Never been on a cruise. It's our wedding anniversary in Jul and I heard Alaska is great at that time. Any recommendations? Which cruise, how many days, ports etc?
What you've mostly described is interior Alaska. Cruising is coastal Alaska. Neither is better than the other. They're just different. There's no reason you can't do both or pick one or the other. Alaska is not really a destination you can do once and have the whole experience.malenurse said:
I'll ruffle some feather by saying "Cruising to Alaska is a waste of time".
There is way too much to see and do in Alaska to waste time on a cruise ship.
Fly to Anchorage and take the train to Denali. Spend several days there and then rent a car and start driving.
Spend a few days in Talkeetna. Fly K2 Airways and land on one of the glaciers on Mt McKinley.
Work your way down to Homer and then take a day cruise to see the galciers.
Go to Whittier and see the clearest, bluest water on the planet
Etc etc etc
Whoop Delecto said:
Not an issue for my family but I've heard US cruise passengers with a DUI record can have problems in Vancouver customs. True?
Beckdiesel03 said:
To the travel agents on here- is an Alaskan cruise something good for kids? Would be ages 9 and 12 and fairly active. We have been tossing this idea around here lately
Beckdiesel03 said:
To the travel agents on here- is an Alaskan cruise something good for kids? Would be ages 9 and 12 and fairly active. We have been tossing this idea around here lately
Agree with others, most ships will have kids clubs and lots of kid-centric things to do. I know at least one of the Norwegian ships (that I think is in Alaska now) has go carts and lots have mini golf, etc...Beckdiesel03 said:
To the travel agents on here- is an Alaskan cruise something good for kids? Would be ages 9 and 12 and fairly active. We have been tossing this idea around here lately
Right now, there's only one dock where NCL does this, Ward's Cove in Ketchikan. They have a shuttle that runs between Ward's Cove and the cruise dock in Ketchikan and it only takes about 15 minutes to get there. Even for some of the NCL excursions, passengers still have to take a shuttle to Ketchikan to begin their excursion. It's not hard at all to do non-NCL excursions or to get in to Ketchikan to walk around town.David Happymountain said:
NCL has built their own docks outside of some ports, so you have to bus into town. This will lesson the amount of time you have. Keep that in mind.
Completely a business decision by them to keep their cruisers on the NCL catalog list of excursions and discourage non-NCL activities, but it cheapens the experience (even moreso) of seeing Alaska/Inside Passage via cruiseship.
I think you have to frame an Alaskan cruise as the sampler platter of appetizers at Chili's or Flingers.
Jak981 said:
We just did Norwegian Encore out of Seattle for 7 days in July. Trip included Juneau, Glacier Bay, Skagway, Ketchikan and Victoria BC. Hardest part is what to pack. First day at sea, pool was clobbered. Glacier Bay was the only coldish day and was the highlight of our trip. Sea otters, eagles, seals, Whales. I swear I saw a grizzly on the beach. Invest in a good pair of binocs. Get a balcony. My sister did the early morning thing every day. Great cruise. The best thing about Norwegian was the free style cruising. No formal sittings, go eat in the main dining rooms anytime with jeans OK all week. They did have upscale dining options that required a res. Our package included two of those and that was enough. We had no problem catching shuttle buses and making our excursions. The train/bus in Skagway was incredible. Encore and her Sister ship Bliss are practically brand new. Both go 165,000 tons. 4000 pax. Has go karts, laser tag, etc. Also, Jana from Aggieland Travel, who posts on here set it all up for us. Took a lot of the worry off of us. I have no idea about kids stuff. We were all in our 60's.