TLSnell1981
Tiny bubbles... make me happy... make me feel fine
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2006
- Messages
- 18,222
Not sure where this comes into play with all of the various theories-but I have come across 11C's on both the Dream and Alaska cruises that I have booked for next year-these lower cabins were not available a few weeks ago. DCL is not completely full if they are offering these lower categories again.
It doesn't matter if the boat is empty or not...just like the airlines. It doesn't determine availability on points.
But what I'm suggesting is that there is not only a per-cruise limit but also a cumulative annual limit for all cruises.
Just to throw out a number, let's say that DVC members are allowed to have 5% of all cabins over an entire year.
Rather than releasing 5% of all dates / cabin classes, they may make a higher percentage available on each sailing. That gives members greatest flexibility. On one cruise with particularly high demand perhaps 8% of all cabins will go to members while another sailing may have only 2% of cabins taken by members.
But the annual limit would still apply.
It's like having two caps--a cap on the number of rooms available for each cruise and a cap for the year. They may not have met the cap for the cruise you were looking at but if they met the annual cap, all bookings would end.
I asked this on the DCL board a few days ago. I suspect, you are probably correct. There is total sum of points allowed for use when booking a cruise. There has been increased interest due to the new ship and destinations. So, this theory makes sense. IMO