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smokeybandit

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Everything posted by smokeybandit

  1. AIr2Sea doesn't have any additional flights that aren't listed in any public database.
  2. Maybe they were pulling crew from Jewel/Serenade to pick up the slack then.
  3. They may be recovered fast (I've known people recently testing negative less than a week after initially testing positive), but as far as I know, it's still a minimum 10 day quarantine after a positive test based on the guidance in the CSO. Close contacts are 14 days. I don't know what happens after that going back to their assigned ship if they have to quarantine again. All that adds up.
  4. In hindsight it'll blow over quickly. But it'll feel like forever to get through it.
  5. I guess they continue to use Jewel as the "do not pass go, do not collect $200, go directly to covid jail" ship.
  6. Some of the better southern Caribbean itineraries are Sun/Sun. Those return trips are tough for those of us west of the Mississippi
  7. https://www.cruiseindustrynews.com/cruise-news/26529-barbados-simplifies-cruise-protocols.html?
  8. I don't disagree. But I think post-cruise testing is a lower hanging fruit that cruise lines can get rid of with lessor push back
  9. Supply and demand. Mid-day Sunday flights will always be more expensive and more in demand. Not for cruising, but people going home from a weekend getaway and business travelers going to their next work site for the following week.
  10. I would hope post cruise testing gets nixed since the vaccines haven't shown much affect in preventing omicron infection.
  11. I know the CDC just said the CSO still goes optional next week. But I still don't trust them to power play their way into more restrictions. That said I can't imagine there's any more impact on March cruises than there is now
  12. With the ventilation systems, there's really no deep cleaning that'd need to be done. The hazmat suits and foggers we hear reports of are extreme overkill from the March 2020 understanding of covid.
  13. It makes total sense to show them as sold out just from a marketing perspective. "Hey, you're too late, this cruise is so popular it's full!"
  14. Not uncommon in the covid era. Cruises get pulled late to keep passenger counts at manageable levels.
  15. I can't help but picture one of those dome cages that crazy people ride motorcycles in
  16. The best price we ever got was the first time we ever did a suite on Explorer in 2015 (5 night trip), right before drydock. Total cost for 2 adults and 1 child in a grand suite was $2300. No idea why it was that cheap. But I wish I knew. Since then I haven't found any good way to get a better price.
  17. https://www.asta.org/About/PressReleaseDetail.cfm?ItemNumber=31372 Alexandria, VA, January 5, 2022 – Zane Kerby, President & CEO of the American Society of Travel Advisors (ASTA), issues the following statement in response to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) updated guidance on COVID-19 and Cruise Ship Travel, recommending that cruise travel be avoided regardless of vaccination status: “An increase in reported COVID cases on cruise ships should surprise no one given the worldwide spike driven by the highly-transmissible omicron variant. The difference between enjoying a cruise vacation and visiting your local grocery store or restaurant, however, is the extraordinarily stringent anti-COVID measures put in place voluntarily by the cruise lines, in close consultation with the CDC. These measures include testing, vaccination, sanitation, mask-wearing and other science-backed measures, as well as protocols to respond to potential cases of COVID-19. “If the average cruise ship were a U.S. state, it would be the safest in the country – by far. According to Royal Caribbean Group, since cruising restarted in the U.S. in June 2021, its ships have carried 1.1 million guests with 1,745 people testing positive – a positivity rate of 0.02 percent. Among U.S. states as of January 4, Alaska’s positivity rate is the lowest at 9.4 percent, with Georgia’s the highest at 38.7 percent. “Cruising is no more responsible for the spread of the Omicron variant than travelers from southern Africa were at the outset of the current crisis. But we continue to see knee-jerk reactions singling out travel for discriminatory treatment. Because the travel industry is regulated more heavily than other activities, when COVID caseloads rise or new variants emerge, travel takes the hit. It brings to mind the old saying, ‘if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.’ This pattern needs to stop. “The Administration has shown flexibility on its anti-COVID measures of late, including the recent decision to lift the November 26 travel ban on eight countries in Southern Africa. We call on it to do the same here. At this stage in the pandemic, the tools exist to allow us to combat this virus without crippling an entire sector of the U.S. economy in the process. Let’s use them.”
  18. I don't like Aria because there's an entire cruise line called Aria Yes, I know, I'm a stickler for some semblance of originality.
  19. And Norwegian thought they were going to be king when they went with an all vax requirement.
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