23 days of cruising condensed into one post
I'll sum up the cruise as much as I can, rather than describing each day. I'll post the meals and drinks in separate posts too.
The Viking cruise we did was the European Sojurn, which was 23 days from Amsterdam to Bucharest. We elected a Category D French balcony cabin which was on the main deck along with the restaurant.
The booking and interim contacts was fine. About 90 days before departure we received notification of the included and optional land excursions. We booked 4 that were of interest and stayed with the optional ones.
The excursion list ended up thus;
We ended up cancelling the
Croation countryside and wine tasting on the ship as we booked another paid full day excursion that was better (I can't remember what it was).
On the ship there was a few spots still available so I don't think you must be first to book. I recall the smallest paid group was 12 and that sold out as soon as they reminded people of the tour and the spaces left.
We had previously spoken to Viking about actual arrival time, length of time and departure time on the overnight stay days so we could plan our own time, and this was quite hard to do. There is some chat on forums about this and we had to hassle an agent in Sydney to look at previous trips to see the times. It was harder than it needed to be and I'd call that probably the only issue with booking, paying and receiving intel from Viking.
A few weeks before leaving Oz we received the documents and bag tags for boarding. Basically, tags with our name and cabin number on them that are used on most cruises.
We also confirmed that embarkation would be in the Cruise Port Amsterdam, close to the Central railway station. Some internet mis-information had it at Westpoort which is way North of the City.
Getting to the ship on the day was simple - we trained it to Central, fought the crowds and got to the dock where there was a Viking tent in clear view. I recall we got there about 3pm which was our allotted status time.
Each day the schedule was advised via a newsletter left in the cabin during dinner, along with the tickets for the excursions, regardless of free or paid.
We were split into groups, normally 4 and the start times were normally staggered into 2 times, so 2 groups per time.
The organisation of the tours was very good. Unless we were right in town and a walking tour started there, we'd get on busses and be driven to the start. The shortest trip was about 10 minutes, the longest was about an hour. The busses were tourist coaches and had air conditioning and seat belts. They also had some steep stairs which the older less mobile folks did struggle with.
All the guides utilised an Audio Vox system which used a receiver and an in-ear speaker and worked quite well with a range of about 50 meters. They also supplied different headphones for hearing aid users.
We found the guides to be varied in their style. When comparing with others after a tour we found some didn't give information that others got, or they didn't take their group to some places. one time that stands out is in Budapest where we all stood off to one side of the parliament in the shade and were told about the area. But when we went to move off into view came a fairly impressive statue that was ignored by our guide and turned out to be some quite important historic monument.
The included tours were all decent in quality - always included history, all had a lot of walking and were all in groups of about 15 or so. We saw old towns, castles, monuments and the guides all provided a non-stop commentary on them.
The schedule was well done - everyday we ate lunch on the boat, either after a tour (most common) or before a tour. There was only one day we had lunch off the boat and that was as part of a full day tour in Bucharest on the last day, which was probably done to give the ship time to change over to the new passengers.
To get off the ship you needed to swipe your cabin card and the reverse was done on return - that way they knew who was on and off. At times when we had an overnight in port we were free to come and go as we pleased, I don't think there was a curfew.
Each night before dinner the cruise director gave a talk of about 30 minutes on the next days activities and schedule. He also included some background and history which was always interesting. There were some older people on board and they were less mobile. Quite quickly into proceedings this 'group' was recognised and a leisurely group was organised that had less walking, they were dropped closer to areas being visited (typically using the disabled spaces for example) and I thought that was a good response to an issue. It's probably in the SOP's but still it was considerate.
The cruise we took was actually 2 cruises which we didn't realise and the split at Vienna was quite pronounced in the surroundings and country.
To start, Amsterdam, Germany and Austria had huge amounts of castles and older towns to visit. This was very interesting as the empires of old were discussed and dissected and they all related to each other. Some of the castles and forts are very old and in good condition.
There were a few tours relating to Jewish history and these were interesting too. The Germans are very up front with this subject - "It happened, we did it, we can't change it and here it is". They don't gloss it but they don't promote naz_-ism.
We did 2 ports with an overnight - Vienna and Budapest. In both ports optional excursions were offered for opera, dinners or shows which we didn't do. In Budapest we did spend time doing night photo's of the town but mostly we were worn out each day after a full schedule.
