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Going on a cruise, what is it really like?

(115 Posts)
woodenspoon Sat 18-Jan-25 10:49:10

We have been thinking about going on a cruise. We have never been before.

Last night, we watched Susan Calman followed by the Good Ship Murder. Are these realistic portrayals of what it is like on a cruise ship? Being herded together, sunbeds all lined up and packed like sardines, entertainment nights etc. Or are we getting a wrong impression? As it is, we don’t think it’s for us if it’s like those we saw last night.

Who has been on one, which company, and what would you recommend?

Cath9 Mon 03-Feb-25 18:36:11

My late husband and myself went on one of the Cunard ships which I really loved although it was many years ago when the ship had only been on one voyage before our cruise. It was small, quiet and the food was fantastic but we did go off during the Christmas period

NoveltyDocs Thu 23-Jan-25 14:14:37

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Scotsnana Tue 21-Jan-25 20:38:28

Been on ten cruises. Favourite is Seabourn…but expensive. Its amazing, small ship fantastic food. Would not recommend NCL (huge and noisy) Princess (just after covid, very miserable staff, poor food), worst was P and O. Packed ship, noisy pool area, terrible food. Just back from a Celebrity cruise. Very old ship, poor entertainment. We have come to the conclusion we only enjoy smaller ships (600 guests or less). Fed up of having to reserve sunbeds at dawn and blaring music round the pool!

silverlining48 Tue 21-Jan-25 18:35:08

We have had about 5 cruises . 4 with Fred Olsen which were excellent and the last one with a much bigger P & O which was glitzier but on balance we still preferred Fred.

LtEve Tue 21-Jan-25 18:05:22

Just coming to the end of my 3rd day on our Northern Lights cruise, so far we haven’t been crammed in nor forced to take part in anything, evening entertainment isn’t our thing so we haven’t been but nor have we been bored. No butlinesque feeling either. Our ship is a smaller one, it holds just over a thousand and is not full so plenty of space.

JdotJ Tue 21-Jan-25 15:46:40

MissAdventure

I wouldn't risk it, in case Jane Macdonald was on there. smile

Just joking.

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

TwinLolly Tue 21-Jan-25 15:06:19

It depends on what you want out of it. A large ship can be busy with lots of people but there is much more on offer in the way if restaurants and entertainment. Smaller ships have everything too but fewer people. A friend works for Holland America Line but prefers working on the smaller ships in the fleet. Another friend works on expedition style ships. They are educational and one does landings in places that bigger cruise ships don't go to, rather than going from port to port (and getting off and going on tours). E.g. visiting Grytviken in South Georgia and visiting Shackleton's grave and the former whaling station. Basically on the expedition style ones you see a lot of nature.

All the best!

JamesandJon33 Tue 21-Jan-25 11:48:30

Middle, cabin , middle deck plus balcony……our favourite too. P&O have put their prices for these cabins up by £1000, last time we looked.

MissAdventure Tue 21-Jan-25 10:17:12

I hope you have a fabulous time. smile

woodenspoon Tue 21-Jan-25 10:07:39

Just a quick note to say, thank you all very much for your responses. They have all been very helpful to me and we will be doing a starter cruise this year. Probably just a short one but it will be a start.
I really appreciate all of you taking the time to give your opinions and advice, good and bad experiences, all of which will help us booking ours.
Thanks so much.

Goldieoldie15 Tue 21-Jan-25 10:01:10

Silver Seas: crossing the Panama Canal, Viking: Amazon and river cruises. Absolutely superb. You only get what you pay for. I’d hate to be on one of those gigantic floating tower blocks. Must be so impersonal. One thing that puzzles me: why so many object to formal wear? You get to wear pretty party frocks (or better) and men in dinner jackets. Splendid adventure! What’s not to like.

escaped Tue 21-Jan-25 09:21:31

Those last 2 posts are good advice in choosing a cabin. Thank you.

Aveline Tue 21-Jan-25 09:10:38

Oh yes! Middle cabin, middle deck for me every time. Having a balcony is best too.

nanna8 Tue 21-Jan-25 08:50:37

I get seasick from time to time but it doesn’t last long and I carry seasick tablets with me just in case. I went through a really big tropical cyclone once ( 12 metre waves!) in a very fancy balcony cabin at the back of the ship. It leaked and I was thinking of the Titanic. That was not nice and now I tend to try to avoid cyclone season and always, always get a balcony cabin in the middle where you don’t feel much at all.

