If you get a notice to change your clock before going to bed - ship’s time is changing.Cruising out of Galveston in January, "Ship's time" will remain same as Galveston time, right? Even though time in ports of call is different?
Thanks! We cruised with another line with ports of call in Belize, Honduras and Mexico a few years ago, and they made a big deal of there being an hour's difference between ship's time and port time, with the ship being an hour earlier. Sure enough, we were watching from our dockside balcony as several parties came running up thinking they were just in time for onboard, when really they had almost missed the ship!If you get a notice to change your clock before going to bed - ship’s time is changing.
That usually is done to match port time. Less confusion for returning passengers.
They have signs up as you exit the ship. And the Cruise Director makes an announcement of these things in the WDTheater the night before and overhead in the morning, also on the ship show on TV in the morning.
Thanks! We cruised with another line with ports of call in Belize, Honduras and Mexico a few years ago, and they made a big deal of there being an hour's difference between ship's time and port time, with the ship being an hour earlier. Sure enough, we were watching from our dockside balcony as several parties came running up thinking they were just in time for onboard, when really they had almost missed the ship!
Not in our experience on DCL cruises. Ship’s time has always adjusted to port or local time (even for sea days on the ocean crossings).Cruising out of Galveston in January, "Ship's time" will remain same as Galveston time, right? Even though time in ports of call is different?
Those ports are in the Atlantic time zone; The Fantasy is out of PC which is in the Eastern time zone. The Atlantic time zone doesn't "spring ahead" so the two time zones are on the same time when daylight saving time is in effect.We didn’t have one two weeks ago on the San Juan/St Maarten itinerary