Cuba Cruising profiles three diverse couples from different parts of the world who visited Cuba under quite distinct circumstances:
Despite being only 90 miles away from the southernmost point of the United States, Cuba is often on the bucket list of US cruisers right next to cruises to such far-flung destinations as Alaska, Antarctica, Hawaii, Galapagos, South Pacific, and more. Among a number of appealing factors to travelers, cruising to Cuba brings with it an unquestionably desirable aspect that few other ports of call have: rarity. Simply because Cuba has not been accessible to cruise travelers for very long. Consequently, a Cuba cruise is on the to-do list of a number of cruisers, particularly seasoned cruisers who have experienced other Bahamas and Caribbean itineraries multiple times. Coupled with the fact that there are some restrictions, both logistical and government imposed, a Cuba sailing has an exclusiveness, a cachet to it. That in part explains why older cruise ships, albeit refurbished and outfitted with features popular with cruisers such as Food Network star Guy Fieri’s “Guy’s Burger Joint” on Carnival ships, elaborate water slides, and onboard Cuba-themed venues and enrichment activities, get repurposed and repositioned for Cuba sailings, and can command a significant premium over comparable length itineraries to other destinations for that same ship. A collateral benefit to cruise lines of older ships sailing to Cuba is that their smaller size relative to the newer mega-ships cruise lines are increasingly introducing are able to dock; Havana’s existing pier cannot accommodate mega-ships.... ....“My Mojito in la Bodeguita, my daiquiri in El Floridita” supposedly said Ernest Hemingway of two of the most famous bars in Havana. Despite the mythology of this saying—and the dubiousness of its authenticity—there is a hand-scrolled sign with that statement and Hemingway’s autograph in La Bodeguita del Medio, along with inscriptions on the walls from the likes of Harry Belafonte, Nat King Cole, and Fidel Castro. Paul and Carole tried a couple of times to get into La Bodeguita, as well as El Floridita, but they were always too packed. They did manage to sample a few mojitos and daiquiris in other bars that drew them in with alluring live music. “In Old Havana we found a bar called Cafe Bosque Bologna on Obispo Street. The daiquiris were excellent. We sat down and noticed that just behind our table was an area where there were turtles, which was a bit strange, but we soon learned the reason they were there is that the Cubans believe that they bring them good karma,” Carole said. “In San Francisco Square right opposite the cruise terminal is a bar called Restaurante Cafe del Oriente, a lovely bar with a seating area outside, ideal for watching the world go by and inside a very talented piano player where we spent a wet afternoon having a fun sing-song. The Mojitos here were excellent too!”.... ....Barbara and Bill’s tour was in a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air. “The car was large enough for Bill and me, the couple that accompanied us, the tour guide, and the driver, a young man who owned the car. He had retrofit air conditioning into the car so it was very comfortable, and much more fun than the tour bus that the ship’s tour would have provided. 1950’s car buffs will swoon over the variety of lovingly restored vehicles.” Among the highlights of their tour was El Floridita. “We went to El Floridita, the night club associated with Hemingway, and we were delighted by the performances of three different groups. I think the live music in Havana was the happiest part of the adventure.” Another place Barbara and Bill got to visit that Ernest Hemingway frequented—as did Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, and John Wayne—was historic Sloppy Joe’s Bar (originator of the sloppy joe sandwich). Sloppy Joe’s Bar was an iconic gathering place frequented mainly by Americans in pre-revolution Havana. Consequently, after the revolution Sloppy Joe’s Bar closed and remained closed from 1959 until just several years ago when it was restored in its old location, replete with much of its original façade after 50 years.... ....The Sloans’ diverse travel pursuits all over the world have included a number of cruises, and in February 2017 they ventured to Cuba on The Soul Cruise, a unique seven-day R&B themed-cruise branded as “The first ever soul music cruise from the United States to Cuba!” The cruise was on Fathom Adonia (now Azamara Pursuit). Fathom Cruises was established in 2015 to conduct “social impact travel” cruises from Miami to the Dominican Republic, and Cuba, where in May 2016 Adonia was the first United States cruise ship to dock in post-Castro Cuba. Joan said, “Fathom Adonia, a 750-passenger ship provided intimacy, specialized in culture tours, and provided Cuban-inspired foods throughout our weeklong cruise.” Joan and Jim enjoyed the dancing tour the most. “It was fun with three different dance activities, but it also was very exhausting. We began early in the morning with two hours of group salsa lessons. Our instructors were high energy and engaging, and Jim and I came away feeling like we were ready to go out salsa dancing. Our next stop was to a ballet company and school where we met with the dancers who were all graduates of the university, and we enjoyed a performance that contrasted African and European ballet. Our group decided to make a donation of ballet slippers for the company as they were not made in Cuba and costly. Lastly we went to see a performance of the Habana Compas Dance Company. The dancers were classically trained and were accompanied by powerful percussionists who mixed traditional and contemporary dance style.... Read the complete story of respectively, Carole and Paul, Barbara and Bill, and Joan and Jim, in Chap 10 Cuba Cruising, The Joy of Cruising. Preorder soon....
