Hey boys and girls. I'm sure that somewhere along the line someone has done a comparison between Disney Cruise and other various cruise lines. But maybe my insight could be moderately helpful deciding if Disney is worth the extra (lots!) of money. Keep in mind, I'll mainly be focusing on my experience with Carnival seeing as I'm sure most people here have plenty of experience with Disney Cruise and can do comparing themselves.
So a little background. Before this Carnival cruise, I've sailed on the Disney Dream a couple of times, and the Disney Wonder once. I've always sailed out of Port Canaveral, and with the exception of the Wonder cruise, most of my sailings were identical with going to Nassau and then Castaway. The Wonder sailing went to Key West, which is probably my second favorite port of call ever. And then Castaway Cay, my most favorite port of call ever, two days in a row for a double dip. Every one of these cruises was with my family. And all of then around September.
So, for the details on my Carnival cruise. I wanted to introduce my friends to cruising, and as most people my age aren't good with budgeting, we were seeking the cheapest type available. Queue Carnival Cruise Line! The so called Wal Mart of the cruise industry. You've heard a lot of bad things. But I'm sure you've heard a lot of good things. We decided to give it a whirl. Probably because it was hard to turn down a four night cruise for a few hundred bucks and that the itinerary was the most friendly for our work schedules. Booking was a mixed bag. Calling Carnival to talk to a sales representetive was a quick, albeit annoying experience. I would call frequently to try and feel out prices and see if we could get any better rates on the cruise we wanted, which I should mention was a porthole view cruise from Galveston Texas to Cozumel Mexico on the Carnival Triumph. Yes! The ship that had caught fire and caught national news as it was pulled slowly back to port.
Anyway, you call Carnival, and most every time it's the same thing. You get put on with a representative and you tell them what cruise your interested in. They look it up, and before telling you the price they start a big long speech that goes something like this "Okay, so you're looking at the Carnival Blank. This beautiful ship has X dining rooms, a fantastic atrium, X amount of pools, blah blah blah, all for the low price of X".. Listening to this whole speech gets pretty tiresome after your third or fourth call. Eventually I would just tell each representative "yeah, I know, you don't have to give me the whole rundown" It's also quite obvious that these folks are on some sort of commission or rewards based system as they'll do anything to make a sale. My first call, when I was still waiting to get the cash from my buddies before booking, I had the sales person saying things like "Can you borrow money from family?" or "Maybe you could use a credit card and pay it off later?" It was a turn off. Nevertheless, I can't say they weren't helpful, and after I pulled the trigger and booked the trip, things went very smoothly. Carnival has a very pretty, easy to understand website. And online check in follows that trend. Was overall a good experience.
For the sake of saving time, let's skip forward to the trip itself. We fly into Galveston and meet the Carnival employees at the baggage claim we were told they would be at. We opted to take Carnival's bus transport. The employees were friendly enough. And they happily loaded us on the bus we'd be taking to the port. This is probably the first big difference I remember from Disney and Carnival. We were loaded on what looked to be a rental bus. No Carnival markings on it. Those of you who'd done a Disney cruise know how awesome the Disney Cruise busses are. With their port hole windows and obvious Disney markings, it's clear they they've been built just for that purpose. As we leave the airport parking lot, the bus slowly pulls over to the side of the road. The driver stands up and says something along the lines of "We're having an issue with the bus. I'm gonna go reset the computer, that usually fixes it" He goes outside. We wait ten minutes. He comes back and just like he said, it starts up and starts moving just fine. Another turn off. But as long as we get there, I don't care. They play some sort of generic action movie on the monitors on the way to the port.
I'll continue with this tomorrow. Hope you're finding this atleast somewhat interesting.
So a little background. Before this Carnival cruise, I've sailed on the Disney Dream a couple of times, and the Disney Wonder once. I've always sailed out of Port Canaveral, and with the exception of the Wonder cruise, most of my sailings were identical with going to Nassau and then Castaway. The Wonder sailing went to Key West, which is probably my second favorite port of call ever. And then Castaway Cay, my most favorite port of call ever, two days in a row for a double dip. Every one of these cruises was with my family. And all of then around September.
So, for the details on my Carnival cruise. I wanted to introduce my friends to cruising, and as most people my age aren't good with budgeting, we were seeking the cheapest type available. Queue Carnival Cruise Line! The so called Wal Mart of the cruise industry. You've heard a lot of bad things. But I'm sure you've heard a lot of good things. We decided to give it a whirl. Probably because it was hard to turn down a four night cruise for a few hundred bucks and that the itinerary was the most friendly for our work schedules. Booking was a mixed bag. Calling Carnival to talk to a sales representetive was a quick, albeit annoying experience. I would call frequently to try and feel out prices and see if we could get any better rates on the cruise we wanted, which I should mention was a porthole view cruise from Galveston Texas to Cozumel Mexico on the Carnival Triumph. Yes! The ship that had caught fire and caught national news as it was pulled slowly back to port.
Anyway, you call Carnival, and most every time it's the same thing. You get put on with a representative and you tell them what cruise your interested in. They look it up, and before telling you the price they start a big long speech that goes something like this "Okay, so you're looking at the Carnival Blank. This beautiful ship has X dining rooms, a fantastic atrium, X amount of pools, blah blah blah, all for the low price of X".. Listening to this whole speech gets pretty tiresome after your third or fourth call. Eventually I would just tell each representative "yeah, I know, you don't have to give me the whole rundown" It's also quite obvious that these folks are on some sort of commission or rewards based system as they'll do anything to make a sale. My first call, when I was still waiting to get the cash from my buddies before booking, I had the sales person saying things like "Can you borrow money from family?" or "Maybe you could use a credit card and pay it off later?" It was a turn off. Nevertheless, I can't say they weren't helpful, and after I pulled the trigger and booked the trip, things went very smoothly. Carnival has a very pretty, easy to understand website. And online check in follows that trend. Was overall a good experience.
For the sake of saving time, let's skip forward to the trip itself. We fly into Galveston and meet the Carnival employees at the baggage claim we were told they would be at. We opted to take Carnival's bus transport. The employees were friendly enough. And they happily loaded us on the bus we'd be taking to the port. This is probably the first big difference I remember from Disney and Carnival. We were loaded on what looked to be a rental bus. No Carnival markings on it. Those of you who'd done a Disney cruise know how awesome the Disney Cruise busses are. With their port hole windows and obvious Disney markings, it's clear they they've been built just for that purpose. As we leave the airport parking lot, the bus slowly pulls over to the side of the road. The driver stands up and says something along the lines of "We're having an issue with the bus. I'm gonna go reset the computer, that usually fixes it" He goes outside. We wait ten minutes. He comes back and just like he said, it starts up and starts moving just fine. Another turn off. But as long as we get there, I don't care. They play some sort of generic action movie on the monitors on the way to the port.
I'll continue with this tomorrow. Hope you're finding this atleast somewhat interesting.