Category Archives: Italy

JOIN US ON THE RHINE

BY CHRIS MEYER(cmeyer@cruiseshipcenters.com (800) 745-4015)

Have you heard of river cruises – the best way to immerse yourself in Europe? Our first one was so great that we’re going back for more.
viking rhine getawayThis time we’re combining a three-day sojourn on picturesque Lake Como, Italy with a 7-day cruise down the Rhine River from the Swiss Alps through the German countryside and on to Amsterdam, Holland. We were originally scheduled for May 2020 and canceled twice by Covid. Undeterred, we’re set for 2023. Everything about this itinerary is epic – the gorgeous scenery, the castles, the windmills, the beautiful Viking ship, the awesome  food, and our group of Joyful Travelers, who make everyone else on the ship jealous because they are having so much fun. Plus, everything is included and organized from the time you leave your home airport – round-trip flights, transfers, internet, meals, drinks, and daily shore excursions. So we can spend the entire time on vacation – mentally and physically.

One reason I am so excited is because my colleague Jane’s group so enjoyed this itinerary in 2018. You might think it is early to be thinking about a trip so far in the future, but two years of canceled cruises means 2023 already is filling, So it’s a good idea to claim the best value staterooms now, while they are available.

Here’s a look at the Itinerary.

May 12: Depart Los Angeles (or other US metro airport)

May13: Arrive in Milan, Italy, transfer to Lake Como hotel.  

May 14: Walking tour of Como including funicular ride for panoramic views.

May 15: Boat ride throughout the lake including an extended stop in Bellagio, the crown jewel.

Daily breakfast included in hotel nights. Once on the ship three meals a day plus wine or beer with lunch and dinner are included. 

Lake Como

Lake Como

May 16: Transfer across the Alps to Basel, Switzerland, and embark on Viking Hermod.

May 17: Breisach, Germany, gateway to the Black Forest and the Alsace wine region. Take a electric bike ride through the Black Forest or go wine tasting at local vineyards.

May 18: Strassbourg, France. Experience this blend of French and German cultures, resplendent churches, medieval covered bridges, verdant parks and handsome Art Nouveau and modernist architecture.

May 19: Heidelberg, Germany; Rudesheim, Germany. Tour Heidelberg, home of Germany’s oldest university, founded in 1386. Visit the beautiful sandstone ruins of imposing Heidelberg Castle and take in the scenery of the Neckar River Valley and the city’s many red rooftops from a hilltop post. Afterward, set on a walking tour through Old Town to Heidelberg’s renowned gates. Later, in Rüdesheim spend free time in the pedestrian-only Drosselgasse and sample a glass of locally produced wine at one of the restaurants or wine bars. Optional Medieval castle dinner. 

May 20: Middle Rhine Scenic Cruising; Koblenz, Germany. Sail along the most scenic stretch of the Rhine, where turreted castles and fortresses overlook the river from their hilltop posts. You will want to be on the top of the ship for 360-degree views. Arrive in Koblenz this afternoon and disembark for a tour of 700-year-old Marksburg Castle.

Castles on the Rhine

Castles on the Rhine

May 21: Cologne, Germany. Begin your day with a morning tour of Cologne, Germany’s fourth-largest city. Stroll through Old Town past St. Martin’s Church and visit the Dom, Germany’s largest cathedral and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Spend your free time enjoying Cologne’s atmospheric waterfront.

May 22: Scenic cruising; Kinderdijk, The Netherlands. We sail along the Rhine during the morning hours. Admire scenic views and enjoy a morning of enjoyable Dutch diversions: sample Dutch cheeses and jenever, a distilled juniper liquor, and take in a culturally enriching presentation on the Dutch Golden Age. In Kinderdijk, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, join an afternoon tour of this ingenious network of windmills and other flood management devices. You learn why the windmills were built and see how they work, plus you enter a working windmill for a tour of its mechanisms and living quarters. 

May 23: Disembark in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Check into a central Amsterdam hotel and then take an insightful walking tour of the city.

May 24: Amsterdam options include a canal cruise, a foodie tour, the Anne Frank House, and the Rijksmuseum.

