Wednesday, September 26, 2018

OK, so here we actually go...


OK so this blog hasn’t started off exactly as I had planned. In reading my first post, I was going to do a review/recap of our Oasis of the Seas cruise in April 2018. Well, life got in the way, work got hectic and I haven’t done that. Plus during this time I was finalizing plans for our Vision of the Seas cruise in September 2018. We were making final arrangements, ensuring all tours were full and we had enough Euros to pay for everything. I had wanted to do a little write up pre-cruise about what we were going to do, who the tours were booked through and how I came to find and settle on these trip purveyors. But again, life got in the way and I didn’t do it. So then my intention was to do a daily recap of what we did, which whom we did it with and the highlights/low points of the day. Well that got shot to hell halfway to the airport the day we left! I realized that I didn’t pack my iPad (remembered the keyboard, but not the device). We were too far away to turn around and I couldn’t even stand to think of typing it all on my dinky little phone screen. So no daily posts. The days were hectic and long anyways and by the time that dinner was done each night, I was beat and ready for sleep, so the posts probably wouldn’t have happened anyway. So here we are now, back home for a whopping 48 hours and I will start composing this blog to try and get as much written down before it fades completely from my memory! I’ll go through the trip day by day doing the best that I can to remember and record what we did, with who, how it was planned and what I got out of it. In the end, hopefully it will both help me remember the trip and maybe help other plan for similar excursions over time.

Before we get on to the 2018 Europe trip, a little bit of history to help explain how we got to this trip and why some of the decisions were made. Our 2016 Europe trip set the stage for this trip and influenced much of what we did. Rather than explain as I go, here is a recap of that trip which I will be referring to along the way. I apologize for any rambling that may happen along the way. I’m writing this in more of a “stream of consciousness”/story style so there may be some jumping around. Basically, I’m not going back and doing a lot of editing on myself as I type.

History:
Let’s do a little bit of recap. I had been planning this European Family Vacation for about a year before we actually boarded the plane. Back in September of 2016, my mom and I went on almost the exact same trip, so I sort of knew what to expect and what kind of things we wanted to do while we were there. Last time, the impetus for the trip was my 30th birthday present to myself. A Mediterranean cruise has always been on my bucket list and I decided that I was going to do it. It was a milestone birthday and financially I was in a good spot. My friends on the other hand, were not. They either didn’t have the time off from work to take a 20 day trip or the money to travel the way I wanted to travel (or both!). So in stepped my Mom. She really wanted to go, and offered to pay half so I didn’t have to pay double. Granted this meant traveling with my Mom, but she’s not the worst travel companion. So it was basically settled. Mom and I were going to Europe. While we were leading up to the cruise my Dad got jealous and wanted to come too. Mom shot him down every time it came up, as him coming would mean that I again would be having to pay double occupancy for the room and would defeat the purpose of her coming at all (we’ll come back to this later in the story…). At one point Dad was saying he would book an inside cabin for himself, but that was getting crazy expensive again. So Dad stays home and Mom and I are going. The 2016 cruise was on the Brilliance of the Seas, sailing a 12 night Mediterranean Greek Isle cruise, departing on September 23 out of Barcelona, Spain. Along the way, we would visit ports in France, Italy, Greece, Turkey and Malta.


We had booked an Owners Suite for the trip. Usually we get Grand Suites, but, when looking at the price difference, it was only about $500 more (I truthfully can’t remember if that was total or per person) to get the Owner’s, so we went for it. It was 12 days…the larger space would be nice and the Owner’s Suite has a dining table where the Grand does not. With the early mornings for excursions we were figuring that we would be doing mostly room service for breakfast and the table would be good to eat at. So we booked it. A few months before the cruise, I was poking around on the RCI website, seeing if there was a price drop for the cabin and noticed that the Royal Suite was showing up as available to book. The price was about $1500 more than the Owner’s Suite that we had, so joking around, I texted my Mom…”Guess what! The Royal Suite is available for $1500”. I was joking. She was not. She called the travel agent and booked it. So…now we’re in the Royal Suite. About 1000 sq ft of space for the 12 night cruise, complete with a baby grand piano. It was a very nice week. I’ll talk more about the suite and all that came with it a little bit later.

We’ve cruised the Caribbean many times and at this point, have the places we like to go picked out, we know how to get there and certainly don’t go on any ship excursions. But Europe is a different animal. Most of the ports are an hour or so from the cities you want to visit. You’re traveling when normal commuters are going to and from work or about their days, so traffic is a major concern. In the research leading up to the trip, people were talking about how they “almost missed the ship”, “traffic was a nightmare”, “god forbid if the bus broke down!!” Putting the traffic and distance concerns together, along with the “horror stories” that you read on the internet, Mom and I were nervous. We didn’t really know what to expect at each port and we decided to take excursions through the ship in most of the ports we were visiting. We knew that we would pay more than if we did them on our own or through private/small group tours through independent vendors, but we wanted the guarantee that we could get back to the ship on Royal’s dime if something happened. Well of course, nothing happened, but we did learn a few valuable lessons. Ship excursions can be great, they can suck, and you can get really sick of 55 person buses! We looked at all that was offered in each port and found things that we wanted to do. Some excursions jumped out right away, while some others went along for the ride. At the time, Royal was offering a 5 excursion “package”. Most of what we wanted was included in one of them already, with a couple of other that were OK thrown on to round it out. Looking at the cost of the excursions separately, the savings wasn’t amazing, but there was nothing else that we really wanted to do instead, so we went for it. The 5 pack excursions included the following tours:
  • ·         “Discovering Monaco & Monte Carlo” for our day in Cannes, France
  • ·         “Coast of Cinque Terre & Portovenere” for our day in La Spezia, Italy
  • ·         “Imperial Rome” for our day in Civitavecchia, Italy
  • ·         “Best of Ephesus” for our day in Kusadasi, Turkey
  • ·         “Blue Grotto Boat Trip & Marsaxlokk” for our day in Valetta, Malta