The optional tours we did were good but I question the value. The Lipizzaner stallions behind the scenes tour was charged to us at 199 Euro each. This did include a horse drawn carriage ride through Vienna, which was a bit of Tourist chintz but when you look at the price of the Stables tour at 23 Euro, we sure paid a premium for that horse ride.
This was no more effort for Viking - we simply stopped outside the venue as part of a tour and stood to one side waiting for another guide to put a sign up. I appreciate there is a cost to Viking involved but a difference as large as this hurts.
The cabin cleaning staff were outstanding. We were lucky to get a lady from Romania and she was very friendly, efficient and a great representative. Each day we walked out of the cabin she did a check list with us; tickets, camera, hat, sunglasses, water, wife/husband. She was great to deal with, as were the other ladies on the floor.
They also cleaned very well. As we walked past cabins there were in there cleaning and they were doing a thorough job on the shower stalls, even wiping down above the shower head. No mouldy bits here folks. Toiletries were always replenished regardless of having one or two open in the shower stall - and they didn't remove them.
Laundry costs were expensive. 4 Euro per piece was the cheapest for your smalls, rising with the size of the garment. The showers had a pull out clothes line and a heated floor, so we washed items in the sink, hung them on the line, cranked the floor up to 10 and closed the door.
Air conditioning in the cabins was efficient, but with nil instructions anywhere it was a bit hit and miss. It would shut off when you opened the sliding door and I suspect a few people were caught by this. But I overheard more than one complaint about lack of control being an issue.
On the top deck there was open space. Mainly utilised with tables and chairs, the front half had umbrellas that would be taken down and removed if the wind picked up; and 'wind' was not much breeze at all. Past the wheelhouse were fixed shade sails with chairs, tables and lounges. Past that was a putt putt green and a shuffle board court. This also had the chef herb garden which we were advised not to touch, pluck, water or do anything other than look. Noted.
Drinks such as still and sparkling water were available at the coffee stations, and 2 bottles of distilled water were provided in the room. However, any other waters of soft drinks were not included outside of meal times and you could expect to pay for these if you wanted one.
There was no issue bringing your own drinks such as alcohol on board, I think they asked you not to drink them in the open area's but I had a beer on the top deck one day without issue.
The room had a fridge (which was quiet) a hairdryer, hanging space with about 8 hangers and on the bench 2 power points - 1 Euro and 1 US. Beside each bed was a Euro power point as well. We used an Aldi power board with 2 plugs and 4 USB ports and it was fine, although I had a power-hungry hard drive that I plugged into one point alone for it to get enough power to charge.
The room had a large flat screen TV and you could watch news channels such as BBC, Fox, CNBC and one other. Reception was a bit sketchy so I didn't rely on it. You could watch the daily cruise director talks in the lounge as well which was an alternative to going to the lounge. they also had a bow cam on 24 hours so you could watch that.
Internet was provided free and unlimited. They did warn us it may be slow and patchy and would be better in port. It was quoted as being suitable for email and light browsing but not for movie download or picture upload. It was slow and sometimes you gave up, but in the main it was enough for a person on holiday to get their interwebs fix. I did the speedtest thing and whilst it come up as starlink and a decent download speed (like 75Mb/GB/??) it was still slow.
You could connect 2 devices per name and cabin, so your phone and tablet could be connected at once.
The differences in the 2 cruises? The first cruise ended in Budapest and the second one started. From a passenger point of view it was seamless; we just had different people at dinner that night. But the biggest change was in the actual countries we visited. There was a definite drop in the wealth of countries in the Balkans - no more castles and forts, old towns were just old and the general vibe was of a struggle. Numerous buildings badly needed repairs and maintenance. The people were just as nice and friendly and I guess happy(?) with their lot.
Croatia was one standout. The war they endured has left permanent marks on the country and there are many buildings left as they were on the last day of war and not returned. Some have been rebuilt but only to a bare stage without any render or finishing.
But the general drop in life quality is evident and it's a wake up call to us in a very lucky country to see how others live.
In all the Balkan states the lack of wealth is evident and you could gauge it by the number of stray dogs. Virtually none seen in the first 2 weeks to a normal thing for the last week.
The history shown in the Baltic states is not as impressive as Germany and Austria but they do have it - older towns are around. We did an optional tour to Lepenski Vir which was a thousands-year old site that was eventually lost to a damming of a river. It's a fascinating site, hauled up the hill and reconstructed above the water level and has displays of original artifacts from thousands of years ago - just in glass cases
To be continued....