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USA Today/10Best Readers’ Choice New Media Award for Best Cruise Blogger winners Matt Hochberg and Scott Sanders share a couple of things in common: each authors a blog that’s dedicated to coverage of primarily a single cruise line, and they both have successful podcasts as companions to their blogs. Matt won for The Royal Caribbean Blog which he started in 2010 and is described as “your ultimate source for Royal Caribbean coverage,” and he hosts The Royal Caribbean Blog Podcast. The Royal Caribbean Blog is an unofficial fan blog written for other fans of Royal
Caribbean, and is not affiliated with Royal Caribbean International. Scott won for The Disney Cruise Line Blog. Since 2012, The Disney Cruise Line Blog and accompanying podcast has been an unofficial source of Disney Cruise Line news and information and a place where fans can share Disney cruise experiences. ....Matt Hochberg, a USA Today/10Best Readers’ Choice New Media Award winner for Best Cruise Blogger is the creator of the Royal Caribbean Blog, and the reassuring voice of the Royal Caribbean Blog podcast. I say reassuring because if you happen to be listening to the podcast a lot, including going back into the archives to listen to episodes you might have missed or replaying episodes you’ve previously listened to, it likely means you are booked on Royal Caribbean and your sailing date is approaching! You are part anxious, and part excited, and Matt (along with occasional guests) calms your anxiety with useful information and stokes your excitement with fun insights. In anticipation of my December 2018 Anthem of the Seas cruise, I listened to every episode of the Royal Caribbean Blog podcast of the last couple of years (and if Anthem was in the episode title, let’s just say I listened to it more than once.) ....I asked Matt how the Royal Caribbean Blog came about. Matt recalled that his second Royal Caribbean cruise was on Oasis of the Seas. As alluded to earlier in The Joy of Cruising, almost every couple of years the world’s largest cruise ship is introduced. But sometimes a new world’s largest ship is so revolutionary, so spectacular, that it “changes the game” in cruising (much like Royal Caribbean’s Sovereign of the Seas discussed in Chapter 1.) Oasis was that kind of ship when it was introduced. Matt said, “I remember back when Oasis of the Seas debuted it was a really big deal, still is, and I was really pumped to go on it. It just redefined what a cruise ship experience could be. My excitement was so great that I needed an outlet for it. I was just that kind of person that I like people to share my experience. I wanted to blog about my experience. I ended up expanding that idea beyond just blogging about my cruise on Oasis to actually covering Royal Caribbean in general. There were a lot of existing cruise websites, some great ones in fact. But none of them focused just on Royal Caribbean. While they did a good job, they only got, say, 10-20% deep into what Royal Caribbean is all about and there is still quite a bit left out. I felt like I’m not going to be able to compete with the major cruise websites out there and cover the whole industry, but if I do a deep dive and cover everything Royal Caribbean, then I can really stand out from other people and bring something different to the table.” Royal Caribbean Blog was born. Matt.... ....Scott Sanders is a USA Today/10Best Readers’ Choice New Media Award winner for Best Cruise Blogger for the Disney Cruise Line Blog. I first became aware of Scott several years ago when I discovered his blog in advance of taking my grandkids on their first cruise, a four-day voyage on the Disney Dream. Two weeks before our sailing, Scott posted a video on his blog of his daughter’s first time on Disney Cruise Line’s AquaDuck, the first "water roller coaster" at sea introduced on the Disney Dream. So, my then 5-year old granddaughter watched Scott’s daughter Isabelle screaming gleefully riding AquaDuck—along with the many other AquaDuck videos on YouTube—over and over. Scott’s blog and podcast are the go-to source for Disney Cruise fans looking for news, tips, and opinions in addition to, or instead of, official information from the company itself. It’s not just Disney Cruise fans that rely on Scott’s