That is a shame, because you would LOVE Castaway Cay. I think the Caribbean is beautiful. Maybe you need an inside stateroom so you don't have to see the open water. At least in the warm water you won't freeze to death.
Oh if only it were as simple as an inside stateroom. I'd never be able to go on deck...not without being heavily medicated anyway. A couple of years ago my SIL (she loves to cruise) suggested going on a 3 day cruise to start. She said you are rarely if ever out of sight of land on those. Something to think about.
I strongly suggest a 3 day then. You will LOVE it.
I love your pictures of Pink! That seems like my kind of place. I LOVE champagne. I hope you got to visit there.
Yes, we did get to visit there. A small but lovely and quiet place to get a drink.
Question for you.. are the all the pools on the ship really small? They seem pretty small in the pictures, but sometimes that can be deceiving. And if they are small, are there a good number of them scattered about? The pool on The Love Boat was small, but really, how big of pool are you gonna build on a soundstage for a TV show?

Oh I crack myself up. Seriously, it seems like the number of people on board would overwhelm pools of that size.
Yes, the pools are really small and they quickly got very full. The kids complained about other kids just kicking and shoving to make room. I am not sure why they make them so small. There HAS to be a reason. I will google .......
OK. Here's and answer from the Cruise Critic boards - Why are cruise ship pools so small? - Cruise Critic Message Boards -It is both space concerns as well as the weight of the water and how it affects the stability of the ship. Not that the pool makes the ship unstable, but in rough seas, the sloshing of the water makes a mess and does move large amounts of weight several feet one way or the other...hence the fast pool dump button up on the bridge.
Smaller pools also keep people lounging and buying more booze...that makes the line more money than a big pool.
IMHO - I'm thinking a larger pool WOULD affect the stability of the ship. Here's another post about it.
Most modern cruise ships are in excess of 90,000tons and are "high" in the water because of the ever growing number of decks to accomodate passengers.Some if not all modern cruise ships have the ability to take on water ballast, to lower the centre of gravity and keep them stable, especially on the high seas, eg trans-atlantic. Clearly given the above, if the ships had huge swimming pools on top located decks, they would tend to undermine the stability of the vessel, especially during inclement weather. And as 1 cubic metre of water alone weighs 1 ton, you don't really need to be Einstein to work it out.
Also are there tons of people out at the crack of dawn reserving deck chairs for their entire party like you might run in to at the resorts? I saw the funniest thing with someone doing that at Pop on our last trip. It totally cracked me up. I really need to get a TR going on that trip. *sigh*