I'm glad OP posted because not one DCL tip I've read talked about the buffet line situation! I would have thought the same thing OP did!
If you're talking about your personal item I totally get that and I think more people do that keeping them with them which we did that as well but mine was a purse basically and my husband's a small enough backpack, if you're talking about an actual carry I don't pack that sort of stuff in my carry on in case of gate checking, not to mention it gets abuse as is being wheeled about by us ourselves (I say that after using a personal item and small wheeled carry on for more than 2 weeks in Japan just now, it gets far more abuse that way in airports and normal walking around than the relatively short time at the port). We broke our checked luggage last year in Venice as we were making our way to the ship lol. They tagged the suitcase as fragile and it arrived with the wheel no more broken than it was to begin with and then they worked to temporarily fix it for us I think it was the second day of the cruise. That seems like for people who don't have anything but a wheeled carry on which these days is very rare from backpacks to totes to purses. (CPAP and that stuff is different, you do what you can with the size of the machine).@Mackenzie Click-Mickelson - since most choose to keep electronics and meds (and CPAP sleep apnea machines) in a ship carry-on, that one bag represents $ and necessities that would be too stressful to have to replace if damaged - if it could even be accomplished during the cruise.
The luggage checked with porters often ends up tossed around and crammed together.
So damage or loss of carryon is just too risky.
If you have ever seen the room stewards doing turn-over, you would see all cabin doors open and their moving quickly in and out as down the hallway to help other workers.
If a guest shows up, they have to stop, stand aside and wait. Like workers would do for royalty. Not my expectation - it’s what I have seen.
PAT was 1:15 and we got there right around noon, they still had the times listed on the lanes and the latest was 12:30, but I asked one of the workers if the times were being enforced and she said no.I’d like to know what time your PAT was. After a certain point, it becomes All Aboard for Boarding Groups - and I imagine that might be why they weren’t concerned your arrival time. As a first time cruiser, I’m guessing you had 12:30 or later?
Did you bring a car booster seat for your daughter? Or was one offered or provider by Cruise Control Transportation?
That stateroom ready at 1 pm was nice; a little earlier than I have gotten used to.
Was your rain from H/TS Oscar? Did your itinerary have to change?
Nice to hear you enjoyed yourselves - especially the 6 yo’s reaction!
Funny I know this on Fantasy so it was a big change on the Wish when they fill the plate and give it to you unless you have one from another area.. This bugged my husband that he couldn’t just grab a plate. I went with the flow.Cabanas is not one long line cafeteria style. It's line per area - if you just want bacon and eggs, you get in line at that area. You don't have to get in line where there is bread and stuff if you don't want that. That's why there are plates at the beginning of every station.
Yes, our family has not been happy with changes to kid’s clubs since reopening after Covid. DD is 14 and happy that she got to experience so much of her time with more activities, etc. Not happy with the changes to Edge/Vibe on the Dream and future Fantasy. So happy our next two cruises are on the Wonder and Magic when she will be 15 and 16. DS is 21 and so happy that he had the experiences he did before aging out.In the last year I've seen a decent amount of dissatisfaction with the Kids Club from age groups to what goes on in them. Counter-intuitive because DCL is marketed towards families but you're not alone based on all the posts I've seen on here and elsewhere regarding the Kids Club situation with DCL
PAT was 1:15 and we got there right around noon, they still had the times listed on the lanes and the latest was 12:30, but I asked one of the workers if the times were being enforced and she said no.
Cruise Control provided a booster for our daughter, you can request one when you make the reservation.
Not sure what brought the rain but the majority was on LC day, and the beaches were black flag most of the day so we couldn't even go in the water. No itinerary changes just moved the Mouse-qerade party indoors.
Yes, it may be low risk of loss or damage based on the sheer volume of luggage handled each cruise. But the willingness to take that risk all depends on how important is the item(s) in the carry-on. A change of clothes, toiletry kit and kindle might not be a big deal. A CPAP or medication or other medical item, and your bag happens to be the odd 0.1% that takes a swim, the stress and frustration of getting immediate replacements is really not something I'd care to deal with at the start of my cruise. Lugging it around is much safer. Unless you live with the absolute need for such items, you probably can't understand the fear of that loss.As far as damage or loss of a carry on. I think that's really a non-issue overall. That's not saying damage or loss couldn't occur but rather that we're talking about passengers en masse doing that to avoid something that is doubtful to really be the risk as opposed to thousands of people lugging their wheeled carry ons for potentially several hours.
I totally get what you're saying, I was talking about en masse though as in all the thousands of passengers choosing to do this in lieu of a different policy. I don't think there's that many people that worried about lost or damaged carry ons when it comes to this exact situation of embarking on a cruise ship such that if given the choice to drop their carry on off and have it taken to their room for them that they would in such great numbers choose not to. It works on other cruises lines so I'm not sure the "much safer" is really the case as opposed to personal preference (which I get).Yes, it may be low risk of loss or damage based on the sheer volume of luggage handled each cruise. But the willingness to take that risk all depends on how important is the item(s) in the carry-on. A change of clothes, toiletry kit and kindle might not be a big deal. A CPAP or medication or other medical item, and your bag happens to be the odd 0.1% that takes a swim, the stress and frustration of getting immediate replacements is really not something I'd care to deal with at the start of my cruise. Lugging it around is much safer. Unless you live with the absolute need for such items, you probably can't understand the fear of that loss.
Plus on DCL there is the issue that any beverages must be carried on. A case of water, soda, bottles of wine/beer, etc. cannot be checked per policy. Many guests use wheeled carry-ons for their beverages.
It is a choice on DCL. Guests can leave their carry-on with the porters along with any checked luggage.if given the choice to drop their carry on off and have it taken to their room for them
To which I already made reference to that in a prior comment, though that is exceedingly rarer especially for a cruise, totes are incredibly common usage of a personal item there. In any case of course not everyone is traveling with a personal item and a carry on. I'm talking about passengers en masse not an individual.Not everyone travels with a personal item AND a carry-on.
With all due respect I kinda think you're reading a bit too much into my personal situation as if all families of 4 think one way and all adults think another way. Or that all families of 4 are traveling one way and all adults are traveling another way. In my travels the families often have the tiniest of carry ons (because many like their children to wheel them), backpacks too are often small and it's the adults traveling with just adults packing the larger, bulkier items. And you wouldn't believe the sheer amount of luggage pictures people share on the FB page, it's a lot. And are families of 4 just traveling with one carry on meant for all 4 people? That would seem abnormal to me but JMO. But in any case that wouldn't be nearly the congestion issue but that wasn't how it was being presented to the thread in a prior comment.If a family of 4 each has their own backpack, it's taking up the same amount of space as the family using 1 carry-on sized piece of luggage. And probably harder to corral all the backpacks into a corner without them toppling and making more chaos to step around.
That's what prompted my comment to begin with because the conversations in the thread did NOT state that and stated the opposite. I wouldn't have even commented if it wasn't presented as if this was a policy. I was commenting on behalf of the customers saying there's got to be another way. The conversation did not start nor was intended to be about what people personally choose to do in lieu of what they are required to do because there's not an alternative option. You do you absolutely but you can't do you because the company says otherwise is totally different.It is a choice on DCL. Guests can leave their carry-on with the porters along with any checked luggage.