insights. Scott is extensively consulted by media such as the Orlando Sentinel and USA Today to opine on Disney Cruise Line news and developments, and has appeared in the book, The Unofficial Guide to Disney Cruise Line. Scott started the Disney Cruise Line Blog in 2012. He added a companion podcast April 2016. The website is more than just a blog chronicling Scott’s cruises. In addition to posting daily trip reports when taking his family on a cruise, the website also offers fans a historical look at the various Disney Cruise Line itineraries and provides info about upcoming sailings. In addition, each week Scott summarizes the current special offers and blogs about the latest news surrounding Disney Cruise Line and its ports of call. Scott lives with his wife Emily, and daughter Isabelle in Celebration, Florida, known as “The Community Disney Built.” Celebration is located five miles from Walt Disney World Resort and was originally developed by The Walt Disney Company. Scott is originally from the Midwest and came south to Florida for the weather and has lived in Florida for most of his adult life. Scott and Emily were married in a Disney Wedding at Walt Disney World Resort. I asked Scott to talk about how his passion for all things Disney was formed. He told me.... Read the complete story of how Matt and Scott’s passion for cruising moved them to become a main resource for fans of two of the world’s top cruise lines in respectively, Chap 18, Royal Caribbean Blog: Matt Hochberg, and Chap 19. Disney Cruise Line Blog: Scott Sanders, The Joy of Cruising. Available now! ....given her background in sales and marketing, within days of contacting the employment firm Flavia was offered an interview. It was for a position with Royal Caribbean as a Cruise Specialist—an entree to a career that I suspect many of the readers of The Joy of Cruising would have been very enthused about in their thirties. Flavia, however, was not all that excited, as the opening involved a position in a call center, which was far from the ideal environment given Flavia’s extroverted personality. (Above Flavia on her first ever cruise, Grandeur of the Seas.)
Flavia reflects back on the day she arrived for her interview with Royal Caribbean with amusement. “My attitude was already negative and when I saw one of the employees arriving at the office in jeans and tee shirt, I was quite disgusted. Only later did I learn that Friday was ‘dress down’ day.” Long before she was blogging about couture and style, Flavia was cognizant of how people should present themselves—even though her presumption about the employee’s attire was incorrect! It turned out it wasn’t so much an interview as a written assessment administered to a roomful of applicants. Applicants would move on to an interview with Royal Caribbean staff only if the assessment score was adequate. Flavia dutifully took the exam, still not particularly enthused about the position. In fact, Flavia had arranged an interview for later that day with a previous employer and was just going through the motions at Royal Caribbean. While waiting for the assessment to be scored, the applicants were shown a video of a Royal Caribbean cruise ship. Flavia had never cruised before. It was at that moment of watching that video that Flavia’s life was changed forever. “I mean really, really, changed,” Flavia told me. “The ship was huge; it looked like a lot of fun and it had a pool and a kid’s club. Then there were endless other things; I just kept thinking, what, there’s a rock wall; what, there’s a surf simulator; what, there’s a mini golf course; a theatre, parades, parties, nightclubs. My mind was blown.” Now Royal Caribbean had Flavia’s attention. She was captivated by what was on the screen. “Now I wanted that job; I had to have that job, I had to get on that ship. It was like everything else just melted away and I had one vision: getting onboard that cruise ship with Lucy, my daughter.” ....Now Flavia found herself fantasizing. This cruise ship on the screen meant there was a way she could travel again, and even as a single mom. Normally a cruise would be out of reach financially for Flavia, but she had recalled one of the Royal Caribbean staffers mentioning something about free or very cheap cruises during their presentation to the applicants. “I had to get