Log In | Customer Support
Home Book Travel Destinations Hotels Cruises Air Travel Community Search:

Search

Search CruisePage

Book a Cruise
- CruiseServer
- Search Caribbean
- Search Alaska
- Search Europe
- 888.700.TRIP

Book Online
Cruise
Air
Hotel
Car
Cruising Area:

Departure Date:
Cruise Length:

Price Range:

Cruise Line:

Buy Stuff

Reviews
- Ship Reviews
- Dream Cruise
- Ship of the Month
- Reader Reviews
- Submit a Review
- Millennium Cruise

Community
- Photo Gallery
- Join Cruise Club
- Cruise News
- Cruise News Archive
- Cruise Views
- Cruise Jobs
- Special Needs
- Maritime Q & A
- Sea Stories

Industry
- New Ship Guide
- Former Ships
- Port Information
- Inspection Scores
- Shipyards
- Ship Cams
- Ship Tracking
- Freighter Travel
- Man Overboard List
- Potpourri

Shopping
- Shirts & Hats
- Books
- Videos

Contact Us
- Reservations
- Mail
- Feedback
- Suggest-a-Site
- About Us

Reader Sites
- PamM's Site
- Ernst's Site
- Patsy's Site
- Ben's Site
- Carlos' Site
- Chris' Site
- SRead's Site


Cruise Travel - Cruise Talk
Cruise Talk Cruise News

Welcome to Cruise Talk the Internet's most popular discussion forum dedicated to cruising. Stop by Cruise Talk anytime to post a message or find out what your fellow passengers and industry insiders are saying about a particular ship, cruise line or destination.

>>> Reader Reviews
>>> CruisePage.com Photo Gallery
>>> Join Our Cruise Club.

Latest News...Carnival Corporation today announced that 100% of its ships across the global fleet are equipped with Starlink's high-speed, low-latency global internet connectivity. The completed installation further enhances Carnival Corporation's onboard experience for its guests and crew to provide even faster service, greater capacity, and more reliable Wi-Fi on its fleet of 90-plus ships across its portfolio...

Latest News...Villa Vie Residences, a leading innovator in modern-day residential cruising, proudly announces the new Endless Horizons program, transforming the concept of retirement for adventurers who dream of traveling the world without the hassle of planning or ongoing expenses. With a one-time payment of $299,999 USD for single occupancy and $499,999 USD for double occupancy,...

Latest News...Setting sail today for her debut season from Southampton, Celebrity Cruises’ award-winning ship, Celebrity Apex, is turning heads as she becomes the first ship in the revolutionary Edge Series to call the United Kingdom home. Celebrity Apex will kick off her European season from Southampton with an eight-night Norwegian Fjords cruise. This serene sailing will visit idyllic locations...

More Cruise News...


Post New Topic  Post A Reply
my profile | register | search | faq | forum home
  next oldest topic   next newest topic
» Cruise Talk   » Cruise Ships   » P&O's Oceana Turned Away from St. Thomas (Page 1)

UBBFriend: Email this page to someone!  
This topic is comprised of pages:  1  2 
 
Author Topic: P&O's Oceana Turned Away from St. Thomas
joe at travelpage
Administrator
Member # 622

posted 01-30-2004 05:27 PM      Profile for joe at travelpage   Author's Homepage   Email joe at travelpage   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
From the Virgin Islands Daily News

quote:

Ship forced to leave V.I. for not providing passenger data

By TIM FIELDS

Wednesday, January 28th 2004

ST. THOMAS - The U.S. Coast Guard ordered the Oceana cruise ship out of St. Thomas Harbor on Tuesday morning after the ship failed to provide a list of the names and citizenship of its 2,870 passengers and crew.

While the ship's tenders, which were full of passengers, did reach the waterfront Tuesday morning, the Coast Guard sent them all back to the ship, Coast Guard spokesman Lt. John Reinert said.

"The ship did not have the information required, so they had to leave the harbor," he said.

The company's failure to provide the required information kept passengers from coming ashore and cost local businesses more than $425,000, based on per passenger and crew spending estimates compiled by the Virgin Islands Bureau of Economic Research.

This is the second time Oceana, which is based in England, has failed to provide required manifest information to the Coast Guard, Reinert said. It received a written warning in May.

The P&O Cruises ship docked at 7:45 a.m. and left at 12:30 p.m. for Antigua, the ship's next scheduled port.

