Day 14 continued
La Sagrada Familia was probably my favourite, or at least second favourite place to visit and I am so glad we were able to squeeze this in. I'd love to go again sometime closer to sunset as I bet the light would stream in differently and in more amazing ways. Here are a few more pics.
This is in the main hall and reflects the four apostles, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John:
The Lord's Prayer is carved into what I think is a set of doors. Very hard to take a pic without a thousand cell phones in the way
Took this one (The Apostle's Creed in French) for my kids, who are in French immersion at school:
For an idea of scale - I believe this was the Passion facade:
And the Nativity facade:
We also wandered through some of the museum parts of the church, saw that there was a service in the nave (?) below the main floor of the church, super cool, and checked out the gift shop. We bought a couple of small things including a coaster with a mosaic print that I am very happy I purchased, as it sits on my desk at work.
And with that, it was time to head back to the ship. OH - forgot to mention that due to weather (allegedly), the towers were closed for climbing anyway, so the Goodmans didn't get to climb

I think they did receive a partial refund, but that's annoying!
Okay everyone so here is a terrible picture of the Magic with what I think is a Marella ship behind it (there was a Marella ship that we were in port with at various times after the Azores, I think this was it... I could be wrong). Observe the size.
Now look at the
MSC Seaview, which was docked two berths behind the Magic.
Holy shnikey that ship is massive!!! I mean what a beast the Seaview is, I believe it holds twice as many passengers as the Magic and there are about 20 decks... wow. Mama Goodman and I had actually both seen the Seaview pull in when we were first docked in Barcelona before breakfast and we honestly had both looked out our windows to see this gigantic ship pass by us. Wow. As we were booked in the Yacht Club, we were on deck 18 forward. I think the Goodmans were booked into the Aurea category (MSC has some great rooms in the Aurea category, ideal for families really) but I don't remember what deck they were on. The Yacht Club (concierge level) is all the way forward and is on decks 16, 18, and 19.
Fun fact: MSC (an Italian company) ships do not have a deck 17. This is because in Italian, the number 17 is considered to be bad luck.
I took this pic from the terminal, it was just ship for as far as I could see!
Fun fact #2: In Europe, MSC's cruises are almost all multi-embarkation cruises. Our itinerary was:
- Barcelona
- Ajaccio (Corsica)
- Genoa
- La Spezia
- Rome
- Cannes
- Palma de Mallorca
And of those, you could board at Barcelona, Genoa, Rome, and Cannes for a 7 night cruise, so passengers were not the same for a week. Barcelona and Rome were the biggest ports for embarkation/disembarkation. Cannes is an interesting place to embark as it's a tender port. Anyway, I didn't find this to be too disruptive - but I'll comment later on how it could have been more annoying.
We went directly to the YC tent outside the terminal and our bags were tagged with YC luggage tags and taken from us. We were then shown to a little cordoned off area in the terminal where snacks and drinks awaited. This is just a waiting spot while you wait for a butler to take you on board. My kids were REALLY excited about the butler experience and even this little perk made them tremendously happy.
It was definitely nice to have, not a must, but very nice, especially because the terminal is huge and the lines looked pretty long for non-concierge guests.
Eventually a butler came down to fetch us. By the way, the MSC butlers are in full butler garb - tuxedo with tails, white gloves, the works. I am not even kidding you. I felt pretty underdressed. He even insisted on carrying my backpack for me. Here we are walking toward the main YC lounge, the Top Sail Lounge.
The Seaview's YC lounge is lovely, it is two decks high and then the restaurant (private for YC guests) takes up part of the 18th deck, after you ascend the beautiful crystal staircase.
We were first seated in the lounge, a little overwhelmed and tired (and feeling underdressed). Various butlers came to take drink orders and a lady from the restaurant came to ask us what our preferred dining time was. Technically the YC restaurant is anytime dining but I think they prefer to have a table ready for you and to have somewhat more structure.... I heard some guests complain about having to choose a time, but we just gave an approximate time and tried to stick to it when we could. We were also told that someone would come to escort us to our room but we ended up being tired of waiting and just went to check out our room.
I don't seem to have taken a picture of our room, which is strange of me, maybe I haven't uploaded all of my pics yet. It's similar to the
DCL Family Oceanview with Verandah, though I would say more spacious. It doesn't have a split bath, but the bathroom was very large. There is a queen or king size bed, then a double pull out couch, and a pullman bed, which oddly faced the same direction as the bed (rather than parallel to the wall as we see in most other cruise ships. This meant that when the pullman was down, there was the danger of smacking your head or shoulder into the corner of the bed if you weren't paying attention.
I will keep going with this post a little later but here are my initial observations:
- Yacht Club was WELL worth the money spent. It is all inclusive, you can pretty much drink anything you like (there are some top shelf liquors that aren't included) and there is food all the time. The private restaurant was delightful. We went to the buffet once and on a ship with 6,000 people you can imagine the chaos.
- the YC lounge was the best place to spend some quiet moments, grab a drink, a snack, etc. It is HUGE and never felt crowded in the least. In the pic above you can see that on deck 19 there is even some outdoor seating.
- MSC is a distinctly different experience than DCL. DCL feels more "American" in that the staff will do everything they can to accommodate you. On MSC, sometimes the answer was just no, or you'd wait quite a while to get a real answer, or sometimes the staff didn't feel as 'warm' - honestly, this didn't really bother me as I chalked it up to cultural differences, which is a bit of an odd answer. I am the sort of person who believes any day cruising is better than not, so I don't sweat the small stuff, but can see how these things might bother others.
- Some things we had to figure out on our own.... such as where to get pool towels. I'm still not 100% sure, but I think part of the problem is that they really don't expect YC guests to ever leave the YC enclave.
- The muster drill for us was in the casino. Not my favourite as it is always smoky in there (true of nearly all cruise ships that have casinos, in my experience). I often see a complaint that MSC is "too" multi-lingual.... it's true that they give the important announcements in at least 5 languages. English, French, Spanish, Italian, and German at a minimum. But the cruise director spoke all of these languages fluently PLUS I think he also spoke Portuguese. I'm pretty sure he did all of the announcements without missing a beat. Frankly I was far more impressed than I was annoyed. At shows, he spoke in all six languages. Truly amazing.
- the registration for the kids clubs was unnecessarily difficult and involved filling out paperwork ... MSC needs to find a way to streamline this. Our kids didn't end up going terribly often, but that was okay with us - they were separated by age and not too thrilled with that after two weeks on DCL together. I'm sure the lack of ipads wasn't helping, lol.