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Cunard Line's flagship Queen Mary 2 is making her historic 200th Transatlantic Crossing, having sailed from New York on Saturday 6 July en route to her homeport of Southampton, England, arriving 13 July.
To mark the beginning of the historic voyage from New York, Queen Mary 2 performed a sail-by of the world's most iconic statue atop Liberty Island. On board are keynote speakers presenting talks about the ship's design, as well as special Big Band performances, and a celebratory Gala Dinner to be held on 11 July.
Queen Mary 2 is the largest, longest, widest and most expensive liner ever built. Today, she is the only ocean liner in service and is the fastest passenger ship in the world. Since entering service in 2004, she has cemented her place in maritime history as the most famous passenger ship afloat today.
In the course of Queen Mary 2's 200 Transatlantic Crossings, Cunard Line estimates that a half-million passengers have consumed 8.4 million cups of tea; 980,000 scones; 481,000 bottles of champagne; 644,000 eggs; and 253,605 gallons of milk. In total, 22.4 million meals have been served over 600,000 nautical miles, excluding the ship's annual World Cruise and sailings to the Canaries, Fjords, Iceland, the Low Countries, around Britain, up to Montreal and Québec in Canada, and among the Caribbean islands.
Also noteworthy, over the course of Queen Mary 2's 200 Transatlantic Crossings, more than 1,000 dogs have been pampered in the only kennel facilities aboard a passenger ship.
"As each year in service passes, Queen Mary 2 becomes even more special and we will continue to celebrate and cherish her milestones and history," said Peter Shanks, president of Cunard Line. "Looking at Cunard's earlier Queens, Queen Mary crossed the Atlantic 1,001 times, Queen Elizabeth crossed 896 times and QE2 crossed 812 times. Queen Mary 2 achieved the milestone 200th in this, her ninth season, and has many seasons and Crossings still ahead!"
To commemorate the 200th Crossing and as part of the line's award-winning Cunard Insights on board enrichment programme, Stephen Payne OBE, who was largely responsible for the overall design of Queen Mary 2, is presenting a fascinating insight into the ship's construction. He will also be guest of honour at the formal Gala evening dinner on 11 July.
"Queen Mary 2 embodies the attributes of a true liner, including reserves of stability and deep draught. Combined with her great size, these attributes ensure that the ship can achieve a level of Atlantic sea-keeping superior to any other liner in history," said Payne. "No other passenger ship is as much at home on the North Atlantic as Queen Mary 2."
Also speaking during the milestone Crossing is BBC newsreader and Classic FM presenter Nick Owen; and getting into the swing of things are a dozen musicians, plus a band leader and vocalist from the world-renowned Julliard School of Dance, Drama and Music. The group is performing as a jazz orchestra, providing a selection of Big Band, Swing and Glen Miller style music and smaller ensemble pieces. They will perform at an evening event in the Royal Court Theatre with full orchestra and vocalist, and afternoon tea dance, lunchtime jam sessions featuring an ensemble in the Chart Room, and a late evening ensemble in Illuminations. In addition, two jazz masterclass talks and a Q&A are being held with the bandleader and members of the orchestra.
"Every Crossing has its moments, as no two are ever the same," commented Queen Mary 2 Hotel Manager Robert Howie. "The beauty of Transatlantic Crossings is the elegance of our guests, the fact that you seem transported back in time, and even the unpredictability of the weather."
Howie continued, "Guests marvel at how the ship handles the varying weather and this is when Queen Mary 2 comes into her own, performing at her best – it's what she was designed for. All of us who work on board feel immense pride when she is acknowledged throughout the world with fantastic arrivals and departure celebrations. No other ship in the world has that recognition."
Brian
[ 07-18-2013: Message edited by: Brian_O ]
quote:Originally posted by Brian_O:I wonder if they are counting the 2 transatlantic positioning cruises that QM2 did before her official maiden crossing.Brian[ 07-18-2013: Message edited by: Brian_O ]
How do you do 2 transatlantic positioning cruises? Wouldn't that just put her back where she started or did they actually sail her all the way to the US empty just to show her off?
QM2's Maiden Transatlantic, Southampton to New York was 16 - 22 April 2004
I would assume they are only counting direct crossings, but one should never "assume" anything. Cunard should perhaps clarify that and there are plenty of "passenger ships" with kennel facilities too. Maybe she is the only liner/cruise ship with kennel facilities, but not sure if any of those in the Far East might have some.
Pam
The United States is said to have done 400 trips but that was the numbering which means 800 crossings, but the real number is less because some of the 400 were cruises and some of the canceled trips due to strikes are still in the 400 number series.
So I assume the Queen Mary 2 is really only on trip 100 .....
quote:Originally posted by lasuvidaboy:Speaking of Transats, someone pointed out on another site that the ssUS could do a roundtrip NYC-Southampton (with no stop in Le Havre) in the same time it takes QM2 to do a one-way crossing.
The claim is utter nonsense. The SS Untied States's 3 1/2 day crossings were timed between the Ambrose Light and Bishop's Rock only. They did not include any of the time spent in the speed restricted waters of the Hudson River, the Solent or even the English Channel. Adding in that time and they were over 4 days (96 hours).
QM2's 7-day crossings are really 7 night crossings that take less than 7 days (168 hours).Look at the scheduled departure and arrival times and take the 5-hour time difference to calculate the hours.
SS United States couldn't even cross from Ambrose to Bishop's Light in half the time that QM2 takes. The Big U's highest average speed from Ambrose to Bishop's Light was 35.59 knots on her maiden voyage. Even on her 7-night crossings, QM2 exceeds 17.795 knots by a significant margin.
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