"We have not enjoyed a day on St. Thomas today," said Bronwen Griffith, a spokesperson for P&O Cruises.

While Griffith would not confirm the ship received a previous warning, she said the Coast Guard forced the ship to leave because it was not satisfied with the ship's ledger information.

Oceana and its 1,970 passengers and 900 crew were nearing the end of a 15-day Caribbean cruise, and St. Thomas was the only stop in U.S. waters, she said.

Since Oceana visited St. Thomas in December with no problems, Griffith would not comment on why the company failed to deliver the names and citizenship information to the Coast Guard on Tuesday.

"We are taking all measures to fulfill the requirements of all our ports of call," Griffith said.

Oceana and another P&O ship, Oriana, average two to three calls per year to St. Thomas, said West Indian Co. Chief Executive Officer Edward Thomas.

Oriana is scheduled to call on St. Thomas on March 13, and Oceana will return to St Thomas on March 23.

Foreign cruise ships calling on U.S. ports must electronically submit the names and citizenship of their passengers and crew to the National Vessel Movement Center, which is part of the Coast Guard.

The center sends the information to the Coast Guard's Ship Arrival Notification System, where local branches can verify the ship's information.

"The Oceana did not have this information in our system when they arrived," Reinert said.

Foreign ships must provide this information 96 hours before arriving at port, and domestic vessels must provide the information 24 hours before arrival.

The notification has been required since November 2001 under a mandate by the U.S. Homeland Security Department.

While the regulations have been in effect several years, the Coast Guard had been issuing only warnings when ships failed to comply - not turning them away.

"This action is part of an enforcement stance were taking now, and it's to the point now where everyone should be on the same page," he said. "We've offered them a grace period to get used to the requirements."

With the new enforcement plan in place, turning away ships from the territory should not pose a threat to the local tourism industry because nearly all vessels calling on St. Thomas comply, Reinert said.

In the last year, the Coast Guard has issued warnings to only two other cruise lines calling on St. Thomas - Pullmantur and Norwegian Cruise Lines.

Both companies are now providing that information consistently, he said.

With each cruise ship passenger spending an average $175 and each crew member spending an average $90 per visit, losing Oceana for a day is unfortunate, but the ship could have stayed, Thomas said.

The Coast Guard and WICO offered to allow the ship to dock once P&O provided the information. Thomas said he had arranged to have the ship dock at Havensight at 6 p.m. and stay until midnight, once the manifest was processed.

"The captain could have anchored 12 miles out and come back later on. He may have been mad because he was forced to leave," Thomas said.



Posts: 29976 | From: Great Falls, Virginia | Registered: A Long Time Ago!  |  IP: Logged
Grant
First Class Passenger
Member # 1000

posted 01-31-2004 12:19 PM      Profile for Grant   Email Grant   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
This kind of thing has gone way too far, to the point that it makes no sense. If I were in a position to make itinerary decisions, I would by pass St. Thomas, St Croix and San Juan rather than submit to this stupidity. There are plenty of other islands, and I strongly believe that British security screening of passengers boarding their vessels is adequate to provide a safe cruise environment.
Posts: 834 | From: Victoria, BC, Canada | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Landlocked Cruiser
First Class Passenger
Member # 4297

posted 01-31-2004 12:27 PM      Profile for Landlocked Cruiser   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Grant:
British security screening of passengers boarding their vessels is adequate to provide a safe cruise environment.

Perhaps it is, but what's so wrong or difficult with providing a passenger/crew list? And I don't think it is the cruise environment they are worried about.

[ 01-31-2004: Message edited by: Landlocked Cruiser ]


Posts: 253 | From: Wichita | Registered: Dec 2003  |  IP: Logged
gohaze
First Class Passenger
Member # 586

posted 01-31-2004 12:31 PM      Profile for gohaze   Email gohaze   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Grant.....she had already had a written warning back in May. Plus it's supposed to be submitted 96 hours prior. SO what makes the Purser on there so almighty important that he obviously thinks he doesn't have to bother? He should be in steerage on the next flight back - FIRED.

.....peter


Posts: 1909 | From: Vancouver.BC | Registered: Sep 99  |  IP: Logged
PamM
First Class Passenger
Member # 2127

posted 01-31-2004 01:38 PM      Profile for PamM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I really don't know what to make of this. There are other reports too... but nothing on the P&O Connections site from pax aboard.
Why were the pax on tenders already? the ship must have intially been cleared.
The decision to turn the ship away came from San Juan, not St Thomas, SJ controls St Thomas. A P&O spokes person in one report said the paperwork was "not accepted".

