|
|
|
|
10-day Tahitian Princess
from $1195 |
|
Tahiti and Hawaii are gems
in the South Pacific. Get away from it all in Bora Bora or get into it all with
some of the best diving in Polynesia. This destination is your chance to slow
down and experience "Island Time". Relax and explore the beaches, the coves and
the beauty that only the South Pacific holds. Immerse yourself in the diverse,
yet singular Polynesian culture. This may be the vacation you were meant to take
right now |
 |
|
Itineraries: |
|
Ship: Tahitian Princess
Embarkation Port: Papeete, Tahiti, Polynesia
Number of Nights: 10
Departures: 2005:
Jan 2, 22. Feb 11, Mar. 3, 13, 23. Apr. 2. May 14, 24. Jun 3, 13, 23.
Jul 13, 23. Aug 2, 12, 22. Sep 1, 11, 21. Oct 1, 21. Nov 10, 30. Dec. 20.
2006: Jan 9, 29. Feb 18, 28. Mar. 10, 20, 30. Apr.9, 19
Overnight in Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia;
Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia; Huahine, French Polynesia; Rarotonga, Cook
Islands; Raiatea, French Polynesia; Raiatea, French Polynesia; Bora Bora, French
Polynesia; Bora Bora, French Polynesia; Moorea, French Polynesia; Tahiti (Papeete),
French Polynesia; Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia. |
| |
|
Ship: Tahitian Princess
Embarkation Port: Papeete, Tahiti, Polynesia
Number of Nights: 10
Departures: 2005
2005: Jan 12, Feb 1, Feb 21, Oct 11, Oct 31, Nov 20, Dec 10, Dec 30. 2006:
Jan 19, Feb 8
Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia; Tahiti (Papeete),
French Polynesia; Moorea, French Polynesia; Mangareva, Tuamotu; Nuku Hiva,
Marquesas; Hiva Oa, Marquesas; Rangiroa, French Polynesia; Raiatea, French
Polynesia; Raiatea, French Polynesia; Bora Bora, French Polynesia; Tahiti (Papeete),
French Polynesia |
| |
|
Ship: Tahitian Princess
Embarkation Port: Papeete, Tahiti, Polynesia
Number of Nights: 12
Departures:
2005: Apr.12
Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia; Tahiti (Papeete),
French Polynesia; Moorea, French Polynesia; Bora Bora, French Polynesia;
Christmas Island; Hilo, Big Island; Lahaina, Maui; Kauai, Hawaii; Honolulu, Oahu |
| |
|
Ship: Tahitian Princess
Embarkation Port: Honolulu, Oahu, United States
Number of Nights: 11
Departures:
2005:May 3,
Honolulu, Oahu; Port Allen (Hanapepe), Kauai;
Lahaina, Maui; Hilo, Big Island; Christmas Island; Bora Bora, French Polynesia;
Moorea, French Polynesia; Overnight in Tahiti (Papeete), French Polynesia;
Moorea, French Polynesia. |
|
Ship Specks |
| Operator: Princess |
Capacity (double occupancy): 684 |
| Builder: Chantiers de
l'Atlantique |
Full Capacity: 684 |
Inaugurated: 1999,
Completely Refurbished 2003 |
Space Ratio: 44.3 |
| Gross Tonnage: 30,277 gt
|
Crew: 386 |
| Length: 594 ft. / 181 m |
Berlitz® Rating: ****+
|
|
|
Ship Review........from
cruise critic |
|
Tahitian Princess, the newest
ship to join the Princess Cruises' fleet, is, in fact, the reincarnated version
of Renaissance Cruises R4. What's interesting about Tahitian Princess -- not to
mention largely identical sister ship Pacific Princess which splits the year
wearing both the P&O and Princess Cruises flags -- is twofold: the strong sense
of deja vu it gives former Renaissance cruisers and the utterly unusual
experience it offers those who are Princess stalwarts.
In a nutshell: Tahitian Princess is a gorgeous vessel. The ship features elegant
cherry-colored wood finishes, lush window treatments, and cozy upholstered
furnishings in a design scheme that literally runs from stem to stern. Every
room, from the casino bar to the spa's salon to individual cabins evokes that
British country house hotel feeling. Princess has tampered little with the
Renaissance formula, so little in fact that, despite a welcome revamp of the
former sports bar into a Polynesian-esque night club, this experienced
Renaissance cruiser could find little had been changed (when Princess changed
the name of the Sports Bar to The Nightclub it simply stripped the new name into
existing signs at elevator banks and some of the crew carried key cards with the
Renaissance logo).