May 25: Fly home

The Viking ship has various levels of staterooms at different price points. The entire trip including including round-trip economy flights from Los Angeles is about $6,000 per person double occupancy for a French Balcony stateroom.  You can save money with a lower deck river-view stateroom or gain more space with a full veranda stateroom or suite. There also are options for premium economy and business class air. Our Expedia pricing is $325 below Viking’s direct price. If you pay by electronic check rather than a credit card, you receive a 3.3% discount. We can determine your exact desires and provide a detailed quote.

Inclusions:

  • All meals plus wine and beer with lunch and dinner on the cruise portion. Daily breakfast on the hotel portion.
  • Daily shore excursions.
  • Nightly entertainment.
  • All transfers.
  • Taxes
  • Two Expedia Rewards points for every dollar spent.

Not included: Gratuities.

CONTACT US TODAY ABOUT THIS SPECTACULAR CRUISE – (800) 745-4015

Traveling is good for you – physically, mentally and spiritually

By Chris Meyer

Here’s an updated  blog version of an article I wrote for Health Connections magazine

Everyone likes to get away. It’s fun and it can be good for you – physically, mentally and spiritually. Yes, you can return from an exciting journey with a new fitness regimen, new appreciation of a foreign culture, and a refreshed outlook on your daily existence.

It’s no wonder figures as diverse as St. Augustine, Hans Christian Anderson and Mark Twain have recommended travel so highly. And modern-day studies back them up.

Summiting Half Dome is a physical and spiritual high.

Summiting Half Dome is a physical and spiritual high.

PHYSICAL

It’s cliché to say that you need to burn off those extra vacation pounds. But it doesn’t have to be that way. If you’re a gonzo traveler like me, you will be burning calories trying to pack in as many experiences as possible. That’s a given when I’m backpacking, but it can also work on more civilized excursions, where the food is more tempting than the dehydrated variety.

A walk through Rome’s wonderful maze of ancient passageways, piazzas, and fountains reveals new discoveries at each turn. It also burns off some serious pasta.  The legs will definitely feel it on a climb to the top of the St. Peter’s Basilica dome.

Cruise ships, sometimes maligned as floating palaces of overindulgence, now offer spa cuisine and state-of-the-art gyms.  (See USA Today’s Best cruise ships for fitness junkies.) Royal Caribbean International is bringing celebrity chefs specializing in healthy food aboard its newest ships. England’s Jaime Oliver, who has crusaded for healthier school lunches, will offer hsi take on Italian and Biggest Loser” chef Devin Alexander’s Solarium Bistro aims to pack a lot of taste into few calories. So why not jump-start your fitness regimen with the ocean in full view?  Everything is convenient and even walking around the track in the fresh sea air is a pleasurable way to get the blood flowing.

Trails connecting the villages of Italy's Cinque Terre bring beauty and exercise together.

Trails connecting the villages of Italy’s Cinque Terre bring beauty and exercise together.

Ashore a plethora of active options await, from trekking between vintage European villages to kayaking picturesque Caribbean coastlines. Runners cruises offer training, expert advice and an island 5K race.

A healthy, local, organic food movement is in full bloom in Hawaii. From restaurants to farmers’ markets, fresh and delicious choices abound. It’s easy to bypass the luau and Spam after burning some serious calories on the kayaking trip to the secret waterfall.

Agriturismos connect you with the Italian roots of what is sometimes called the slow food movement. Plus, you can see traditional methods of producing wine and olive oil, and even take a turn in the kitchen, learning how to prepare fresh food that healthily delights the taste buds.

MENTAL

“The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.” -St. Ausutine

I love books that mentally transport me to another place. But actually being in there is transformative. All senses are involved. Talk about mental stimulation keeping the brain sharp!

Roaming Washington, D.C.’s Smithsonian Museums offers so much history and science.  I grew up fascinated with the moon mission. At the Air and Space Museum I could see, even touch, the spacecraft and visualize the experience.

My mind and extremities were aroused as I shivered amid Denali National Park’s vast and colorful tundra while a native Athabascan described her people’s traditions. I could feel the conditions that required their ingenious adaptations and perseverance.   

What better way to feel the Athabascan culture than through through the words of one of its daughters amid the unspoiled tundra of Denali National Park.

What better way to feel the Athabascan culture than through through the words of one of its daughters amid the unspoiled tundra of Denali National Park?

 

Walking the expansive grounds of Beijing’s Forbidden City helps you process the separation and extravagance of the ruling class that eventually led to revolution.