St Thomas were not pleased with the decision either and wanted the ship back later.. some chance.

Seems as if something was submitted and initially OK'd, but on referring on to SJ, they declined it?
The whole thing is daft imo.. Nitty Gritty and as bad as flying into the US these days.. [the EU agreed credit card details may be submitted as demanded by the US, prior to departure on airlines, so people are not going], Tourism must be way down.

Other cruise lines [Olsen] aren't even bothering to call re the hassles encountered in 2002. Maybe P&O will move on too. Interesingly, Oceana's cruises this month were originally scheduled in the 1st brochure to start/end in FLL... at some point it was changed to Barbados. Wonder why?

Pam


Posts: 12176 | From: Cambridge, UK | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
CGT
First Class Passenger
Member # 3531

posted 01-31-2004 01:44 PM      Profile for CGT        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
They can comply or not. If not, they can stay away. Fine. That goes for people who don't like the US-VISIT program either. Tough.

Anyway, even those from countries that are a part of the visa waiver program will not be exempt forever. You will need a biometric passport to enter or you won't be allowed in. Eventually, it applies to EVERYONE.

[ 01-31-2004: Message edited by: CGT ]


Posts: 2760 | From: New York, New York, USA | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
Grant
First Class Passenger
Member # 1000

posted 01-31-2004 05:19 PM      Profile for Grant   Email Grant   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
From reading other comments regarding this matter, it seems that P & O presented the material on time but in a manner not satisfactory to US officials. It seems as if the ship's documents were kept and presented in a manner that has always been followed by all British ships, and that the problem was that it was done in the manner the US required. The documents were present, they contained all the necessary information, were in the style followed for decades, were in the manner that ports throughout the world required and were acceptable to the rest of the world. The purser's office also held for inspection 100% of the passenger's and crew's passports. Not good enough-too bad, raise the anchor and head for friendlier shores.
Posts: 834 | From: Victoria, BC, Canada | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
CGT
First Class Passenger
Member # 3531

posted 01-31-2004 05:21 PM      Profile for CGT        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Grant:
From reading other comments regarding this matter, it seems that P & O presented the material on time but in a manner not satisfactory to US officials. It seems as if the ship's documents were kept and presented in a manner that has always been followed by all British ships, and that the problem was that it was done in the manner the US required. The documents were present, they contained all the necessary information, were in the style followed for decades, were in the manner that ports throughout the world required and were acceptable to the rest of the world. The purser's office also held for inspection 100% of the passenger's and crew's passports. Not good enough-too bad, raise the anchor and head for friendlier shores.

Bye bye.


Posts: 2760 | From: New York, New York, USA | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
PamM
First Class Passenger
Member # 2127

posted 01-31-2004 05:53 PM      Profile for PamM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Thanks Grant.. that reasoning ties in; the ship was there for 5hrs, and apparently some pax were in a tender for 40 mins before being refused permission to unload. Then they started to sing Rule Brittania and the immigration officials when leaving the ship asked for an escort. Perhaps the old dears had their handbags at the ready
P&O had submitted the paperwork... if the t's & i's had been dotted and crossed instead of crossed and dotted perhaps the ptb could have said something in the 96hours they had.
Pam

Posts: 12176 | From: Cambridge, UK | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Waynaro
First Class Passenger
Member # 3484

posted 01-31-2004 05:57 PM      Profile for Waynaro   Email Waynaro   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I wonder what local businesses thought about loosing one ship's money...
Posts: 6108 | From: Vallejo,CA : California Maritime Academy!!! | Registered: Nov 2002  |  IP: Logged
jsea
First Class Passenger
Member # 3816

posted 01-31-2004 05:58 PM      Profile for jsea     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Grant:
From reading other comments regarding this matter, it seems that P & O presented the material on time but in a manner not satisfactory to US officials.

They had already received a written warning that they were doing it improperly. It's brazen of them to think they can continue doing it improperly and still make port calls. When I visit a foreign country if I don't give the authorities the information they want in the manner they desire you won't see me getting in either! And the U.S. gave P&O a second chance (actually a third if you consider their first written warning) but they apparently were too offended to correct their error.