Aveline Tue 21-Jan-25 07:53:32

We never expect to be entertained all day on board. I love sea days. I read and people watch. DH enjoys taking pics with his ancient camera and always seems to meet kindred spirits. He enjoys the lectures too.
I do suffer from mal de mer but just stay lying down in the cabin. It soon passes.
Key things for us 1) small ship, no crowding 2) a nice cabin 3) good food whenever we feel like it 4) no noisy entertainment/end of the pier type shows 5) company if we feel like it.
6) good organisation.
Viking Ocean certainly ticked all our boxes

grandmac Mon 20-Jan-25 20:29:54

Princess and Royal Caribbean are both great, didn’t like P & O as much. But love cruising, no airports, no luggage restrictions, no worrying about where to find that evening’s dinner, no worries about safety. We think it was better pre Covid but have just booked to Greenland and Iceland via Cornwall and Ireland. What other holiday would give us that?

escaped Mon 20-Jan-25 20:09:35

So if the weather is really rough, and people would be ill, do they wait until things calm down before leaving port? Or would the whole trip then get out of sync?

Yahmeus Mon 20-Jan-25 19:58:17

I went on my first and last recently, Royal Caribbean. I personally hated all of it, was seasick the whole time and the crowds and noise really got to me. That’s just me, my friends love that stuff.

fluttERBY123 Mon 20-Jan-25 19:15:38

We have done several good viking river cruises and then tried one not river and never again. Too many people, a bit grubby, days at sea a bit boring.

joyoga Mon 20-Jan-25 18:35:54

We enjoyed Norwegian Fjiords with P&O from Southampton some while ago. Great to sail into a different fjiord each day. There were 2 formal meals , DJ required but optional, buffets fine, food seemed to go on all day! We booked trips in advance. I don't think we would have been keen on a larger boat. But decided it was the best way to see the fjiords

MaggsMcG Mon 20-Jan-25 18:12:19

You sort of get what you pay for. Even on the cheaper cruises you don't need to be herded. I quite like it myself. However you get a daily Newssheet on most cruises so you can chose what you want to do or not. I would say that on the larger ships the sun loungers are all like sardines especially by the pool but you can often find a quieter space if you don't need to be by the pool. Also there is almost always plenty of space on port days when everyone else gets off for anything from 3-6 hours.

Bazza Mon 20-Jan-25 17:35:27

We did a Silver Sea cruise some years ago and it was superb. Then decided with friends we would try a cheaper option with P&O. Never again. As with most things you get what you pay for, although I know many who have loved P&O, so each to their own. Dun cruisn’ now, but glad I had the opportunity to try it.

Spanisheyes Mon 20-Jan-25 17:25:10

My friend and I went on a Riviera Travel Cruise earlier this year, it was awful. Got on the ship at 8pm after travelling all day, then we were expected to be down for breakfast at 5.45am, we believed it was for the people going on the excursion. When we went down for breakfast at 8am, there wasn’t any. The manager told us that breakfast was at 5.45am, I said but we and lots of others were not going on the excursion so why would we need to be up at that time. When I complained about it to Riviera, they said we should have gone down for breakfast at 5.34am😳. Never go with them again.

M0nica Mon 20-Jan-25 17:19:43

MiniMoon

Cunard, not as posh as you would imagine. Two formal nights on our cruise, but they aren't compulsory, you can eat dinner in the buffet. You don't have to take part in any of the activities or excursions if you prefer not to. We were on Queen Mary 2.
We went on a 7 night Norwegian fjords cruise with a company that no longer exists. Very relaxed, we loved every minute.
Do give cruising a try, it spoilt us for any other type of holiday.

We did exactly the same cruise, although we booked direct.

Wonderful food, nice cabins, lots of things to do - and actually I got quite bored because I am very bad at being contained within one establishment. I wanted to eat out and walk out at will.

Do not take this as a criticsm. DH and DD loved it but if you are the kind of people, who like to go out spontaneously, explore local cuisines. get in the car and drive to visit remote small historic sites - and I am one of those people - it is not for you.

Cabowich Mon 20-Jan-25 16:37:56

We went on a cruise once - never again for me!

Butlins on a Boat.

Admittedly, it wasn't one of the cruise companies you pay tens of thousands of pounds for, but still.

Funnily enough, we know somebody who went on the same cruise and loved it.

So, you get what you pay for, and make sure the entertainment fits your preferences.