A photo of Mount Rushmore is interesting. Viewing it up close from all angles gives you appreciation for the enormous challenge of sculpting huge granite outcroppings with dynamite.

I’ve viewed many beautiful pictures of Yellowstone’s colorful geysers. Walking among the steaming pools and breathing their sulfur odors demonstrates a bit of what goes on deep below our feet. And seeing Old Faithful go off on schedule is, well, really believing.

SPIRITUAL

To move, to breathe, to fly, to float

To gain all while you give

To roam the roads of lands remote

To travel is to live

-Hans Christian Anderson

Have you ever really seen the stars? Away from the ambient light of civilization so thousands of lights explode like diamonds against a pitch-black sky? I have done this high in the mountains while backpacking, at sea on cruise ships and even from remote spots in Hawaii.

It is magical. Awe-inspiring. Humbling.  Mysterious. Soul refreshing. Gets us outside of our modern climate-controlled cocoons. Invites the kind of big-picture contemplation that has mystified and inspired for ages.

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You can’t help but contemplate the miracle of creation high in the eastern Sierra Nevada.

Down to earth wonders have similar effects.  Peer over the edge of the Grand Canyon. Stand in the center of Yosemite Valley and wonder at the kaleidoscope of granite, trees and plunging waterfalls. Put on snorkeling gear and enter the colorful undersea world of a Caribbean reef. John Muir called such pristine sights nature’s cathedrals because they can’t help but kindle appreciation for the wonder of creation.

Man-made monuments also inspire introspection about spiritual matters. Michelangelo’s sacred art, Jerusalem’s temple and Cambodia’s Angkor Wat demonstrate humankind’s relentless search for the divine. The physical feats and message behind them can only be fully appreciated in person.

Travel also connects with people in the here and now. The mixed-race tour guide deftly explaining the complex relationship between Native Americans and the Euro-descended amid the backdrop of the American West. The proud Roman cab driver joyfully describing the wonders of his city.  The Tokyo guide who helps us understand why the traditional sacred tea ceremony remains important in a modern Japan of bullet trains, electronics and neon.

We went to New Orleans to help clean up after Hurricane Katrina. We experienced this great, and staggered, city and its people in a more personal way than usual travel affords.

We went to New Orleans to help clean up after Hurricane Katrina. We experienced this great, and staggered, city and its people in a more personal way than usual travel affords.

 

Take this to another level through voluntourism. Help the National Park Service while enjoying the scenery. Rescue endangered sea turtles on a picturesque Costa Rican beach. Aid a clean water project in conjunction with an African safari.

Mark Twain has transported me to different times and places in his books. He also was an advocate of personal exploration:

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”

How much easier it is for us to visit distant places than in Twain’s day! And do it in a way that’s beneficial to our physical, mental and spiritual health.

TIME TO PLAN YOUR NEXT ADVENTURE

There’s no better time than now to contact an Expedia travel consultant to book a journey that will nourish body, mind and soul. All the travel suppliers have tee’d up discounts for the heavy booking season that begins right after Christmas, and your consultant has the knowledge and tools to hook you up with the right amazing experience.

Call: (800) 745-4015 or (949) 201-4246

Click: ocglobetrotter.com

Email: cmeyer@ocglobetrotter.com

Come in: 24321 Avenida de la Carlota, Suite H-3, Laguna Hills, CA 92653. In Oakbrook Village center between Trader Joe’s and Woody’s Diner

Check out our reviews on Yelp.

Rick Steves – one of many sources for navigating Europe

By Chris Meyer

The Orange County Register Travel section published (Dec. 8, 2013)a good compilation of articles by European travel guru Rick Steves, along with an introduction by travel editor Gary Warner. I have long used Steve’s guidebooks and public television programs to help me navigate Europe – in fact, Gary recommended him to me years ago.

In Dubrovnik, Croatia, we sought out picturesque Buza because of a mention in a Steves’ guidebook. This little bar clings “like a barnacle to the outside of the city walls,” as Steves puts it. Although Old Town is compact, this is a place you are unlikely to stumble upon. With tables on uneven surfaces amidst jagged rocks, we enjoyed cold drinks in this most spectacular setting and even slipped into the Adriatic on a hot and humid summer day. Buza, by the way, means “hole in the wall” in Croatian, not slang for the result of adult beverage consumption.

Buza, which means "hole in the wall," is perched on just outside of Dubrovnik's ancient rampart.