I'm going to Brazil at the end of February and you won't see me making a fuss over fingerprints and photographs. If Brazil wants it I'll give it to them. In a way, I see what the P&O captain did similar to what that American Airlines pilot did to Brazilian officials in Sao Paulo a few days ago. Shame on both of them.


Posts: 644 | From: Texas | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
Maasdam
First Class Passenger
Member # 3858

posted 01-31-2004 06:20 PM      Profile for Maasdam   Author's Homepage   Email Maasdam   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I think the controle by America off people who want to travel to America is out off control. It have nothing to do with terror. I believe that whene a terrorist want to do something wrong he will do it. And fore that annybody even Americans cane be a terrorist.

local trade saw almost 500.000 dollars off income sailing away i imagen how long it will take before the American government will chance there polici.


Posts: 4695 | From: Rotterdam home of the tss. Rotterdam. | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
Commodore
First Class Passenger
Member # 1575

posted 01-31-2004 06:34 PM      Profile for Commodore     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I'm afraid our Government, mainly the President and the Department of Homeland Security, as well as the poor intelligence warning of attacks every 6 weeks are not going to make American travel any easier. We have gone from "we have nothing to fear but fear itself" to Threat Level: orange and wrap your hopes in plastic and duck tape. If it wasn't so sad it would be hillarious.
Posts: 1106 | From: New Jersey | Registered: Sep 2000  |  IP: Logged
CGT
First Class Passenger
Member # 3531

posted 01-31-2004 07:09 PM      Profile for CGT        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Commodore:
as well as the poor intelligence warning of attacks every 6 weeks

I'm no fan of GWB but what makes you think the intelligence when they raise the threat level is "poor"?

[ 01-31-2004: Message edited by: CGT ]


Posts: 2760 | From: New York, New York, USA | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
Commodore
First Class Passenger
Member # 1575

posted 01-31-2004 07:14 PM      Profile for Commodore     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Well, we wind up doing things such as delaying flights, which just wasted time as it turned out, but somehow the "shoebomber" managed to sneak through. Not that all of it's bad, just that I don't have too much faith in it after all it's failures in the very recent past.
Posts: 1106 | From: New Jersey | Registered: Sep 2000  |  IP: Logged
CGT
First Class Passenger
Member # 3531

posted 01-31-2004 07:53 PM      Profile for CGT        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Commodore:
Well, we wind up doing things such as delaying flights, which just wasted time as it turned out, but somehow the "shoebomber" managed to sneak through. Not that all of it's bad, just that I don't have too much faith in it after all it's failures in the very recent past.

Delayed flights to give the plane and passengers an extra once over when threats are detected are not a "waste of time."

Richard Reid, the "shoebomber" got through in Paris, and as of yet, shoes were not something being checked out. That was over two years ago, I might add, just three months after 9/11.

As for "failuers" in the recent past, I guess if they didn't cancel one of the flights that were warned about and it blew up you would consider that an intelligence "success"? Does it not occur to you that flights that have been canceled or delayed have been security and intelligence "successes" because those planes and passengers are still with us today???

[ 01-31-2004: Message edited by: CGT ]


Posts: 2760 | From: New York, New York, USA | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
Steve Read (sread)
First Class Passenger
Member # 788

posted 01-31-2004 08:23 PM      Profile for Steve Read (sread)   Author's Homepage   Email Steve Read (sread)   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I have no problem with security measures -- in my world, everyone's DNA would be registered at birth and we'd wear a barcode on our arms -- but it seems to be going unnecessarily over the top in some areas.

The P&O Purser definitely needs a slap -- "contact counselling" -- for not doing his job properly. But was an incorrectly-completed form adequate reason to turn away a shipload of mostly-elderly passengers, all of whom will have been screened several times during the air/sea journey, and their thousands of pounds of spending money?

I have great confidence in MI-6, CIA and whoever else is doing real work going after the bad guys. But I have little faith in pompous paper-pushing officials -- and they're on either side of the Pond -- ruining holidays and damaging the cruise industry and local economies because i's weren't dotted and t's not crossed. How does that help the war on terror?


Posts: 926 | From: Locksbottom, Kent, England | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
Ocean Liners
First Class Passenger
Member # 4013

posted 01-31-2004 09:14 PM      Profile for Ocean Liners     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Does anyone have comment or article about the Shipping Agent in St. Thomas?

