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   Cruise Travel - Reader Reviews

Welcome to Your Favorites, where you have the opportunity to share your travel experiences with fellow Internet Travelers around the world.


Princess Cruise Line

MS Sea Princess

Your Rating:Four Stars
Reviewed by: Wes (mainecruiser) Carter
Date of Trip: January 13, 2001
# previous cruises: 10+
Itinerary: Caribbean - Western

Overview
The Sea Princess is a beautiful and well maintained ship. Walking around, day or night, there are crew members washing, cleaning or polishing something. The day of sailing, the Sea was inspected and received a score of 97, and the Captain, Andrew Proctor, commended his staff and crew for doing such a good job.

Public Areas
All the public areas, from the lounges and bars, the 4 pools, the theater, to the various restaurants were soft and attractive. This used to be considered a mega-ship, but now, at 77,000 grt., she’s about the average size for most of the newer ships. Outwardly, the Sea Princess looks like a hugh ship, but once on board, it feels like a smaller one.

Food and Service
We had assigned seating for early dining in the Sicilian Dining Room (Neapolitan being its twin, one deck below Sicilian). Again, the dining room was very attractive and sectioned off to give it a bit of an intimate feeling. Seating upwards of 1100 per dining room, one would expect some noise, and there was a little, but not to a point of displeasure. It was mostly tables being bussed by the waiters and assistant waiters - kind or normal restaurant noise. The main dining rooms are open for breakfast, lunch (open seating) and dinner (assigned seating). But for breakfast, we chose the Horizon Court buffet. The selections were plentiful, from fresh fruits and fruit salad, to a variety of cold (1 hot) cereals and yogurts, pastries, breads, bagels, rolls, toast, meats, fish, potatoes, pancakes, French toast, and eggs done 4-5 different ways, including fried, done to order, and omelets with all the fixings done to order. For lunch, we frequented the bountiful buffet in the Horizon Court and every other day had a pizza in Lago’s Pizzeria. Princess probably makes the best pizza afloat. Unfortunately for those doing the Grand Princess, if you want a whole pizza rather than a slice, it costs an arm and a leg (Lago’s suggested gratuity is $1.00 per person; GP’s cover charge is/was $15.00 per person). Then if you are still able to eat, there’s always the Riviera Grill for hot dogs, hamburgers, French fries, and the like. Princess ships also have an ice cream bar, called Sundaes, but this is also at an added cost. Food aboard the Sea Princess is excellent. We’ve found this to be true with all the Princess ships that we’ve sailed. While RCI may be a step up as far as cabin accommodations are concerned, Princess wins the food quality race.

Cabins
Our cabin, A412 (cat. BA), is a balcony cabin. The size was a little small, but functional. There was adequate storage for a 7 day cruise, but one might find space lacking on longer voyages. The bathroom reminded this cruiser of the ‘soap-on-a-rope’ days; again, tight quarters, but it suited its purpose. The balcony was also small, in comparison with the Grand Class ships, with 2 small, straight-backed poly chairs and a table. There wasn’t much moveability, but all the balconies were pretty much the same size (except for minisuites and suites).

Entertainment
The entertainment was fine although it was a bit loud.

Activities
Itinerary: Princess Cays, Ocho Rios, Grand Cayman, and Cozumel. Princess Cays is, by far, the nicest beach day a cruiser could have. Princess Cruises is constantly improving and expanding this ‘island paradise.’ It is clean, has plenty of sun and shade, ample lounges, water sports and toys to rent, water coolers spaced throughout, open showers, clean restrooms, some shops and local vendors, and a nice BBQ in the early afternoon. Once it gets started, tender service to/from the ship runs every 10-15 minutes. We didn’t get off the ship in Ocho Rios because of its reputation, so we used this as a day at sea. And since we’ve been to Grand Cayman and Cozumel several times, we didn’t do much here either - just shopped for lightweight cotton clothing, i.e., Bye-Bye, Peer, Miro. But, for first-time cruisers, or those who haven’t done them, we’d recommend these tours: In Ocho Rios, the Dunn’s River Falls and/or rafting down the Martha Brae. In Grand Cayman, we’ve done, and enjoyed the ‘See and Sea’ tour, Stingray City, and the semi-submarine. In Cozumel, we’ve done the tour for San Gervasio Ruins and Playa sol Beach, and the Cozumel Beach Break at the Reef Club Isla Cozumel. Other cruisers have raved about the Tulum Mayan Ruins.

Who Goes
It was a mixed crowd. Everyone seemed to be having a good time.

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