Buza, which means “hole in the wall,” is perched on just outside of Dubrovnik’s ancient rampart.

On the Spanish island of Mallorca, we sought out the Caves of Drach on Steves’ recommendation, which I have since passed on the clients. Here, amid dramatically lighted stalactites and stalagmites is a huge subterranean lake, across which a candlelit floating classical concert emerges from a dark tunnel and passes by a small stand of benches. A very European blend of nature and civilization!

Of course it doesn’t always work out so idyllically. A Steves’ recommended hotel in Barcelona, Spain will forever be immortalized in Meyer family lore as the worst place we ever stayed. The location was right, just off the Las Ramblas main drag and near near the central Placa Catalan. And the price was mild in a very expensive city. But even I could not not put lipstick on this pig. The stinky reception area polluted by the chain-smoking attendant can be written off as just the way it still is in Europe. But the “hazard” signs along the dingy corridor to careworn rooms with ancient mattresses sent this one over the top or, more accurately, under the bottom. To be fair to Steves, I could have picked a pricier option among his multiple recommendations in the spirit of “you get what you pay for.” But I wonder why he even had this one as a selection. Still, when the good-natured ribbing comes, I take the blame and deflect Steves, whom I still uses as a resource – but with more critical analysis.

MANY SOURCES LEADS TO MORE RELIABILITY

Emphasis is on the “a”. Guidebooks are good tools for navigating spectacular vacation experiences – our corporate mission. But they have their limitations – See my post on the methods of Lonely Planet, another good, imperfect resource.

As for Steves, I like his off-the-beaten-path style of travel. But it’s not for everyone because of preferences and/or physical limitations. Some people prefer guided luxury. Or they may want a little of Steves’ “Back Door” style along with other modes.

So in our travel practice such guidebooks are in toolboxes also stocked with personal experience, user reviews, the media (newspapers, magazines, books, television) and materials from travel suppliers themselves. Together, these resources help us to craft experiences tailored to individuals. We strive to use multiple sources and control for biases in a creative customer-centric approach that is agnostic about mode, hotel chain, cruise line and tour operator. Priority is given to delivering an enriching experience at great value.

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When in Rome….at the Rome Museum.

I employed these principles on a personal visit to Rome in July 2013.  Upon our arrival, after little sleep in our overnight flight in economy seats, my wife, Susan, and I used our “power through” strategy to the first-day acclimatization. After quickly unpacking and freshening up at our hotel, we ventured out quasi-sleepily and rambled through the nearby area around the Spanish Steps and Piazza de Popolo until we crashed hard for a serious sleep.

First, our hotel. A deal on our Expedia booking engine offered Hotel Majestic on Via Veneto for just about $100 a night when packaged with our Al Italia flight. Reviews on TripAdvisor and Expedia Verified Reviews averaged to above four stars. It turned out to be very nice and in a great part of town, steps away from a Metro stop and near the Spanish Steps and Trevi Fountain. And a good deal that partially offset high airfares.

RECOMMENDATIONS: BOOKS, CONSUMER REVIEWS, PERSONAL

During our power-through exercise we employed both personal recommendations and guidebooks. Our daughter, Megan, had spent a college semester abroad in Rome. Her local knowledge of the city and familiarity with the kinds of things we like added up to many plot points on our map. This day they included some favorite churches around Piazza de Popolo. On later days Megan’s recommendations included a terrific outdoor market and a climb to the top of St. Peter’s dome.

rome cafe

We beat the dinner crowd because we were between time zones.

For food, we turned to Steves for recommendations in the vicinity of the Spanish Steps. Problem was, we were not in sync with the time zone – hungry for dinner around 5 p.m. when those restaurants would not open until 7. After striking out a few times, we fell back on the stumble upon tactic because in life the plan just doesn’t always work perfectly. Plus, while I like to have a plan, I also know that surprises in travel, as in life in general, can be as delightful as a mysterious gift under the Christmas tree.

So, in our hunger and fatigue, we took a chance on a Osteria della Vite, a nice looking sidewalk cafe with huge cooling fans and cold beer. I know that seems odd for our first beverage in Italy, but we had walked a couple of miles in the heat and we had another nine days to indulge in the county’s wines. Turns out, this was a pretty good stumble. The focaccia bread pizza was unique and satisfying. And the cold beer hit the spot. On a later stumble-upon near the Trevi Fountain, we would not be so fortunate in a place with a menu whose Hollywood Rat Pack references were cheesier than the bland, rubbery pizza. But on the Vatican’s main drag we came across a lunch place patronized by locals with fresh sandwiches, fresh fruit and the most reasonable prices we found in Rome.