[ 01-31-2004: Message edited by: Ocean Liners ]


Posts: 4502 | From: Japan | Registered: Jul 2003  |  IP: Logged
Commodore
First Class Passenger
Member # 1575

posted 01-31-2004 10:53 PM      Profile for Commodore     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I'm sorry I didn't mean that the intelligence is rotten, so much as *some* measures a bit too much, and that the government creates unneeded panic with terror alerts and warnings about almanacs,etc.
Posts: 1106 | From: New Jersey | Registered: Sep 2000  |  IP: Logged
Grant
First Class Passenger
Member # 1000

posted 01-31-2004 11:34 PM      Profile for Grant   Email Grant   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Indeed the problem lies with the "pompous paper pushing officials" rather than with those charged with the serious task of protecting the interests of everyone. It seems the more stripes you place on officals uniforms, the more gold braid or brass buttons, or in America the more gum they chew, the more they resemble border crossing guards in the tin pot third world nations of Africa. Why, if there were slight problems with the completed forms was the ship not told in the 4, count them 4, days from the time the forms were submitted to shore side officials until the ship docked. Good on the old gals for Rule Britannia; I would have joined in and maybe even pelted them with tomatos from the pool side buffet.
Posts: 834 | From: Victoria, BC, Canada | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Commodore
First Class Passenger
Member # 1575

posted 02-01-2004 12:08 AM      Profile for Commodore     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I don't think the passengers should've been anti-American or disrespectful. Surely both sides at least are partly to blame.
Posts: 1106 | From: New Jersey | Registered: Sep 2000  |  IP: Logged
Ocean Liners
First Class Passenger
Member # 4013

posted 02-01-2004 02:14 AM      Profile for Ocean Liners     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Here's an article concerning the ship's V.I. agent.

and to see Full article St. Thomas Source

quote:

Princess Cruises is the U.S. division of P & O Cruises. The Oceana has a maximum passenger capacity of 2,250. Edward Thomas, president of The West Indian Co., the ship's V.I. agent, was very disappointed at the turn of events. "Unfortunately, that ship didn't have its paperwork in place for the federal authorities," he said. "They are required to present documentation, and this problem has occurred before with the ship and they got a verbal warning from the Coast Guard, so they will take action this time.

"We had hoped the ship would go out of the harbor and get its paperwork squared away and come back, Thomas said, "but the captain elected to leave. I guess he was just annoyed. He said he is not coming back."

Thomas rued the lost revenue the ship represented. "It was carrying 1,970 passengers with about 700 crew," he said. "And one of the ship's tenders was approaching the waterfront when it was told to turn back. I can imagine the passengers' frustration."

When asked why the ship didn't have its paperwork in order, Thomas replied, "It's a British ship, and it operates directly out of British headquarters, so I'm not sure they were aware of the rules. It's not like Royal Caribbean or Carnival Cruise Lines, who are regular callers."

In contrast, Thomas reflected on Saturday's call from the Queen Mary 2, a day when 11,000 cruise ship visitors came to our shores without any paperwork problems.

Although the lost revenue from the Oceana is troubling, Thomas said he looked forward to Wednesday's arrival of eight ships.


[ 02-01-2004: Message edited by: Ocean Liners ]


Posts: 4502 | From: Japan | Registered: Jul 2003  |  IP: Logged
Maasdam
First Class Passenger
Member # 3858

posted 02-01-2004 04:45 AM      Profile for Maasdam   Author's Homepage   Email Maasdam   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Commodore:
I don't think the passengers should've been anti-American or disrespectful. Surely both sides at least are partly to blame.


That both sides have a sertain blame to this all i agree. buth things must be split.
After 9/11 the American government take so called security mesures that insulted not only the rights of the Americans buth also the same rights off many people around the world. Some European governments the Brittish, also the Dutch falowed as iff there where blind. Not listening to there own poeple. What you now seeing is that specialy fore the British poeple is that they begin to hate there own government. Here in the Netherlands we find that oure Premier is to pro Bush and cooperate to much with his polici so he's not populair (we don't think his home polici in general is good)

So it is obvious that what happend with the Oceania that the passengers will showed there feelings toward the American boarder control. So iff singin Rule Brittania is not showing respect to America.

Where was the respect frome the flight crew in Brasil.


