Best place to avoid motion on a ship is low down (deck 2 or 3) and in the center of the ship.
My first cruise in '84? was on the NCL Sunward II. 400+ feet long. We hit a gale and had 20-30 foot waves. Bottles crashing, tables overturned, dishes in restaurant broken. Heck, even my son left the top bunk not of his own free will (guess we should have strapped him in).
We had a blast (wife and myself) looking out over the bridge, watching the waves crash onto the bow. Stayed up till about 3 am looking. Most people were sick in their bed.
Slept like a log with the gentle rocking of the ship once we went to bed. Only ship not to have ambulances waiting on the pier the next morning in Miami when we docked.
Was an excellent cruise. (Sound like I'm really out there some where, huh?) Been on 15 cruises since and still going "back to sea".
My first cruise in '84? was on the NCL Sunward II. 400+ feet long. We hit a gale and had 20-30 foot waves. Bottles crashing, tables overturned, dishes in restaurant broken. Heck, even my son left the top bunk not of his own free will (guess we should have strapped him in).
We had a blast (wife and myself) looking out over the bridge, watching the waves crash onto the bow. Stayed up till about 3 am looking. Most people were sick in their bed.
Slept like a log with the gentle rocking of the ship once we went to bed. Only ship not to have ambulances waiting on the pier the next morning in Miami when we docked.
Was an excellent cruise. (Sound like I'm really out there some where, huh?) Been on 15 cruises since and still going "back to sea".