THE WISDOM OF THE CROWD

Our best meals in Rome came courtesy of TripAdvisor and a tour we booked. My wife, Susan, found that one of the consumer review site’s top rated restaurants was near our hotel. Osteria Barberini has a non-descript door on an alley-like street and you walk down a flight of stairs to a diminutive dining room. The gregarious owner tells us in English that his son, the chef, has some truffle-infused lasagna and ravioli as the day’s specials, and he highly recommends them. The couple at the next table nod and smile so we order a plate of each. The couple, who were from New England, tell us they’ve returned multiple times because they found the food so delicious. We were similarly impressed. Magnifico!

Our other great Roman meal was the climax of a night walking tour of Rome we had selected through Expedia because of solid consumer reviews and an Expedia discount. We were the only people on the tour this night, so we had a proud and vivacious Roman woman to ourselves. We got to ask all the questions and we like to ask questions. We got her take on the Forum, the fall of the empire, Italian reunification and other historical issues. We walked by well-known sights like the Trevi Fountain and Pantheon. Plus, we went a bit off the most beaten path to the historic Jewish Ghetto and across the Tiber River to the trendy Trastevere district. There we came across a local political protest and Ristorante Spirito DiVino, another restaurant with a gregarious English-speaking owner, who told us the building and a special dish go back to the days of Julius Caesar. We toured the ancient cellar and I ordered the pork dish purportedly prepared for the emperor, which was earthy and unlike typical Italian food.  Both superb experiences. 

The Pantheon's occulus is just one piece of evidence of  amazing ancient engineering, given the tools of the day.

The Pantheon’s oculus is just one piece of evidence of amazing ancient engineering, given the tools of the day.

Our own experiences, of course, are added to the resource mix, and often become our strongest recommendations because we are not relying on others. Ratings and recommendations always carry a degree of subjectivity, of course. A conversation with a friend or client adds perspective.

A POWERFUL NETWORK ADDS DEPTH AND BREADTH

I should mention one more powerful recommendation tool in the box – our people. In addition to our local team of 40 consultants, we are part of a network of 4,000 Expedia colleagues from Canada’s Yukon Territory to San Juan, Puerto Rico. Judging from the conversations on our Facebook page, there is hardly a travel question so obscure that one of these experts can not answer – usually in minutes. And, like us, they thrive on mutually beneficial relationships with clients and colleagues.

So we have the likes of Rick Steves’ writings to let us know about Dubrovnik’s Buza; Jorge from San Juan, who has taken his kids on that Disney cruise; Allison from Vancouver, who has explored the Mekong; Marilyn from Brooklyn, who can provide a complete rundown of Jamaican resorts from personal experience; and Jane, transplanted from England to Laguna Hills, who knows exactly what to see and what to skip in her birthplace.

Personal referrals, TripAdvisor and, yes, guidebooks and maps all are part of good preparation for travel.

Personal referrals, TripAdvisor and, yes, guidebooks and maps all are part of good preparation for travel.

Together, that’s a powerful set of resources.

LEVERAGING ALL THE RESOURCES

There’s no better time than now to contact an Expedia travel consultant to take advantage of all the resources available for a fantastic exploration of Europe – or anywhere else. All the travel suppliers have discounts tee’d up for the heavy booking season that starts right after Christmas, and our consultants have the knowledge, connections and tools to sculpt a travel experience you will be talking about for years.

Call: (800) 745-4015 or (949) 201-4246

Click: ocglobetrotter.com

Email: cmeyer@ocglobetrotter.com

Come in: 24321 Avenida de la Carlota, Suite H-3, Laguna Hills, CA 92653. In Oakbrook Village center between Trader Joe’s and Woody’s Diner

Check out our reviews on Yelp.

The delights of a small ship lie in what’s ashore

By Chris Meyer

The Azamara Journey doesn’t have a rock-climbing wall. There are no Broadway shows, surf simulators or other mega-ship trappings.

What this “small” cruise ship lacks in razzle-dazzle is more than compensated by its access to off-the-beaten-track ports that allowed us to immerse ourselves in a more intimate side of Italy.

