We didn't need to be downstairs at the hotel for our shuttle to the port until 11am, so we decided to sleep in and have a nice relaxing morning. Naturally, we were too excited to sleep and were up at the butt crack of dawn.
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window I flew like a flash, Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below. When, what to my wondering eyes should appear, But two red and black smokestacks, peeking out from behind that
Royal Caribbean Ship.
Crappy cell phone picture:
Slightly better zoomed picture from an actual camera:
Honey! Our boat's here!
When checking in yesterday, the lady at the front desk asked what floor I wanted to be on. Naturally, I asked for the highest they had (4th) hoping that we would have a decent view of the port. Turns out, Bambi and I weren't the only ones that were excited by those two little funnels playing peek-a-boo with us.
We dressed up - well, got dressed anyway - and headed down for breakfast. The best part about Country Inns & Suites? Besides the clean, comfortable rooms at a reasonable price, the chocolate chip cookies in the lobby, the free parking and shuttle to and from the port? Free Hot Breakfast! No "continental" breakfast of doughnuts and last week's fruit for us. Scrambled eggs, made to order waffles, biscuits & gravy, sausage, bacon, oatmeal, fruit, etc. They even had grits! Which, as a native and proud northerner, I completely stayed away from.
Unfortunately, the biker gangs and what appeared to be the Red Hat Society (minus the red hats) all had the same idea about breakfast at roughly the same time we did. The dining room was full, but not overly packed. We spotted a fairly large family just getting ready to leave so I casually wandered over to the table and marked it as my own. You can use your imagination as to how I accomplished that, but rest assured, no one else was going to sit there.
With breakfast taken care of, we had only one more thing to do before we got loaded into our taxi. Wait.
I had called the taxi company provided by the hotel the night before and scheduled us on the 11 am van to the port. So we wandered around the hotel. We checked out a little craft show they had in one of their conference rooms. We threw rocks into the pond out back hoping to agitate any alligators that were living in there. And then we waited some more.
All the while, there was a steady stream of shuttles and taxis in and out of the hotel, loading up luggage and people and making the 5 minute drive to the port. Finally, our chariot (well, a 15 passenger Ford Econoline van pulling a Haulmark trailer) arrived! We were loaded up with a few other families destined for other ships (suckers!) and headed off.
The first stop was Disney's terminal. We expected the family with the very excited teenage girl in the Donald Duck t-shirt to get off with us, but they were headed to another boat. OoooooKKKkaaaayyy.
We had a few minutes before we needed to be inside, so we took a quick walk around to check out the ship, Mickey, and the broomsticks.
Our first reaction? "Holy crap that's a big boat!"
(You're probably wondering what that flag is flying off the back of the ship. It's the Bahamian flag, where Disney (and a lot of other cruise lines) register their ships. If you register your ship in the US, you have to pay US taxes and abide by all US employment laws for anyone working on the ship. Cruise lines find countries that have much more - shall we say,
profit-friendly laws and register their ships there)
Once inside the terminal, you go through an airport TSA-style security checkpoint where no photographs are allowed, then head up the escalators to get checked in for the cruise.
It never occurred to me to get a few shots of the terminal building itself. It's massive, open, airy and very clean. Check in desks line the left hand side of the room, lounge seating and TVs showing Disney cartoons on the right.
We headed to the left to get checked in - a process that took maybe 10 minutes, even with an "Earning My Ears" cast member working the controls. We were given a card with a boarding number and were told to listen for the announcements and to board the ship when our number was called.
She then instructed us to head over to another corner of the room to get the kids registered for the Kid's Clubs. Each child got a waterproof electronic wristband that stayed on them for the entire cruise. Sensors around the ship read the band which not only checked them in and out of the Oceaneer's Club and Oceaneer's Lab, but also allows cast members to locate them anywhere on the ship. Lojack for children!
(You can see Evan's Lojack bracelet pretty good in this shot. Yes, Disney has a fancy name for the bracelet, but I don't remember what it is and calling it Lojack for kids just sounds funner)
While the kids waited and watched TV, we stood in Minnie Mouses's line. She was doing a meet & greet in the middle of the atrium. About 5 families from the front of the line, Minnie left. And was replace by Mickey! Score!
(Want to hear something freaky? See that shirt I'm wearing in the picture with Mickey? I'm wearing it now! Twilight Zone music: Doo Doo Dooo Dooo Doo Doo Doo.)
The other side of the model of the Disney Magic is open for inspection. I don't think it helps with "floating" much, which as I understand is a fairly important feature in a ship.
The entire floor of the terminal building is a map of the Bahamas and the Caribbean. Three of the most important areas are: Port Canaveral, Florida (sorry, no picture),
Disney's Private Island,
Castaway Cay:
... and finally, and possibly most importantly, Barry Island!
(Although with Disney's famous attention to detail, you'd think they'd get that spelling mistake fixed sooner or later, wouldn't you?)
Finally, our boarding number was called and we headed through the giant Mickey Mouse shaped tunnel. A final security check to make sure we were who we said we were, a picture or two for ship's photographers, and we were headed up the gang plank!
Luggage for 4,000 people takes a while to load.
As soon as we stepped onto the ship, we were greeted by a member of the crew and asked our names. They then escorted us a few feet into the atrium, and announced our arrival on the PA system. Yeah, we're that important. (OK, they do it for everybody, but it's still cool!)
The kids with the Admiral Donald statue in the Grand Atrium.
The Atrium is simply stunning. Huge, classical, ornate...think of any other fancy words like that and insert them
[here].
The purple and orange bunting was all part of their
Halloween on the High Seas celebration going on. We got on the ship on October 30 after all.
Coming Up Next: Lunch, Swimming, and the First of Many Parties!