on that ship, and I had to get this job. That was that.” Flavia did get the job with Royal Caribbean. She set out to make her fantasy of traveling with her daughter a reality. The Royal Caribbean call center training was rigorous and comprehensive, providing Flavia with in-depth knowledge into Royal’s products, services, and system. It also included training on Celebrity Cruises and Azamara Club Cruises as they were all under the same parent company. It was six weeks before she was allowed on real telephone calls, and once that began, she was subject to constant monitoring and mentoring on her performance and was accountable for a stringent set of criteria to meet on each call. Flavia and her call center colleagues faced financial consequences for failing to meet the call standards as determined by the Royal Caribbean Quality Assurance team. There were many times Flavia wanted to rip her headset off and quit. But her mind kept going back to that video about the cruise ship. So, she resolved to get past the six-month probationary period, take her daughter on a discounted Royal Caribbean cruise, and then quit! Despite the demands and tedium of call center work, Flavia thrived and frequently exceeded sales milestones. As a result, she was offered a free “familiarization” trip (familiarization trips are for employees and travel agents, but not everyone is lucky enough to get one; they are usually based on sales performance.) Flavia could not believe it. The fantasy was about to become a reality in the form of a four-night cruise on Grandeur of the Seas departing from Palma de Mallorca, Spain and docking in Málaga, Spain. Flavia was overcome with gleeful anticipation. “I did panic a bit I must admit,” Flavia said. “I wondered if it would really be everything I had expected. What if Royal Caribbean had just told me it was great, but in actual fact when I get onboard I am going to hate it and be stuck on the ship with a bunch of people I don’t like? Suddenly I started to worry.” When we arrived at the port there was a huge ship, just like the one in the video. Then as we turned the corner there was what seemed in comparison a small, not so impressive ship behind it. Oh no, that was the ship we were going on, not the lovely big one. Now I was really worried.” Flavia boarded and found that “small” ship to be quite nice and it did not feel small at all. In fact, once onboard she found it to be huge. The ship was gorgeous, with a lovely chrome and beech atrium with marbled floor and a ceiling that seemed to extend to the sky. The first food venue Flavia and her colleagues tried was the buffet with a seemingly endless array of choices. After eating they went to the sundeck and Flavia laid out on a sun lounger. She felt like she was back at the beach, only there were really friendly waiters wearing Hawaiian shirts saying hello and asking if anyone wanted anything. She also found the other cruisers to be very personable. The cruise was off to a great start and getting better and better. Flavia kept hearing others talking about the sail-away: go find one of the many ideal vantage points on the ship, with a cocktail in hand for sail-away. Flavia chose to join the group of Royal Caribbean employees that she was sailing with on the top deck. Cocktail in hand, steel drum band playing and guests joining members of the Royal Caribbean entertainment team to dance on the deck stage, the anticipation was thrilling. That larger ship, the Liberty of the Seas, the one Flavia mistakenly assumed was meant for her to board, went off first. Despite already being captivated by the more modest ship she boarded, Flavia watched wistfully as the “ship like the one in the video” sailed past. Someday…. Read the complete story of Flavia’s transformation from cruise line call center rep to cruise travel influencer in Chap 8, Ships and Champagne, The Joy of Cruising. Preorder soon.... Theme cruising....passion for cruising with passion for a hobby, interest, culture, or lifestyle, be it jazz, poker, quilting, wellness, or whatever. Or, even more esoteric pursuits: there are cruises aimed at bikers (yes, your motorcycle is loaded on the cruise ship), cruises for cat lovers (Meow Meow Cruise), cougars (not the cat variety!), couples seeking stronger marriages, swingers, and recovering substance abusers.
