Cruising Girl
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2018
- Messages
- 144
I have east bound panama canal next October on the Magic!!
See you there...I have east bound panama canal next October on the Magic!!
Me too!See you there...![]()
Don’t one or more of DCL ships have that ability to hover in place by using longitude and latitude? Kinda give up the Anchoring requirement? I swear I was at one port and someone explain the engine noise was to accomplish perfect position.Thy weren't always moving, they dropped anchor right off shore. You could see them from the beach at Jetty Park for days at a time. This was June of 2020.
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Yes, but props can spin the opposite direction to move in reverse.They have used the aft side thrusters to help hold position when in a tender port, but they still drop the anchor on the bow. There is no way to hold the ship in one spot since there is no prop on the bow to counteract the rear prop, only side thrusters,
Then the ship would move backwards if the anchor wasn't out. She said she was told they could sit in one spot using the engines with no anchor.Yes, but props can spin the opposite direction to move in reverse.
Exactly. I'm not saying they can or they can't but it makes sense that a ship could move in any direction to adjust for whichever way the current is moving the ship. You don't need a prop on the bow to move in reverse. GPS would be telling it which way to move. Like a virtual anchor.Then the ship would move backwards if the anchor wasn't out. She said she was told they could sit in one spot using the engines with no anchor.
Then the ship would move backwards if the anchor wasn't out. She said she was told they could sit in one spot using the engines with no anchor.
The WISH yes not the other 4.Ships employing AZIPOD Units instead of the old engine + shaft to prop with rudder. PODS with thrusters and GPS can keep ships very stationary.
https://new.abb.com/marine/systems-and-solutions/azipod
I stayed on the Queen Mary docked in Long Beach 25 years ago. It was kind of fun, a little eerie. But I have read that the ship is in bad shape now (the hull) from just sitting in salt water all these years and not going into drydock, etc. Because it doen't have to GO anywhere, I think they thought it would be fine just floating. It's like the planes that were out of commission during Covid. You can't just park a plane long term and let it sit. It has to be serviced.
I might have misunderstand too. So can ships stay at port with an anchor but not remain tied? Did the Disney ships have that capability or am I thinking of other ships.Then the ship would move backwards if the anchor wasn't out. She said she was told they could sit in one spot using the engines with no anchor.
Japan is nowhere near Australia, though. Sailing from Sydney to Tokyo would take at least two weeks with few stops. And as you said, Japan's summers don't align with Australia's summers. April is a great time to visit Japan, though, because of the cherry blossoms. I guess Disney could keep a ship in Australia until mid-March, then move over to Tokyo for the month of April. The ship couldn't stay too long, though, since it'll take another few weeks to get over to Vancouver for the Alaska cruise season.1. Australia. There’s a fairly significant cruise industry there. P&O, Royal C., companies we don’t recognize. Sail up to Singapore Or start there. Disney Parks are in Tokyo (2) and Shanghai - and Hong Kong? During the year, do runs from various home ports. It’s not like just doing an Alaskan season - more like the move over to the West Coast on the Wonder - for a while Vancouver, then San Diego. Australian summers aren’t the same months as Japan, right?
We did it in 7 days with Uncle Sams Navy, but then we refueled and loaded provisions while underway. Long ride..Japan is nowhere near Australia, though. Sailing from Sydney to Tokyo would take at least two weeks with few stops.
Japan is nowhere near Australia, though. Sailing from Sydney to Tokyo would take at least two weeks with few stops. And as you said, Japan's summers don't align with Australia's summers. April is a great time to visit Japan, though, because of the cherry blossoms. I guess Disney could keep a ship in Australia until mid-March, then move over to Tokyo for the month of April. The ship couldn't stay too long, though, since it'll take another few weeks to get over to Vancouver for the Alaska cruise season.
Sailing to Hong Kong or Shanghai isn't likely, either. They're far away, China requires visas for most of Disney's audience, and at least for the foreseeable future, they aren't allowing in tourists, anyway.
It would be on the Wonder (not that it makes a huge difference)Yep, lots of long stretches of ocean. I remember that NZ and Australia appear close, but are 1200 or 1800 miles apart.
Spread out, but possible for a repositioning or Grand Voyage. A once in a lifetime cruise on the Magic. I’m thinking outside the box. Because we keep sailing around in these same boxes with only a few tweaks now and then. A girl can dream. It wasn’t my dog who started this one. It was my cat, just after he toyed (tortured) a Mouse.