Re: 2017 cruise
Some interesting and possibly misguided comments coming through from those who have never cruised. Perhaps I can widen understandings.
The notion that you can visit the same destinations as a cruise via say flying and get a better experience that way is not correct. Yes you can fly and stay in
one place for 1-2 weeks but it is a completely different experience. Let me compare.
On a flight out to say Spain you will have to go through the typical sheep herding experience at the airport. You will be required to arrive hours before you fly and so have to hang around in the "captive audience" cafes and lounges. You'll be hugely restricted in terms of baggage and pay significant premiums if you are overweight. You'll have to endure a flight in a tiny seat crammed in like sardines with crappy food. At the other end you'll be hanging around in another airport waiting for baggage to come off the plane. By this time you've spent the best part of a day and will be ready to just get to your apartment or hotel and unpack and chill.
If you cruise, you will drive your car right up to the port terminal where waiting porters will take your baggage from you and the car park company will take your car. You walk into the terminal and within about 30 mins you are at the booking-in kiosks showing your tickets and passports then straight from there through customs x-ray check and onto the ship. That's it ! From arriving in the car you are on the ship and free to roam within 30min to 1hr and your holiday starts right there. You can relax in any of the lounges with a glass of bubbly and have a lovely meal. The ship won't sail until 5pm most likely but you have all day at your leisure. No waiting in airports, no uncomfortable flights, no baggage collection. And talking of baggage, you have NO RESTRICTIONS. You can take 4-5 suitcases if you wish, ladies take all the shoes and dresses you want, all your hair curlers etc. At 5pm everyone will be out on deck for the sailaway waving to the quayside, often with a brass band to play you off.
Those who chose to fly will have to find their way to an apartment or hotel or be transported there if part of a package. On a cruise you are straight there in your 4-5 star floating hotel replete with air-con cabins, lounges, restaurants, bars, casinos, theatres, cinemas, shops, coffee shops, libraries, computer rooms, ballrooms, sunlounging decks, outside walking prom decks and so on.
In terms of seeing the sights the experiences are totally different. If you fly you are usually in one place for the duration of your holiday. Whilst you can hire cars, take buses and taxis to explore, you are pretty much in one place. And I concede that this lets you sample that one country/place in far more depth than any cruise. You can sample lots of the local food in different restaurants, you can see more parts of that place and see more people.
On a cruise however you get variety. Whilst the flier will sit in Spain for 2 weeks, the cruiser will call in at Spain on day 2-3 (prob Cadiz) and spend a day there, then spend a couple of days at sea, then a day in Naples, then days in Corfu, Venice, Dubrovnik, Kotor and then on the way back, call in at Malta then Gibraltar and then home. Spain, Italy, Greece, Croatia, Montenegro, Malta etc, what variety !
Let me also make clear that sailing into some of these places is a unique experience that fliers will never have. Sailing into Venice early morning as the mist rises is magical. The Cathedral dome slowly appears out of that mist and St Marks tower. The ship being so tall towers over the buildings so you get a unique view of the terracotta tops and bell towers that you would otherwise never see. You sail right past the palace and St Marks Square and round to the back of Venice to berth. It is a breath taking sail-in.
If you cruise to the Fjords you will sail through the most picturesque waterways with towering rocks and tumbling waterfalls, twisting and turning jagged corners to your destination.
If you cruise to Lisbon, Portugal you will sail down the river past many important landmarks and finally sail under the magnificent "April 25th" suspension bridge.
All these "sail-ins" are unique and afford views and experiences you will never have if you fly into local airports.
Once actually at any of these varied destinations you are free to do whatever you wish. You can just walk off the ship and roam at your leisure, you can take a local bus, train, tram or taxis somewhere, or you can take an organised ship's tour, of which there are many. Mostly I just do my own thing. I know the places I go to now, I have my favourite cafes and restaurants and have no need of tours and taxis. You go at your own pace, whatever that is. All you have to remember is to get back to the ship before it sails again. The visits are fleeting being just 1 day in each country port (very occasionally an overnight 2 day stay) but you get a taste and flavour of many different countries.
I willingly concede that in some places I wish I could stay longer and here the fly holiday scores. In Spain for example, I always wish I could buy some of the beautiful fruit and vegetables in their immaculate markets. On a cruise you could buy and enjoy the fruit but not the veg.
Overall though, the sheer hassle of flying and being herded about is overwhelmingly trumped by a cruise by being able to drive up to the quayside, drop off baggage and car and walk straight onto the ship where your holiday immediately begins. For those with infirmities, wheelchairs etc you are looked after brilliantly on a cruise and there will be tours organised that suit you. Lots of people take their own electric scooters on the ship.
Definitely worth trying at least once for the experience but be warned it is very addictive.