hrhdhd
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 9, 2010
- Messages
- 1,516
Use them to board.Yup. Leaving for Italy next week. Bought my tests this week. I waited as long as I could, but not quite long enough.
Use them to board.Yup. Leaving for Italy next week. Bought my tests this week. I waited as long as I could, but not quite long enough.
Yes, we’ll use them for our sailing in September, if still required, but our Italy trip is a land trip so no testing for this one.Use them to board.
You didn’t see family or friends for 2 years? Was it worth it? SMH.After two years of hand washing, mask wearing and not seeing family or friends. Well now at least we get a 90 day positive exemption. And we’re 4x vaccinated.
....and they got Covid anyway.You didn’t see family or friends for 2 years? Was it worth it? SMH.
Maybe they or some family members are immunocompromised or have other high risk conditions. Maybe they have health anxiety. You don’t know. It may not have been the decision you made, but you don’t need to look down on their decision and make fun of them…You didn’t see family or friends for 2 years? Was it worth it? SMH.
my thoughts exactly don’t see cruises changing much till ports they visit changeNot until some of the countries they visit (eg: Bahamas) also drop the requirement. Maybe on a regional basis they do...
I am confused by your question. The only testing for Bahama cruises from the US was the Cruise test you needed to get on the boat to start your cruise ( there was the unvaccinated kid, 5 day screening on board for a while- not sure if that is still there). There was no testing to enter the US from any cruises. The recent US immigration testing was only for international AIR traffic. You could cross the border via car in Canada and not have to test.So, how does this currently work on cruises on the Bahama routes for example. When you return to the US, do you get tested on board?
This would be my worry as well. Right now, I can book an asymptomatic observed RAT at my local pharmacy - specifically for travel, but if the only people getting those tests are folks going on a cruise, then it's only a matter of time before the pharmacy phases out that service due to lack of demand.I just fear that as more places do not require testing - testsfor cruising will be become a rare and expensive commodity. Up until now most testing sites and also telehealth was driven by air traffic demand. Cruising is still a small number compared. I am seriously worried about my future cruises. Stress of testing pre-cruise in time on my own or paying a fortune at port and that stress.
This would be my worry as well. Right now, I can book an asymptomatic observed RAT at my local pharmacy - specifically for travel, but if the only people getting those tests are folks going on a cruise, then it's only a matter of time before the pharmacy phases out that service due to lack of demand.
Where I live we can also order at home observed tests from Switch health. I think I'll go buy those now, for our cruise in August. They cost about $80 for a two pack, which is about the same as the pharmacy test service.
Did the same thing... even googled to see if there was any news about removing the requirement. Did it 2 days too early.So glad I bought the $150 6-pack of e-med. grrrrrrrr
i was hoping they would drop the pre cruise testing, but this article suggests the cruise lines probably won’t drop that until spring 2023.
Good news .. happy for those with international flights! Today would have been the start of our Greek isles cruise, but we bailed 6 mths ago due to the testing regs then...to get to Italy, get on ship, and to get home. Oh well...at least our alternate plans start next week--vero beach, western Fantasy, bay lake tower, and boardwalk.
Hoping to do a Norway cruise next summer... hopefully testing will completely be a thing of the past by then.