...there is a staggering array of themes covered by these special interest cruises. Essentially, if a theme cruise purveyor is willing to invest money, time, and other resources necessary to design, organize and market the theme cruise—and assume the risk of the cruise failing to generate the requisite demand—it can be arranged. The nature of theme cruises I have seen marketed run the gamut. Passionate about motorcycle riding? ETA Motorcycle Cruises tagline is “Bring your bike with you on a cruise.” (Chapter 25). Love poker? Card Player Cruises is run by a couple of Poker Hall of Famers (Chapter 24). How about craft beers? The California Beer Festival at Sea. Knitting, quilting, health and wellness? Yes, there is a cruise for you. Recovering substance abuser? Want to strengthen your marriage? Celebrate and rejuvenate your religious faith? All are covered by theme cruises. Yes, there are even clothing optional cruises—either geared more towards cruisers seeking risqué fun, or others appealing more to naturalists. I could go on and on. The opportunity to network with other like-minded cruisers can be arranged around essentially any pastime, avocation, or interest... There are many formats for carrying out theme cruises ranging from the cruise line offering it directly to customers, to a theme cruise purveyor such as a travel company or a group of independent entrepreneurs chartering a cruise ship, to various iterations in between. For instance, a cruise line may choose to bring on board a performer, celebrity chef, sommelier, author, orator, thought leader, or other celebrity. Often these cruise line theme cruises are in conjunction with sponsors and feature celebrities who the sponsors are in partnership with. For instance, Celebrity Cruises partners with Fine Cooking magazine and their Emmy® Award nominated PBS series, Moveable Feast with Fine Cooking. Celebrity Cruises’ Moveable Feast passengers participate in cooking classes and demonstrations, and even can opt for excursions to shop for local ingredients in preparation for a private dinner on the ship. In early 2019, Holland America Line and O, The Oprah Magazine are partnering on a Girls’ Getaway cruise featuring Oprah Winfrey on Holland America’s newest ship, Nieuw Statendam which launched in December 2018 with a transatlantic voyage. Oprah, is the Nieuw Statendam Godmother. The Girls’ Getaway cruise sold out in three days after it was announced. In these instances of cruise line theme cruises, passengers may choose to partake or not in various performances, demonstrations, or presentations. Such cruises may be arranged entirely by cruise line staff or a collaboration between a cruise line and a sponsor, or with a separate theme cruise operator. Alternatively, the theme cruise may be a music fest, or beer fest, or nudists, or whatever the theme is that takes over the entire ship; partaking is largely unavoidable and the theme and the cruise are for the most part inseparable. Generally, in these instances the theme cruise operator “rents” or charters the ship and its staff from the cruise line—at a cost of approximately $1 million to over $10 million depending on ship, season and duration of the cruise—and the cruise line is otherwise not directly involved in the theme cruise except to offer the food, ship services and amenities, and standard entertainment such as lounge acts, and activities.... Music-related cruises are by far the most popular type of theme cruise. Jazz, rock, R&B, country, reggae, even classical—virtually every music genre has one or more dedicated cruises. For many well-established music artists, performing on theme cruises offers a stable source of work and a way to bring their music directly to fans at a time when radio is dramatically different as a means to get music to fans than in the past, and retail music is virtually extinct. For the fans, it is an opportunity to see artists who may no longer be regularly touring, or not accessible in a cruise passenger’s home town. Music cruises can focus on a single artist who performs a couple of concerts and the remainder of the cruise activities are around meet-and-greets, DJ’s and parties, and themed activities. Popular single artist cruises include the Kiss Kruise, New Kids on The Block Cruise, and The Backstreet Boys Cruise. At least one single artist cruise takes place without the actual artist! One successful theme cruise revolves around