i have been reading that rccl is $0 corkage fee. i checked again yesterday and that is what it still says. RCCL wins!
http://www.royalcaribbean.com/custo...336&faqSubjectName=Food+&+Beverage&faqId=5442
i have been reading that rccl is $0 corkage fee. i checked again yesterday and that is what it still says. RCCL wins!
No policy change on soda. Someone posted that DCL could start charging for soda -which also wouldn't affect me.I've been out of the loop so I apologize, but what's the policy change on soda? I didn't know there was one?
DCL will allow you to bring the same amount of alcohol onboard at each port. Some cruise lines allow you to bring alcohol onboard only at the beginning of the cruise.
No policy change on soda. Someone on the other thread posted that DCL could start charging for soda -which also wouldn't affect me.
If you read that carefully - Royal Caribbean allows two 750 ml bottles per stateroom to be brought onboard - and only at the beginning of the cruise.i have been reading that rccl is $0 corkage fee. i checked again yesterday and that is what it still says. RCCL wins!
http://www.royalcaribbean.com/customersupport/faq/details.do?pagename=frequently_asked_questions&pnav=5&pnav=2&faqType=faq&faqSubjectId=336&faqSubjectName=Food+&+Beverage&faqId=5442
okay, but i was only referring to the corkage fee. i didn't say anything about what could be brought on board. did i miss something somewhere?If you read that carefully - Royal Caribbean allows two 750 ml bottles per stateroom to be brought onboard - and only at the beginning of the cruise.
DCL will allow you to bring the same amount of alcohol onboard at each port. Some cruise lines allow you to bring alcohol onboard only at the beginning of the cruise.
I don't see the issue with Disney trying to make more money they are a business and as I said above I think those that the policy affects should be able to opt out even if past paid in full date
You are right about RCI's corkage fee being $0. But with an allowance of only two bottles of wine or champagne per stateroom for the whole cruise, the corkage fees wouldn't add up to much - even if they charged.okay, but i was only referring to the corkage fee. i didn't say anything about what could be brought on board. did i miss something somewhere?
And each time you open that bottle of wine that you bought in port is another $25. I don't think their goal is to reduce drinking. It's to get you to buy their booze at their markup. Other than European cruises, most ports are going to have a pretty low selection at inflated port prices. It becomes more convenient to just buy the bottle at dinner on the ship because by the time you pay up in port and add the $25, you're not really saving anything.
The other main tier cruise lines make a tremendous amount on casinos and drink packages. Disney isn't likely to add casinos anytime soon, but they could increase revenue by charging for drinks. IMO this is a decision to trot out higher profits to shareholders and has nothing to do with protecting the poor children from drinking.
But you don't seem to get that everyone isn't you. You not caring that they are taking something from other people might bite you later when they take something away from you. Do you drink soda? What if I hoped they start charging for it?
And some people like both; they like some alcohol and they like their families.
Or like me, they want to bring their craft beer on board, which is bottled in 22oz bottles, not 12. This is a problem with the new policy. And I can't go tell my fave breweries to change the bottle for me.
Not much of a family vacation if the adults can't have an adult beverage if they wish to. And I've never once seen a bored kid at a bar. MY kid at a bar is chomping at the bit to get out, as it's not legal in WA for kids to be right *at* the bar, and it freaks him out that in FL it's OK. Other kids are playing, spinning on the chairs, having a grand time. Never seen a bored one.
Corkage fees apply only to bottles brought to the dining room. Drink your onboard-purchased wine in your cabin, just as you did all the liquor you were previously allowed to bring onboard.And each time you open that bottle of wine that you bought in port is another $25. I don't think their goal is to reduce drinking. It's to get you to buy their booze at their markup. Other than European cruises, most ports are going to have a pretty low selection at inflated port prices. It becomes more convenient to just buy the bottle at dinner on the ship because by the time you pay up in port and add the $25, you're not really saving anything.
The other main tier cruise lines make a tremendous amount on casinos and drink packages. Disney isn't likely to add casinos anytime soon, but they could increase revenue by charging for drinks. IMO this is a decision to trot out higher profits to shareholders and has nothing to do with protecting the poor children from drinking.
BUT….they still don't charge and that was the point i was making.You are right about RCI's corkage fee being $0. But with an allowance of only two bottles of wine or champagne per stateroom for the whole cruise, the corkage fees wouldn't add up to much - even if they charged.
... The previous policy allowed those of us that don't drink wine and beer to bring on the alcohol of our choice too. Now we can no longer do that.
The point people are making is not that they want to get sloppy drunk on the ship. The point is that DCL has changed another policy to further restrict the benefits that were previously offered (and for us, that was done after our cruise was already paid in full and inside the cancellation penalty period).
For those that want the kid-centric vacation, how will you feel when those special meet and greet with Anna and Elsa or the Princesses are changed to a $25 ticketed event? Or when they start charging an hourly fee for the kid's clubs? Guess what, neither of those two things will affect me or my family but I'll be right there with you showing my disappointment with yet another benefit that has been removed with no reduction in the already premium price that is paid to be on a DCL ship.
it doesn't affect me because only once did i want/try to bring on alcohol (read about it in passporters) and i found i had all the alcohol left because i didn't want drinks in my room or to be running back and forth to my room. what we drink, we figure into our cruise costs. what there people do is their own deal, but in my limited experience, the acting out inappropriate people we've seen on a cruise have been the ones pouring it out from a personal stash. it seems like such a huge hassle that i can't fathom why people do that in the first place! but it always is a bummer when things change? but at this juncture it seems like the revised policy still allows quite a bit of alcohol.
You think parents should never have a glass of wine in front of their kids? You understand that there is a difference between having a drink and getting drunk, right?I've never really understood drinking in front of my child.
I agree on both points. If a Disney cruise was supposed to be so kid-centric, then there would not be adult only areas of the ship and pool waiters walking around with alcoholic drinks for purchase. I don't agree with the term "family vacation" when it means cater only to the children. That is a kids vacation. A family vacation means adults get to enjoy it also and for some, that means having an alcoholic beverage on the verandah after the kids go to sleep or while they are in the kids club, etc. Or even at dinner (gasp) in front of the kids. The previous policy allowed those of us that don't drink wine and beer to bring on the alcohol of our choice too. Now we can no longer do that.
The point people are making is not that they want to get sloppy drunk on the ship. The point is that DCL has changed another policy to further restrict the benefits that were previously offered (and for us, that was done after our cruise was already paid in full and inside the cancellation penalty period).
For those that want the kid-centric vacation, how will you feel when those special meet and greet with Anna and Elsa or the Princesses are changed to a $25 ticketed event? Or when they start charging an hourly fee for the kid's clubs? Guess what, neither of those two things will affect me or my family but I'll be right there with you showing my disappointment with yet another benefit that has been removed with no reduction in the already premium price that is paid to be on a DCL ship.