and sprucing up of the ship. Must be what the parks were like 30 years ago. Some chairs here and there were a little scruffy but overall the upkeep of the ship was very good. I especially liked the Cadillac lounge but unfortunately it’s Happy Hour and my dining hour matched. Which sucked.
Crew:
Almost everyone you walked by said hello. Everyone was friendly. Many of them were good to talk to for a chat. Since I’m a bit of a nerd being able to talk to people and ask questions about the finer details was great. I also noticed the officers were a lot more visible on the ship compared to celebrity. Heading to dinner on the last two nights many of them, including the captain, were out and about. So that was very cool to see. Jimmy was our cruise director. Him and his assistant were wonderful. Every time you ran into either they had a way of making you feel like they remembered you. Jimmy called me sir. I was like dude you’re old enough to be my dad and in uniform I think we have the sir part backwards.
I normally spend my time on my balcony and the bars on a ship. But no balcony and I’m not running up a 150$ a day bar bill. So I went to a lot more activities compared to previous cruises. I came second in trivia 5 times and when I did win. A total of 13 people had the same score and I was left without a prize. I know. Tear. But still. I want my glorified plastic
Characters:
Goofy grabbed me on deck for a photo on the second day after I had decided not to bother with characters because of the line. So I had to then go met all the big ones. Character interaction was universally stellar except Mickey one. I understand guy plus solo plus stuff equals the friends being more hesitant. But still it sucked to wait in line for about 45 minutes for Mickey and get a pretty ****ty interaction. After that one I started asking who the handlers and photographers were going to be so I could map out when to meet characters with people that helped make the experience great. I made sure I wrote their names on the comment cards. I made Donald one angry duck though. Called him daffy. Oops. The lines and the chatting in line with the various people was also a highlight for me.
Fellow Guests:
I don’t know if I got a special cruise or if DCL guests are just more friendly and pleasant. But I had a blast meeting and hanging out with new people. Everyone was up for a chat. Helped a little guy find his parents the first night and had a little friend and a bar buddy (his Dad) for the rest of the cruise. It was all very super relaxed and laid back. I didn’t see any server mistreatment or crew getting yelled at. My fellow Disney peeps were awesome. Though I will say there was a noticeable Gay contingent. So I did try to engage, being Gay as well, and they were the coldest. I got accepted by the Dads though. Probably ended up having a better time. I also loved how everyone thought I was Aussie until I spoke. One of the officers thought I was an American when we spoke. I said no Canadian. She ended up checking and said I was likely the only non-crew Canadian on board. I was a novelty.
I mentioned on another thread that traveling and Disney is emotional because of my Mom passing earlier this year. So there were times onboard that I got emotional about being on a Disney ship and her not being there with me. We were suppose to do a three night Bahamas on the wish over the same weekend but I couldn’t do it. I was standing up on deck one day and the emotions got to me a bit. The Dad I had been hanging out with came across me. I explained what was going through my head. Aussies don’t seem to be shy about hugging I guess.
I actively tried to be more extroverted this trip. Figured Aussies are a safe space and inside a Disney bubble. I am so happy I did.
I will add more. But it’s hard to type on phone.
- I have only sailed the Caribbean and only on Celebrity. So like the vast majority of the ship I was a first time DCLer
- single guy that loves Disney
- first time in both Australia and New Zealand
Cabin:
I had an inside cabin (only sailed verandah before) on deck 7 aft. 7619. Principle drawback was the noise on the final morning from the crew access point beside my cabin. The cabin was in good shape except for the sofa and coffee table. The sofa was so run down and worn. So was the table. They need to be replaced probably ship wide. Bed was the best I’ve had on a cruise ship. The bathroom, while small, was serviceable. The water pressure and water temperature were excellent.
Cabin steward/attendant was excellent as well. Very fast and it seemed like he got to know our schedules because I never had an issue with running into him doing up my room. Only slight complaint is that I tipped him on the second to last night a bit extra and then he mentioned the tips to me again the next day. I know it is important to him and I am not making a judgment call on tipping. Just I doubled your tip. Leave it at that please.
Common Spaces:
It was like there was an army of crew just there to fix and paint and clean. There was so much painting and varnishing and sprucing up of the ship. Must be what the parks were like 30 years ago. Some chairs here and there were a little scruffy but overall the upkeep of the ship was very good. I especially liked the Cadillac lounge but unfortunately it’s Happy Hour and my dining hour matched. Which sucked.
Crew:
Almost everyone you walked by said hello. Everyone was friendly. Many of them were good to talk to for a chat. Since I’m a bit of a nerd being able to talk to people and ask questions about the finer details was great. I also noticed the officers were a lot more visible on the ship compared to celebrity. Heading to dinner on the last two nights many of them, including the captain, were out and about. So that was very cool to see. Jimmy was our cruise director. Him and his assistant were wonderful. Every time you ran into either they had a way of making you feel like they remembered you. Jimmy called me sir. I was like dude you’re old enough to be my dad and in uniform I think we have the sir part backwards.
I normally spend my time on my balcony and the bars on a ship. But no balcony and I’m not running up a 150$ a day bar bill. So I went to a lot more activities compared to previous cruises. I came second in trivia 5 times and when I did win. A total of 13 people had the same score and I was left without a prize. I know. Tear. But still. I want my glorified plastic
Characters:
Goofy grabbed me on deck for a photo on the second day after I had decided not to bother with characters because of the line. So I had to then go met all the big ones. Character interaction was universally stellar except Mickey one. I understand guy plus solo plus stuff equals the friends being more hesitant. But still it sucked to wait in line for about 45 minutes for Mickey and get a pretty ****ty interaction. After that one I started asking who the handlers and photographers were going to be so I could map out when to meet characters with people that helped make the experience great. I made sure I wrote their names on the comment cards. I made Donald one angry duck though. Called him daffy. Oops. The lines and the chatting in line with the various people was also a highlight for me.
Fellow Guests:
I don’t know if I got a special cruise or if DCL guests are just more friendly and pleasant. But I had a blast meeting and hanging out with new people. Everyone was up for a chat. Helped a little guy find his parents the first night and had a little friend and a bar buddy (his Dad) for the rest of the cruise. It was all very super relaxed and laid back. I didn’t see any server mistreatment or crew getting yelled at. My fellow Disney peeps were awesome. Though I will say there was a noticeable Gay contingent. So I did try to engage, being Gay as well, and they were the coldest. I got accepted by the Dads though. Probably ended up having a better time. I also loved how everyone thought I was Aussie until I spoke. One of the officers thought I was an American when we spoke. I said no Canadian. She ended up checking and said I was likely the only non-crew Canadian on board. I was a novelty.
I mentioned on another thread that traveling and Disney is emotional because of my Mom passing earlier this year. So there were times onboard that I got emotional about being on a Disney ship and her not being there with me. We were suppose to do a three night Bahamas on the wish over the same weekend but I couldn’t do it. I was standing up on deck one day and the emotions got to me a bit. The Dad I had been hanging out with came across me. I explained what was going through my head. Aussies don’t seem to be shy about hugging I guess.
I actively tried to be more extroverted this trip. Figured Aussies are a safe space and inside a Disney bubble. I am so happy I did.
I will add more. But it’s hard to type on phone.
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