a legendary artist that has been deceased for over 40 years—the Elvis Cruise, an homage to Elvis Presley, celebrates his music and the musicians who performed with him. More typical is the music festival type theme cruise featuring numerous performers and accompanying comedians, celebrity hosts, and activities that are in keeping with the music genre featured by the cruise. Particularly with music theme cruises, there is a contingent of cruisers who after experiencing a theme cruise choose never to go back to traditional cruising due to the cruise mates they meet, and more importantly, getting an intense dose of whatever it is they are passionate about. Imagine what it must feel like for a person into music of a certain period, say, the 50’s and 60’s, to experience that music live, performed by the original artists daily for a week! Why wouldn’t someone want to keep repeating that experience without giving up any of the benefits of a traditional cruise—the ship amenities; experiencing all the joy that comes with being on the ocean; and, getting to stop at wonderful destinations? It is of little surprise that theme cruises have very high retention rates.... There are now websites that track upcoming theme cruises. So, a cruiser who is passionate about some interest could look for cruises that cater to him or her. Alternatively, some cruisers use these sites to inform themselves about cruise ships’ future full or partial-ship charter plans so they can modify their own travel plans accordingly. It is possible to be “bumped” when a ship gets chartered after you book, and I have heard of passengers who wish to avoid a theme cruise that they find themselves on the same ship with, in the case of non-full ship charters. They might have had an unpleasant experience or heard about one from another cruiser. These unfortunate stories are relatively rare occurrences though. In fact, Chapter 22 Festival at Sea, tells the happy story of Ms. Dorothy, 80-something cruise passenger who experienced just the opposite: Ms. Dorothy found herself on the same ship as a theme cruise that she was not a part of, and was aimed at a very different demographic—and yet the theme cruise became an annual tradition for her.... Read the complete chapter, Theme Cruising: Two Passions in One, in The Joy of Cruising. Available now... ....In 2018, Dana Freeman was named one of the “10 Travel Influencers Changing How We Vacation” by Porthole Cruise Magazine, and she was also selected as one the “30 Bloggers and Travelers to Follow for Summer Vacation Advice” by Travel Pulse.
Dana has had a diverse career path to get to where she is today as a travel writer and influencer, but her passion for travel can be traced in a straight line back to her grandmother. Somewhat before her time, Dana’s grandmother, Mildred, was an itinerant traveler dating back to the forties and fifties. After a divorce, her grandmother vowed to continue traveling, and cruising was particularly conducive to traveling solo; accordingly cruise travel developed into a passion for “Gram.” It was not unusual, even in the fifties, for Mildred to save up her money, put her kids in summer camp, and go on a cruise. Mildred also frequently traveled professionally in her medical administration career. She introduced Dana to travel, first by having Dana accompany her on a business trip to Greece, and then sshortly thereafter taking her on her first cruise—just the two of them. Consequently, Dana became addicted to travel as a young teen, and that passion for travel has morphed into a passion for travel writing, and Gram forever speaking through her as what Dana refers to as “her travel muse.” In 1980, “Gram” decided to share her love of travel with her four grandchildren by inviting each one of them to accompany her on a trip of their choice. Each year Gram planned a trip with one grandchild to go anywhere in the world that they wanted to visit. Dana was the oldest of her grandchildren and got to travel with Gram first. 