Anna Chassereau
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2016
- Messages
- 552
Awesome! Did you use DCL excursions for the experiences you describe, or did you use other vendors that you can recommend?Unlike the Caribbean, where the experience does not vary a lot from cruiser to cruiser, a Mediterranean cruise can be as varied (and costly) as you want it to be. My son is 6 and loves castles, stories of kings and queens, churches, old cities, etc. We brought him to Europe from the time he was 4mo and always implicate him in the places we visit. If your kid is similar in his interests, a European cruise is extraordinary because every day, there's a different city to explore, different foods to try, etc. We did the Norwegian fjords cruise last year and he loved every second of it, from the castle in Copenhagen to the brown cheese made by hand on a farm in the back country.
If you want to stay on the ship or go to beaches, you'll get beautiful views but an experience quite similar to a regular Caribbean cruise.
We always use DCL excursions, because the ship will wait for you. In Europe, were ports are far from the cities most of the time, it's particularly important.Awesome! Did you use DCL excursions for the experiences you describe, or did you use other vendors that you can recommend?
Great! Did you ever feel unsafe at any of the ports, or were you ever given special warnings, in relation to possible terrorism?We always use DCL excursions, because the ship will wait for you. In Europe, were ports are far from the cities most of the time, it's particularly important.
Some places in Italy, particularly Florence and Pisa, and the old quarter of Barcelona, are know pickpocket hubs. Be wise and keep as little on you as possible and safely tucked away. Stay away from alleys and other secluded places. That's the same advice you get in all the ports.Great! Did you ever feel unsafe at any of the ports, or were you ever given special warnings, in relation to possible terrorism?
I'm also a huge fan of traveling to far and wide places with kids as they learn so much from it. I grew up in Europe (Military brat) and I know that alone helped shape the person I am today. My son, who is 13 now, luckily inherited my love of travel and want to explore other countries and I can honestly say it's helped him immensely in school and to be a better and more rounded person as he has experienced first hand other cultures and ways of living.
We are on the Med cruise this August and I'm so excited for him (and my husband) to add more countries to our list. We've already booked our Italy excursions exclusively through Rome in Limo (with friends and another family) and I highly recommend them although I haven't personally used them yet. They have amazing reviews and their customer service was phenomenal. In Villefranche that will likely be the only port we use DCL for but definitely use what you are most comfortable with but also compare prices and options with independent tour operators too.
Go explore the world and take advantage of the Med, for sureI would ask your son if anything interests him, is there something he really wants to see? Kids have all kids of awesome ideas and although it's not too educational, lol, after we do all our "educational items", my son said he wants to tour the Camp Nou soccer stadium in Barcelona before our cruise so we'll do that. We aren't even FC Barcelona fans (we love Bayern Munich) but it's something he wants to do so we'll incorporate that too.
Have fun planning!
Heather
Unlike the Caribbean, where the experience does not vary a lot from cruiser to cruiser, a Mediterranean cruise can be as varied (and costly) as you want it to be. My son is 6 and loves castles, stories of kings and queens, churches, old cities, etc. We brought him to Europe from the time he was 4mo and always implicate him in the places we visit. If your kid is similar in his interests, a European cruise is extraordinary because every day, there's a different city to explore, different foods to try, etc. We did the Norwegian fjords cruise last year and he loved every second of it, from the castle in Copenhagen to the brown cheese made by hand on a farm in the back country.
If you want to stay on the ship or go to beaches, you'll get beautiful views but an experience quite similar to a regular Caribbean cruise.
Regarding DCL vs other excursions, we did the DCL Baltic cruise last year. We did 2 DCL excursions and 2 I arranged thru companies found on TripAdvisor. I figured I'd hedge our bets on which would be better. For our family of 8 (dh and I, four kids ages 11-16, and a set of grandparents) we all agreed the non-DCL excursions were much, much better. Nothing against DCL, but the private tours allowed us to: maximize our time in port - we met the guide right after we arrived in port and always got back 60 minutes prior to sailing. Our DCL excursions seemed to waste time - like leaving 2 hours after getting into port - not enough time to go out and get back again, then finish with just not enough time to do anything else. We could maximize our time at any location - with a 50 person bus full of cruisers, even going to the bathroom takes forever - with 8 of us we could get up close and personal with the sights for as long as we wanted. We had the guide all to ourselves to ask questions. We were able to tailor tours to our interests, and take breaks if the kids were tired. And to top it off, the private tours were often half the cost of the DCL tours. If you don't have a large enough family to make private tours significantly cheaper, many companies will arrange smaller group tours and plug you into one.
I understand why folks use ship excursions, particularly the fear of not making it back to the ship, but if you do your homework and find reputable companies you should be fine. They do not benefit from customers missing the ship either, in this day of internet reviews. You can check cruisecritic port boards for feedback on companies as well.
Enjoy Europe! Our kids are great travelers, and I think seeing so much of the world has really influenced who they are as people. It's been wonderful seeing the world with them.
We've been on Med sailings twice with 2 different cruise lines. Based on what we saw on both sailings, definitely use the cruise excursions. There are some things that non-cruise operators cannot control--like traffic. Traffic around Rome is very unpredictable, well, actually, it's predictably horrible and can just get ridiculously horrible without notice. We've had traffic delays to the tune of a couple hours where the ship literally waited for our bus because it was DCL. We've seen non-DCL people get left behind. Now, if the next stop is Italy, it's easy to just drive to the next port and probably get there before the ship does, but who wants to deal with that? We also saw people at the Venice airport once who missed their ship and had to try to get airfare to the next port. The problem was that their passports were on the ship(!) Not good.
2-4 yo are the bad years for flying. They can't tell you how they feel in a clear manner and sometimes can't control their emotions. At 7yo, you'll should be fine. It is, after all, the safest mode of transport. If he gets nervous, that info plus a couple of movies should do the trick.Thank you to everyone for their replies and advice!!
One thing that makes me nervous is the flight...this will be our son's first flight and it will be 8 hours. Am I insane for doing this for his first flight?!
2-4 yo are the bad years for flying. They can't tell you how they feel in a clear manner and sometimes can't control their emotions. At 7yo, you'll should be fine. It is, after all, the safest mode of transport. If he gets nervous, that info plus a couple of movies should do the trick.