We were on our own for Santorini and Athens. Everything I read about those ports was that they were really easy to do on your own. We were scouring Cruise Critic prior to the cruise to find things to do in these 2 ports. Along the way, we also joined the Cruise Critic roll call for our sailing. I didn’t really get into it that much with talking to others, but we read every post. In the end, we ended up joining someone else’s private tour in Athens, so we only had to worry about Santorini on our own. There, we rented a car and planned to drive around, seeing what we wanted to see.

So what we were doing on the ship was planned (mostly), now we had to figure out some logistics. We are both of the mindset, that if you are going to travel that far for a vacation, you should make the most of it and see all that you can. Because of the ship schedule, we were able to plan for a few days of extra sightseeing both before and after the cruise. One of the main “problems” we found when trying to book the flights was that you cannot fly direct from Boston to Barcelona on any airline…you have to connect through some city. I can’t remember exactly how we found it, but Aer Lingus allows passengers to have an extended layover in Ireland (up to 14 days) while traveling on the same transatlantic ticket. This may not seem like a huge deal, but flights booked out of the US have a few more “perks” than those within continental Europe. Things like baggage fees, “picking your seat” fees and baggage allowances are very different when you start to do a little investigating. The only downside to this…you have to call Aer Lingus to make the reservation and you cannot do anything online. No check-in, no modifications, no nothing. They don’t charge any extra though, even though the website says that booking over the phone has an added fee, because there is no other way to do it. So we call and book the tickets. With the ship sailing on a Friday (23Sep16), we added 2 days before the cruise to explore Barcelona. So we flew out on 20Sep16 from BOS to DUB, then DUB to BCN. It was an early evening flight out of Boston, landing at an ungodly hour (5am local!!!) in Dublin, to then trudge through the airport for a couple of hours layover to get a morning flight out of Dublin to finally arrive in Barcelona about 10am. The return flights were a little more complicated. First of all, the only fight on Aer Lingus from BCN to DUB that we could have possibly made was at 1045 in the morning (if I remember correctly, there was another early morning flight out). That is cutting it a little too close for comfort to make it on debarkation day, so another night in Barcelona it is!! (We’ve been burned in the past with a late port authority clearance of the ship when trying to catch a morning flight, so we just don’t even try any more. There is nothing worse than ending your vacation stressed out, missing your flight, hanging around the airport trying to get on another one, not being able to and having to try again tomorrow, knowing that you would be on standby the entire time, but your luggage would make it home!) So, we booked a flight to Dublin on 06Oct16, landing midday to have 2 and a half days to explore Ireland. Our flight home to Boston was on an afternoon flight on Sunday 09Oct16, so I can go to work on Monday 10Oct16 and not lose any more vacation days. Now, we just needed to plan and fill up all those extra days.….

One more things about Aer Lingus transatlantic flights…they have Business Class. And this is the Business Class with the lie flat seats! When we were booking, Business Class was way out of our price range. Our Economy tickets were in the ballpark of $850 round trip…not too bad at all! When we booked, Business was going for around $3100 round trip! Keep in mind that Business is only on the BOS-DUB legs of the trip…DUB-BCN is cattle call air! So we booked economy. BUT, we found out that they offer a way to bid for an upgrade to business class. You basically offer a price and if they accept it, you move up. If not, you don’t! The downside is that you don’t know until 3 days before your flight if it was accepted or not. Long story short, we bid for both transatlantic flight legs and WON! So our ~$850 tickets became ~$1850 tickets and we had 12 hours of flight time in the Business class cabin…it was SO worth it!

Another reason to fly Aer Lingus (or at least make you last stop in Europe Dublin before heading back to the US), and no I don’t work for them or get any perks, is US Pre-Clearance. Within Dublin Airport, there is a small section of US soil. Yup, you heard that correctly, US soil…or at least when it comes to airports. They have a dedicated area of Terminal 2 with about 5 or so gates that is past US customs and immigration. You get into the airport, go downstairs, through TSA security, Passport control and to your gate. Then BOOM! When you land in the US, you walk off you plane as a domestic flight. Benefits: MUCH shorter lines at immigration checkpoints. It was also nice to finally not be in the “All other Passports” line! There are only 10 or so flights out a day so there is never really a big line, unlike when landing as an international flight and there could be a bunch more and lines forever! Cons: once you go through Pre-Clearance security, there really isn’t anything down there. 1 little shop, a grab and go place and 1 restaurant. Oh, and a lounge….51st & Green is a nice place to spend a couple of hours if you can…

The rest of the story on this trip will be explained and remembered on a day by day basis. I’ll walk through the memories of it all starting with packing and leaving Massachusetts, to finally arriving back home. We’ll end here for the moment and I’ll start again with the story tomorrow…