12-year old Dana knew Gram’s true passion was cruising—and that was her pick to travel with her. “I wanted to see why she loved cruising so much,” Dana said. In August 1980, Gram and Dana embarked on the Holland America Line SS Veendam on a cruise to the Caribbean. In 2010, 91-year old Gram—known as Great Gram to Dana’s two children, daughter Callahan, 8, and son Flynn, 11—expressed an interest in resurrecting the tradition she had started 30 years earlier of traveling with Dana and the other grandchildren. Gram told Dana, “I want to take your kids out on a trip like I did when you were children.” What an audacious thing to want to do at 91. Not surprising given Gram’s longtime love for cruising, and her independent attitude. (Gram continued in her career until well into her eighties, only stopping due to failing eyesight.) Dana was very hesitant to let the kids go on a cruise with Gram alone. Gram would be 92 by the time she traveled with the great grandkids. Dana told her, “I don’t think that it’s fair to put on the kids the burden of something happening to you. And they are a lot to handle.” Gram responded, “Ok fine, why don’t we all just go. I’ll take you all.” After Gram quickly reached that compromise, Dana’s concern was alleviated. She assumed this would be a one-time event. “I thought she would take my children, my husband and myself on a cruise because that is what she really wanted to do and we felt like she could not do it herself anymore and it would be done. Gram’s passion was cruising and that’s what she wanted to do.” In August 2010, virtually 30 years to the day of 12-year old Dana’s first cruise with Gram, Dana, her husband Andrew, son Flynn, daughter Callahan and Great Gram embarked on the Windstar Windsurf in Barcelona, Spain to Nice, France. Aside from a cruise in Mexico with her parents as a young teen on Sitmar Cruises (now P & O Holidays), for Dana it was the first time cruising in almost 25 years. Flynn and Callahan, and Andrew, would get to experience their first cruise on one of the world’s most exclusive vessels. “It sort of spoiled them rotten going on the Windstar Cruise line as their very first cruise!” With a capacity of only 310 passengers, the five-mast, seven-sail, 6-decks Wind Surf yacht was the flagship of the luxury Windstar fleet—its largest and most well-appointed craft. The Freeman family and Gram were “somewhat of a square-peg-in-a-round hole” on the grand Wind Surf. “We were definitely an anomaly; even for my demographic in the mid-forties, I was not the typical Windstar cruiser. My kids were the only kids on ship. So as a family we were definitely seen as an oddity. Gram was the oldest on the ship and my kids were the youngest.” Nevertheless, Dana described the Wind Surf cruise as incredible. So, much so that Great Gram and Dana’s family decided to take another cruise the next year. “When we got home from the trip—I don’t even think Gram’s luggage was unpacked—Gram said, let’s go again; so where are we going next year.” It turns out Cruising with Grandma became a tradition—beginning with Gram at 92-years old and taking place over the successive four years—of Gram taking Dana, Andrew, Flynn, and Callahan on a cruise. Not just any cruise; Gram was partial to small luxury craft. So, after first experiencing Wind Surf, the Freemans got to experience a Mediterranean cruise on Seabourn, another cruise line that Gram was very fond of.... Read the complete amazing saga of Cruising With Gram in Chapter 5, Dana Freeman Travels, The Joy of Cruising. Available now... The Joy of Cruising: Passionate Cruisers, Fascinating Stories
The Joy of Cruising 1. The Joy of Cruising 2. Marathoner of the Seas: Joe Church 3. Jim Zim 4. The Godmother: Elizabeth Hill The Influencers 5. Dana Freeman Travels: Cruising with Grandma 6. Sheri Griffiths: Cruise Tips TV 7. The Traveling Wife Cruising Around the World 8. Ships & Champagne Cruisers Like You and Me…Sort Of 9. Bill and Rosie and Mark and Leanne and Karen and Jerry 10. A Cruising Ministry 11. Cuba Cruising 12. Seventeen Seas Cruising’s Young and Restless 13. Cruising’s Young and Restless 14. Cruising Isn’t Just for Old People Cruise Bloggers: The Readers’ Choice 15. Cruise Bloggers: The Readers’ Choice 16. CruiseMiss: Danielle Fear 17. Popular Cruising: Jason Leppert 18. Royal Caribbean Blog: Matt Hochberg 19. Disney Cruise Line Blog: Scott Sanders Theme Cruising: Two Passions in One 20. Theme Cruising: Two Passions in One 21. Malt Shop Memories 22. Festival at Sea 23. Music On the Ocean: Cruise Production, Inc. 24. Card Player Cruises 25. ETA Motorcycle Cruises Performing On the Ocean 26. The Cruise Director: Alonzo Bodden 27. Jazz On the Ocean: The Legendary Manny Kellough 28. Lectures and Luxury 29. Laughter On the Ocean: AJ Jamal 30. The Holidays 2018 |
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