Posts: 4695 | From: Rotterdam home of the tss. Rotterdam. | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
PamM
First Class Passenger
Member # 2127

posted 02-01-2004 05:50 AM      Profile for PamM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Oceana had no problem when she called in Dec, so why should Jan be any different. I wonder if this has a petty, belting up, something to do with Barbados, the fact that she now starts/ends her cruises there instead of FLL, and that from 1 Mar? US citizens will require passports for Barbados. It's amazing how pedantic and nitty people can become.
Dealing with a ship full of people with passports must be a heck of a lot simpler than dealing with a ship full of people with all manner of birth certificates & "other" ID.
Pam

Posts: 12176 | From: Cambridge, UK | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Beezo
First Class Passenger
Member # 1505

posted 02-01-2004 09:22 AM      Profile for Beezo   Author's Homepage   Email Beezo   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
LOOK, IT'S A POLICY THAT MUST BE FOLLOWED BY THE US GOVERNMENT. Whether you like it or not, they need to have the paperwork present. Yes, I would be upset if I was on that cruise, but I am EXTREMELY pleased with how it was dealt. NO FAVORITES.
As for the part stated that it is a British Company, and not like Carnival or Royal Caribbean, that is even more B.S., they recieved a ***WRITTEN WARNING*** At that point they should have IMMEDIATELY change proceedures to make sure it is done the next time. SHAME ON P&0...

~Brian

P.S. As for the people who are making political comments against the US, who don't even live here, STOP, its a completely different perpspective when the threats are against you.


Posts: 865 | From: Massachusetts, USA | Registered: Aug 2000  |  IP: Logged

All times are ET (US)
This topic is comprised of pages:  1  2 
 

Post New Topic  Post A Reply Close Topic    Move Topic    Delete Topic next oldest topic   next newest topic
Hop To:

Contact Us | CruisePage

Infopop Corporation
Ultimate Bulletin BoardTM 6.1.0.3

VACATION & CRUISE SPECIALS
Check out these great deals from CruisePage.com

Royal Caribbean - Bahamas Getaway from $129 per person
Description: Experience the beautiful ports of Nassau and Royal Caribbean's private island - CocoCay on a 3-night Weekend Getaway to the Bahamas. Absorb everything island life has to offer as you snorkel with the stingrays, parasail above the serene blue waters and walk the endless white sand beaches. From Miami.
Carnival - 4-Day Bahamas from $229 per person
Description: Enjoy a wonderful 3 Day cruise to the fun-loving playground of Nassau, Bahamas. Discover Nassau, the capital city as well as the cultural, commercial and financial heart of the Bahamas. Meet the Atlantic Southern Stingrays, the guardians of Blackbeard's treasure.
NCL - Bermuda - 7 Day from $499 per person
Description: What a charming little chain of islands. Walk on pink sand beaches. Swim and snorkel in turquoise seas. Take in the historical sights. They're stoically British and very quaint. Or explore the coral reefs. You can get to them by boat or propelled by fins. You pick. Freestyle Cruising doesn't tell you where to go or what to do. Sure, you can plan ahead, or decide once onboard. After all, it's your vacation. There are no deadlines or must do's.
Holland America - Eastern Caribbean from From $599 per person
Description: White sand, black sand, talcum soft or shell strewn, the beaches of the Eastern Caribbean invite you to swim, snorkel or simply relax. For shoppers, there's duty-free St. Thomas, the Straw Market in Nassau, French perfume and Dutch chocolates on St. Maarten. For history buffs, the fascinating fusion of Caribbean, Latin and European cultures. For everyone, a day spent on HAL's award winning private island Half Moon Cay.
Celebrity - 7-Night Western Mediterranean from $549 per person
Description: For centuries people have traveled to Europe to see magnificent ruins, art treasures and natural wonders. And the best way to do so is by cruise ship. Think of it - you pack and unpack only once. No wasted time searching for hotels and negotiating train stations. Instead, you arrive at romantic ports of call relaxed, refreshed and ready to take on the world.
Holland America - Alaska from From $499 per person
Description: Sail between Vancouver and Seward, departing Sundays on the ms Statendam or ms Volendam and enjoy towering mountains, actively calving glaciers and pristine wildlife habitat. Glacier Bay and College Fjord offer two completely different glacier-viewing experiences.

| Home | About Us | Suggest-a-Site | Feedback | Contact Us | Privacy |
This page, and all contents, are © 1995-2021 by Interactive Travel Guides, Inc. and/or its suppliers. All rights reserved.
TravelPage.com is a trademark of Interactive Travel Guides, Inc.
Powered by TravelServer Software