We were able to traipse through Cinque Terre, the five diminutive villages clinging to steep cliffs along the Ligurian Sea, and cool off in a perfect swimming hole in the rocky shoreline.

The Azamara Journey docked in the center of Portoferraio on the Italian island of Elba, giving passengers easy access to the town, the sights and the beach.

The Azamara Journey docked in the center of Portoferraio on the Italian island of Elba, giving passengers easy access to the town, the sights and the beach.

We briefly stepped into the lifestyles of the rich and famous in Portofino, an idyllic burgh that could be the model should Disney ever create Italyland. So what if the mediocre pizza was overpriced?   The vintage fishing boats bobbing feet away and pastel buildings below green hills in the background was a feast for the eyes.  Interestingly, our 20-something waiter was infatuated with TV’s “The OC.” Go figure. In a small-world moment, we shared a shuttle with a very tall Russian who plays basketball for the Los Angeles Clippers.

We were treated to tasty local food and wine at a historic estate overlooking Santa Margarita de Liguria while a tenor and soprano crooned opera and other Italian melodies.

The Cinque Terre village of Riomaggiore.

The Cinque Terre village of Riomaggiore.

We toured Lucca, a walled town with the aura of Florence on a smaller scale, and visited a Tuscan winery to learn its processes and taste its wine and exceptional olive oil.

There were other ports less traveled, such as the Italian island of Elba and the French island of Corsica, but you get the picture.

The excellent swimming hole at Cinque Terre's Manorola.

The excellent swimming hole at Cinque Terre’s Manorola.

The understated ship made an ideal home base for these excursions. After a long day in the heat, we could gete respite in an air conditioned environment or take a dip in the salt water pool on those days when we didn’t get into the sea while ashore. Whether by dock or tender, shore access was easy and time in port was extended.

And Azamara delivered the convenience and cost effectiveness of cruising. We moved from place to place as we consumed the included food, enjoyed the company of fellow passengers, occasionally took in the entertainment offerings, and slept to rest up for another day of exploration. There was a nighty show, dancing in a night club atmosphere and a diminutive casino – all backdrop to the destination focus. One night the deck exploded with a fun party that featured a wide array of regional cuisine and fresh seafood, some of it grilled  on Weber kettles.

The staff and service were over-the-top-excellent and the ship well designed as a floating boutique hotel. Mostly the food reminded us of Celebrity, a sister cruise line with larger ships, the best we have experienced at sea, even if it falls short of Zagat’s 5-Star. What are you going to do when you are serving several hundred people three squares a day? The wonderful exception was our dinner in Prime C, the specialty restaurant with a smaller kitchen, its own menu of made-to-order dishes and a $25 surcharge. Definitely worth it for an above-and-beyond experience! Friends raved about their dinner at the Chef’s Table, an ultra-over-the-top, multi-course affair with high-end wine pairings, but we shied away from the $95 price tag.

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Wine and olive oil tasting at the Monte Carlo winery in Tuscany. We brought home some excellent balsamic vinegar. This was part of our Azamara Land Discovery, which also included a tour of  Lucca.

Fellow passengers told us they liked being in the real world, rather than the traditional cruise world. With Azamara’s “country club casual” style, this means you don’t have to pack your dress clothes and you can dine when and with whom you want. For us, this often meant later than usual, as we tended to maximize our long days ashore. 

The largest contingent of guests were Brits, followed by Americans and then Canadians, with a smattering from other countries.

A number were doing back-to-backs, either starting with the Barcelona-to-Monaco French Riviera leg that preceded our’s or continuing on from Rome to Amalfi, Sicily, the Greek Isles and Athens. Unlike some ships, Azamara’s do not repeat the same itinerary for a season, so you can experience fresh ports for as long as you are willing and able to travel. And Azamara offers significant discounts when you extend your voyage. That leads us to pricing.

Azamara commands a higher price point than the mainstream lines. But, since much more is included, you have to do the math to compare apples with apples, and the price gap shrinks significantly. For example, on Azamara “well” alcoholic beverages and gratuities are included rather than being a la carte additions to the base price. If you buy your flight through the company’s Choice Air program you get a credit (read discount) of $500 or $1,000 per person plus a guarantee that you will not miss your ship’s departure. And on select (read slower selling) cruises, you can get a killer deal like my mother-in-law got on this 7-day cruise: less than $4,000 per person including the luxury cruise, flight, transfers and travel insurance. When you consider that flights to Europe in the high season go for more than $1,500, you understand the value here for a truly premium experience.

