We enjoy cruising but we like to add on a week in an interesting but restful location. We love getting out at all the ports but we also like a week or so of being on dry land.
Getting off the ship at ports often means an early start and one eye on the time for getting back. We enjoy this but are a bit lazy so we like a week of partly chilling and partly setting off and returning from our days out at any time we feel like.
The one thing I am not keen on is spending my evening having to chat to random strangers, with whom I may or may not have something in common, while I eat my dinner. The first cruise I ever went on was a bit like that, but I have found it no problem to get a table for two since then.
I feel a bit nervous about resuming cruising at the moment when I think of the people stranded in their cabins for weeks on end with food provided by people also crammed in on board. A recipe for disaster with this virus. So many died. I think [and hope] that with better testing now, if the virus did break out, they could people testing negative away from the ship to isolate elsewhere until it was definite they were clear. But who knows? I think that, in the light of the cruise industry's past experience, I would want to know what they have learned and if they have, at least in theory, strategies in place to move pdq.
I will be back to cruising, but I think next year at the earliest.