Last Mousefest I did the cruise portion as well, it was my first ever cruise. I approached it with a degree of uncertainty, while everyone always says they love the cruise I wasn't sure if it was for me.
I guess I have to admit that basically I enjoyed it. I had a BIG problem with the way they scheduled their dinners, I was on the late rotation and that meant that I kept missing other things. Like their big pirate party, the other people at my table that knew about this gulped down their food and ran out. Since I didn't I missed some of it. And I kept having things closed down on me when I was trying to do things after dinner. I'd be in the pool and then be told that the pool is closed. So I'd go off to the pingpong tables only to find that they've taken away the paddles so I can't play.
Otherwise I had a good time. I couldn't get over the novelty of eating dinner and then walking out without having to pay the check. It was an awful shock to get back to Disney World and have to start paying the rather steep prices for food that frankly wasn't quite as good.
My shots from the cruise are kind of slapdash, I didn't really have a procedure down for when to have my camera with me and what to shoot. For now I offer shots mostly from the two island days. I wasn't overly impressed with Nassau (the first two shots), not even with Atlantis. I mean it was impressive to see, it's a huge structure. But the aquarium failed to impress me. I don't want to suggest anyone else skip it, the theming of the area is impressive and they have some interesting fish, especially the manta ray (NOT a stingray, a manta ray, they're much larger and very intimidating looking yet completely harmless). But if I'd do it again I'd skip the aquarium even if I might still head out to see the massive structure again. I took a water taxi out to the place, which was fun because we had a good guide telling us about stuff we were passing on the way, including who owned the houses on the same peninsula that the light house is on and how much they were worth (YIKES). For the trip back we took a taxi van, and I REALLY enjoyed that. It's just that we passed through what I want to call the REAL Nassau, the homes of people other than the ultra rich, the narrow streets and chaotic traffic patterns.
The other shots are from Castaway Cay. That place didn't quite work for me. Everyone else loves it, this may very well be a quirk of my temperament, but I just didn't "get" it. I had a lot of fun snorkeling in the ocean, except I was too darned buoyant and it was too difficult to dive. Otherwise I couldn't get into the groove of the place. I rented a bike, intending to ride out to the lookout tower only to find that the entire trail leading to it was closed. The beach is accessible by the trail that was still open, it's not for swimming, just for looking and relaxing.
The last shot is of the aft end of the ship. This was the first thing I noticed about the ship when we drove up to the terminal. It was the thing that said "this is a Disney boat". If it's not clear, those are actual figures (giant figures, they had to be big because of the scale of the ship), not just artwork on the hull.
Also, incidentally, the area at the bottom of the image, the openings in the hull, look into what seems to me to be the least polished, the most industrial looking, publicly accessible areas of the ship. I was walking around exploring things and suddenly I found myself in there and stopped in my tracks, wondering if I'd ended up somewhere I wasn't supposed to be. But it seemed clear that I'd followed a public pathway that looped around this area. You can see some enormous machinery, winches and such, related to working the lines that they use to tie the ship up to shore. The walkway is clearly walled off from the machinery.
Up next, the nightlife.
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I guess I have to admit that basically I enjoyed it. I had a BIG problem with the way they scheduled their dinners, I was on the late rotation and that meant that I kept missing other things. Like their big pirate party, the other people at my table that knew about this gulped down their food and ran out. Since I didn't I missed some of it. And I kept having things closed down on me when I was trying to do things after dinner. I'd be in the pool and then be told that the pool is closed. So I'd go off to the pingpong tables only to find that they've taken away the paddles so I can't play.
Otherwise I had a good time. I couldn't get over the novelty of eating dinner and then walking out without having to pay the check. It was an awful shock to get back to Disney World and have to start paying the rather steep prices for food that frankly wasn't quite as good.
My shots from the cruise are kind of slapdash, I didn't really have a procedure down for when to have my camera with me and what to shoot. For now I offer shots mostly from the two island days. I wasn't overly impressed with Nassau (the first two shots), not even with Atlantis. I mean it was impressive to see, it's a huge structure. But the aquarium failed to impress me. I don't want to suggest anyone else skip it, the theming of the area is impressive and they have some interesting fish, especially the manta ray (NOT a stingray, a manta ray, they're much larger and very intimidating looking yet completely harmless). But if I'd do it again I'd skip the aquarium even if I might still head out to see the massive structure again. I took a water taxi out to the place, which was fun because we had a good guide telling us about stuff we were passing on the way, including who owned the houses on the same peninsula that the light house is on and how much they were worth (YIKES). For the trip back we took a taxi van, and I REALLY enjoyed that. It's just that we passed through what I want to call the REAL Nassau, the homes of people other than the ultra rich, the narrow streets and chaotic traffic patterns.
The other shots are from Castaway Cay. That place didn't quite work for me. Everyone else loves it, this may very well be a quirk of my temperament, but I just didn't "get" it. I had a lot of fun snorkeling in the ocean, except I was too darned buoyant and it was too difficult to dive. Otherwise I couldn't get into the groove of the place. I rented a bike, intending to ride out to the lookout tower only to find that the entire trail leading to it was closed. The beach is accessible by the trail that was still open, it's not for swimming, just for looking and relaxing.
The last shot is of the aft end of the ship. This was the first thing I noticed about the ship when we drove up to the terminal. It was the thing that said "this is a Disney boat". If it's not clear, those are actual figures (giant figures, they had to be big because of the scale of the ship), not just artwork on the hull.
Also, incidentally, the area at the bottom of the image, the openings in the hull, look into what seems to me to be the least polished, the most industrial looking, publicly accessible areas of the ship. I was walking around exploring things and suddenly I found myself in there and stopped in my tracks, wondering if I'd ended up somewhere I wasn't supposed to be. But it seemed clear that I'd followed a public pathway that looped around this area. You can see some enormous machinery, winches and such, related to working the lines that they use to tie the ship up to shore. The walkway is clearly walled off from the machinery.
Up next, the nightlife.
[This attachment has been purged. Older attachments are purged from time to time to conserve disk space. Please feel free to repost your image.]
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