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The Journey is designed as a floating boutique hotel. Entertainment includes a piano player in the lounge.

At the end of the day, there still is a premium for access to destinations the big ships can not fit into and the high-end nature of the ship and service.  It’s a premium that is much smaller than at first blush. And one repeat Azamara passengers find to be a good value, particularly when they get one of deals and pile on the loyalty benefits.

Celebrity Cruises Captain’s Club members’ benefits apply, as well as Azamara’s. This has to do with Azamara being part of the company that also operates Royal Caribbean International and Celebrity Cruises. That included 85 internet minutes per person in our case, a great value for keeping in touch with the office, even though we passed on the captain’s cocktail party. Some passengers told us they have sort of graduated through the system – Royal’s action-packed mega-ships when the kids were at home, Celebrity’s W-Hotel style as empty nesters and Azamara when they sought to delve deeper into cultures.

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Lucca’s broad walls once offered military protection. Today they serve as a picturesque promenade, with the Medieval city on one side and the Tuscan countryside on the other.

That brings up another small-ship attribute we discovered. The captain, cruise director and other ship leaders are very accessible and take feedback themselves.

In summary, we found what other passengers told us brought them back to Azamara. The cruise line delivered on its key promises: destination immersion in smaller ports, longer stays and outstanding, unpretentious service. Would some of our customers enjoy that? Absolutely! And we ourselves definitely will be among those who repeat with Azamara. Let’s see? The Baltic? Asia? The possibilities reach beyond the horizon.

But we won’t restrict ourselves. I’ll be going on Royal Caribbean’s Allure of the Seas, the Azamara Journey’ really, really, really big cousin, in November. I expect a very different, but equally fantastic experience. I might even be persuaded to try the Chef’s table.

Click here for more information about Azamara Club Cruises.

In future posts I will drill down into some other aspects of our excellent Italian interlude including:

  • Taking in the wonders of Rome on foot in 90-degree heat.
  • Successes and challenges in finding great restaurants in foreign lands.
  • The pros on cons of guidebook and internet reserach.
  • Those small world and other moments that that add to the wonder of travel.

Flowers under the Tuscan sun.

Sunflowers under the Tuscan sun.

It’s almost “Ciao Italia”

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Passports – check.

Euros and no-foreign-transaction-fee credit cards – check.

Flight, transfer, cruise and excursion reservations confirmed – check.

Rome plans and recommendations plotted on map and spreadsheet – check.

Camera with charged battery and spare memory cards – check.

Now it’s just a matter of finishing some office work, throwing some clothes in the suitcase and heading over to LAX on Wednesday.

Much planning has gone into what promises to be an epic trip … for us and for clients. I’m sure we will thoroughly enjoy living the dolce vita. But I’ll be on the clock, too – absorbing the vibe of small coastal towns and Rome itself, testing restaurant recommendations, trying out tours, and evaluating how small ship immersive cruising compares and contrasts with its larger cousin. First-hand experience that will help me better help our clients make choices fitting their preferences.

Soon it will be showtime as we emerge from a long flight into the Eternal City. I’d like to think that when in Rome we will do as the Romans do. But I know that would not be accurate. I know I will again be smitten by the magic of the place. But maybe we can insert a little more native perspective than the typical tourist.

Oh, we’ll again visit the Trevi Fountain and Spanish Steps, but this time we will linger longer and settle in for dinner at a local enoteca a bit off the beaten path. On Friday, we’ll hit the Pantheon early in the morning when it is quieter and the rising sun puts on a show through its ancient skylight. At St. Peter’s, we’ll climb the dome for an amazing sight from what is by law Rome’s tallest structure. We also will try to fade into the scene as much as our few words of guidebook Italian will allow.

Equally exciting will be our cruise along the northwest Italian coast aboard the Azamara Journey. We visit picturesque Portofino, Cinque Terre, Lucca and Elba – alternating between packaged excursions and do-it-yourself roaming as we evaluate the difference ways to experience the local culture and stunning natural beauty.

Of course I will report the findings on this blog and other materials for our clients, but not until I return. Italy is sure to keep us very busy trying to absorb all she has to offer.