Some of the elements for which Renaissance had become synonymous -- the sense of
staying in a floating hotel and the intimate feel of a midsize ship which
creates a passenger and even staff camaraderie unmatched by today's mega ships
-- are high points of a Tahitian Princess experience. But if the Princess
"style" has made itself unfelt, by and large, in the ship's appointments, it has
most definitely communicated its onboard experience elements, from dining
traditions to entertainment programs, on a comprehensive basis, so cruise line
regulars will feel right at home. One note, however, to travelers more
accustomed to 2,000-plus traveler mega ships: at 680 passengers, what you give
up in breadth and depth of onboard options (tiny casino, one showroom, one pool)
you more than get back in a sense of being pampered and, pervasive on this
vessel, absolute relaxation.
For passengers, the most unique challenge facing a trip on Tahitian Princess,
which, at a 677-passenger capacity (and which sails mostly full every cruise) is
getting there. The biggest conundrum: Tahiti, home of the region's major
international airport, has limited (and often overbooked) air service -- and yet
now it has three cruise lines (Radisson's Paul Gauguin and Windstar's Windstar)
sailing there year-round. Los Angeles is the jumping off point for U.S.
travelers-- and only three airlines (Air France, Air Tahiti Nui and Air New
Zealand) offer flights from there. These airlines fly only a handful of times
each week and missing a connection from a domestic flight to the Tahiti flight
can result in a delay of days so plan accordingly.
Another option is to book the cruise line's air and Princess, while using Air
Tahiti Nui, mostly depends on a charter operator called Omni; comments we heard
were that the service was fine but the seats cramped.
Princess has, at least for now, modified its "personal
choice" dining program to suit this much-smaller ship. Meals are available 24
hours a day but the choices vary (and it's helpful to pay attention to the
"quick reference" card left in your stateroom). The Panorama Buffet, the usual
lido scenario, offers a smaller-than-usual selection of hot and cold dishes
throughout the day (starting with continental breakfast fare at 4 a.m. and
winding up with a pizzeria that closes at 11 p.m.). Night owls can get a hot
dinner at the "Bistro," housed in one of the alternative restaurants, from 11
p.m. - 4 a.m. A limited room service menu is an around-the-clock operation.
Traditional in nature, "The Club" dining room is open seating for breakfast and
lunch. At dinner, there are two seatings: 6 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. and passengers
are assigned tables and tablemates. There are a smattering of tables for two
though these seemed in high demand. For casual breakfast and lunch the Panorama
buffet features the usual hot and cold options -- though limited in variety
(breakfast seemed to get repetitive but the ship's themed lunch buffets were
worth catching). There's an omelet station out by the pool (and the cook there
will cook eggs in other styles). Another lunch option is the basic barbecue,
with grilled hot dogs, hamburgers and the like. One underused curiosity was the
transformation of The Panorama into a pizzeria for casual dinner-seekers. It's a
great idea but the only item available is pizza (no salads or other possible
additions) so it didn't seem to attract too many patrons.
The ship has two alternative restaurants and they're open on, um, alternative
nights. The Sterling Steakhouse Grill, unique to this ship, was early-on a
passenger favorite (book in advance), featuring carved-at-the-table prime rib
and all manner of steaks, from filet mignon to porterhouse. Sabatini's is an
extension of an existing Princess concept and features a multi-course northern
Italian-style feast. Cover charge for Sterling was $8 per person and for
Sabatini's was $15.
Afternoon tea was held daily in The Club and featured delicious scones and
pleasant musical accompaniment.
One don't miss event: one of the few late-night eating events is the Polynesian
buffet, held poolside (see also under entertainment).
Probably the most dramatic area of the ship, first
impression-wise, is the purser's lounge area on deck four and that's because
Tahitian Princess has a Titanic-look-a-like staircase winding its way up to the
next deck (and a player piano that more less constantly plunks out pleasant
tunes). The extremely versatile Cabaret Lounge is the main theater and hosts
everything from evening production shows to movies to bingo. There are two very
small gift shops, one selling the usual cruise essentials and logo-wear, the
other an array of pearls, perfumes and other trinkets. There is a handsome
Internet room with six terminals but oft-excruciatingly slow connections (this
is French Polynesia, after all!) and a serious lack of communication between
passengers needing assistance and a ship contact drove a lot of potential users
away. There is also a nice card room.
The ship has one laundromat and aside from the usual "rush hour" periods, there
was plenty of room. In addition to the four washers and dryers, there are two
ironing boards. Passengers buy tokens at the purser's desk ($1 per wash, $1 per
dry); the soap is funneled into the machine automatically and at no charge.
The ship's highlight? Has to be its library which is easily one of the most
gorgeous at sea. Featuring a faux fireplace and ceilings-with-painted murals
(not to mention overstuffed couches and chairs and walls lined with
cherry-finished bookshelves), this is the most pleasant room onboard for moments
of utter peace and quiet. The unlocked bookshelves featured a selection that
must have been current when Renaissance operated the ship (could do with a
little updating) but was still interesting and eclectic.
