| Seadream I: Venice to Venice |
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| Geschrieben von: Administrator | ||
| Montag, 07. Juli 2008 16:22 | ||
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Not even half a year ago we (both in our thirtees living in Munich) took our last SeaDream cruise: 12 days of caribbean sunshine on Seadream II. In the meantime lot's of changes happened in our live including a little seadream baby that is in the works (you can see how we liked our first cruise ;). This resulted in us having to change some of our travel plans for this year. Instead of going to Caribbean again with a 12+ hour flight we were now looking at a vacation in the Med - and of course at Seadream again. Juggling with availability and pricing we came up with a 7 day cruise on SeaDream I departing from and returning to Venice and going to a lot of Croatian islands in between. On this trip, we would also take our parents to convince them off the Seadream way of doing things.
Departing on June 28th our flight left Munich at 6:50a.m. Ummm. Still had to get up at 4am to catch the plane. The flight is a Lufthansa / United codeshare flight operated by Air Dolomiti running on small turboprop planes (ATR 72) and takes little over one hour. We arrived in Venice shortly after 8am after spectacular sightseeing over the alps: No clouds, sunny skies and great mountains. In fact we saw several places we usually use to go skiing or hiking from above which was very nice. Venice airport is a nice small airport (and surprisingly has a lot of international direct flights as well) not too affected by the italian creative chaos that got us when we landed at Rome once. In fact we got our bags very quickly and were off the airport in 20 minutes or so. Our choice of transporation was Alilaguna, the public water bus connecting the Airport and downtown. The blue line went all the way to Zattere, which should be a short walk to Quay St. Basilico where Seadream was docked. After quite a wait for the boat we boarded the water bus which tooks us on a sightseeing tour (passing through Murano, Lido, St. Marks Square. Price is 12 Euros per person (which is really cheap), but the bus can ge crowded and carrying your own luggage can be a pain. The trip took 1.5 hours (compare that to 40 minutes on a water taxi at a steep 100 Euro). Ending up in Zattere, the ship's docking point was short 15 minutes walk from the drop off point. BUT: There are two bridges in between and they are not made for luggage. We bravely carried it all across but my dad hurt is back while doing the heavy lifting and had to see the doctor on board later.
We were meeting the Captain (Bjarne), the activities director (Meredith) and quickly got our first glass of champagne - which we refused since Britta is pregnant. Our first surprise here: The old fashioned room cards and sliding boards have been done away with and you now get a plastic card with your picture on it. Embarkation now takes a little longer since it takes a minute or so to print the boarding pass. We really enjoyed the wooden board and are a little bid sad to see it go away and being replaced with technology. On to the reception where we met Maxi - the receptionist from Austria.
Shortly after boarding it was time for the safety at sea drill. The ship alarm bells would ring and you are taking your life vest and assemble at your assigned lifeboat station. At Seadream there are 4 lifeboats (one of which is also used as tender) with a combined capacity of close to 100 guests as well as life rafts for another 100 people. After having completed these formalities (hopefully without needing them), it was time for the magic Venice sailaway. San Basilio cruise terminal is located right at the end of the Zattere. Ships have to sail literally right through downtown Venice to reach the open seas.
Sailing from Venice takes abou 30 minutes to one hour. First you pass the main island with San Marco square on the left, then later the Lido island with its beaches on the right hand side. Then it's off through a channel out to the open sea. Our next day stop would be: Rab, Croatia. After our first night on board we would wake up to the sights of relatively unknown Rab, Croatia. Being an island town this place has managed to evade the hordes of tourists sometimes found on the croatian coast. Instead, Rab remained a lovely little town - easy enough for sightseeing and with wonderful waters for watersports and swimming.
That evening, Germany would play Spain in the finals of the European soccer cup. There were 13 Germans and 4 Spanish people on board and everyone watched the finals on the big screen in the salon. Well, sad for us, but the Germans lost. Seadream stewards would bring out champagne for the Spanish guests after their victory for the celebrations. (Nice treat). And anyhow: The spanish team was way better and deserved the win! That ended our first real day on board. Our next port of call would be Hvar. The
Stone houses, stone streets: Hvar is a marvel of the mediveal art of building. A couple of impressions:
Hvar would also be the second day that the water toys would be out. Each Seadream vessel carries two jetskis, a sailboat, two kayaks and a couple of zodiacs used for water skiing and swimming. All water toys are free to use (price is included in the fare), but require a legal waiver to be signed. You will also have to wear a lifejacket and remain in the supervised area of the ship. Given these limitations, it is still a lot of fun to use the toys and play or simple swim around the ship. The captain has repositioned the ship a little bit in the afternoon to provide for better use of the toys and we were facing a natural bay now - and a safe distance from any boat traffic.
And tomorrow: On to Dubrovnik
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| Aktualisiert ( Samstag, 09. August 2008 15:25 ) | ||