Stateroom categories range from inside cabins (158 square
feet) to owners' suites (962 square ft.) but what's distinctive about this ship
is its high percentage of standard outsides with verandah (73 percent of the
ship's outside cabins have balconies). Staterooms are cozy and colorful with a
gold and blue color scheme on soft furnishings, set against the ship's signature
cherry finish. Bathrooms in mini-suite categories and above have tubs; all
others have showers. There's a (terrible) hairdryer. Mini-suites and above have
mini-fridges and receive an initial supply of mini liquor bottles.
In-cabin television options are quite varied and almost too intriguing! Channels
featured relatively new flicks (some not yet out on video), CNN and the
Discovery Channel.
The nice thing about Tahitian Princess' balconies is that they're simply wrought
iron (no fancy glass coming between you and the view). On the down side,
however, all of the verandahs are outfitted with the same pair of $5 plastic
straight-back chairs (might be time for Tahitian Princess to upgrade the veranda
furniture). Also: these verandahs aren't as private as some of those found on
more recent ships -- there are huge gaps on each side of the white painted
doors.
While they were plenty of activities, both during the day
(particularly sea days) and in the evening, they were geared to the more
traditional members of the ship's mostly over-60 crowd. During daytime, there
were organized golf putting, shuffleboard and ping pong contests. There were
craft workshops, a chef-maitre'd cooking demo that was as hilarious as it was
informational, and occasional afternoon movies in the Cabaret Lounge. Art
auctions and bingo were daily mainstays.
Evenings, most of the ship's bars -- particularly the Casino and the Club bar,
featured a pre-dinner guitarist or pianist. Post-dinner the ship swings into
full gear. The Cabaret Lounge features a range of options, from production shows
that are definitely scaled down to fit the smaller venue to a magician and a
comedian. The Nightclub is the spot for pre- and post-dinner dancing and
transforms itself into a disco for the late night revelers (of which we spotted
few).
The poolside entertainment consisted of a rather lackluster duo who performed
during lunch hour and at sailaway time but didn't seem to inspire passengers.
Tahitian Princess' ultimate entertainment highlight -- and this is definitely a
don't miss event -- is a dance and musical performance, while the ship is docked
in Raiatea, of locals, from toddlers to adults, that gives passengers a real
sense of the art and culture of this part of the world. Afterward they hold a
quite entertaining "workshop" on pareo tying that involves men and women. A
second, and different musical show, featuring an adult troupe, takes place that
same evening on the pool deck, during the Polynesian buffet event.
The pool area features one smallish pool that's flanked by
two whirlpools (in this hot climate they weren't necessarily all that crowded).
We didn't see too many blatant signs of chair-saving though lounges around the
pool area seemed limited on sea days at noon-time. The pool deck also has a
well-used ping pong table. A small walking-running promenade deck rings the pool
area and was usually quite busy early in the morning and late in the afternoon.
Two decks above there's also an extra sunbathing area.
The spa is simply gorgeous and offers the usual Steiner services, both
traditional (full body massage) to nouvelle (they were pushing the Chakra hot
stone treatment). There are four treatment rooms (and we never had trouble
getting appointments) and men's and women's locker rooms (which included,
ironically, steam rooms; this destination is so naturally humid and, well,
steamy that they seemed redundant). Outside is a private thalassotherapy pool
and sundeck that requires a $15 per day charge; we never saw anyone using it.
The salon, also elegant and peaceful, offers the usual hair and nail treatments.
The fitness facility was small but entirely adequate and pleasantly fronted a
wall of windows which made it feel larger than it really was. There are numerous
classes, from aerobics (no charge) to Pilates and yoga ($10 per class); the spa
is experimenting with packages for the for-charge workouts (for instance,
unlimited yoga and Pilates for $75) though options chane with each cruise.
There are no dedicated childrens' facilities (and this is
not really a cruise for young kids, between the distance from the U.S. to Tahiti
and the ports themselves which don't have a lot of kid-oriented attractions). At
the same time, the activities staff works really hard to entertain the children
it does get -- and they plan games and diversions for junior passengers that use
numerous rooms all over the ship. If the ship does have more than 20 kids
registered to sail Princess assigns a dedicated children's counselor.
The crowd on this ship skews differently from other new (and
otherwise larger) Princess vessels, attracting a large percentage of couples in
both the over-60 and on-a-honeymoon range.
There are two formal nights per ten day cruise (though
passengers left tuxedos and spangled gowns at home -- think "resort casual
formal" with lots of flowing pants ensembles); the rest of the cruise was resort
casual. |
|