By Eileen Ogintz
Tribune Media Services
What’s not to like — from a kid’s perspective anyway. The way they see it, a cruise ship is vacation heaven, better even than a theme park. There’s all the food — and free room service. “You’ll be stuffed when you leave,” says 11-year-old Matthew Moris.
There are all the other kids onboard (more than a million children cruise every year, reports the Cruise Lines International Association, more than 1,000 on each Disney ship) and organized kids’ and teen activities from morning until night. “You’ll find a friend on the first day,” promises Brooke Abzug, 10, who likes the shipboard scavenger hunts staged by the kids’ clubs.
There’s all the freedom to roam as they please, sun by the pool, hit the arcade, watch a movie, grab a slice of pizza or an ice cream cone. Alyssa Baron, 15, says she would never be permitted to be on her own as much at home or at a resort. “When I come in to our cabin, my parents are already asleep!”
“You don’t have to be with your parents, except maybe at dinner,” said Allison Clayton, 12.
Add sunshine, frothy non-alcoholic drinks, big waterslides, rock climbing walls, new places to explore, private islands (for you and 2,000 or so of your closest friends) and an adventure or three (how about zip-lining across a rain forest or climbing to the top of a waterfall in Jamaica) and you’re good to go. Let’s not forget the always-smiling stewards who not only clean up your mess and make your beds, but also leave behind animals fashioned out of towels. It’s easy to see why kids have become such cruise fans.
Clayton, Abzug and Moris — all from South Florida — were chosen to be on a panel I moderated recently in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., at cruise3sixty, the cruise industry’s annual conference for travel agents and cruise lines, which was sponsored by the Cruise Lines International Association. The kids in the group, who ranged in age from 7 to 15, were all cruise veterans — some had sailed 10 times (thanks to someone in the family in the travel industry) and clearly knew what they were talking about. Their charge: Give the grown-ups a kid’s-eye-view of cruising. They weren’t the least bit phased by the more than 1,000 people in the audience. A cruise, they agreed, beats a theme park any day. At a theme park, “There’s not as much to do, or as much good food,” said Mathew.
The cruise lines, including the most upscale, for their part, are doing all they can to keep these young cruisers happy. They know – just as any adult who has ever traveled with a child knows — that if the kids are happy, the adults will have a good time too, especially when they don’t have to pay every time a child wants a snack. That’s why this year you’ll see more kid- and teen-friendly shore excursions, shipboard water playgrounds and theatrical productions, enhanced programming and facilities.
— Royal Caribbean (www.rccl.com) has just announced Nickelodeon-themed cruises starting this summer on Freedom of the Seas, which kids love because of the FlowRider surf simulator and H20 Zone water playground.
— Carnival (www.carnival.com), which expects to carry 600,000 kids this year, is adding WaterWorks aqua parks (complete with 300-foot-long corkscrew water slides, water spray park and double-lane racing slides) as part of its $250 million “Evolution of Fun.” Look for them first on the Carnival Inspiration and Imagination “fun ships,” while a new “Circle C” program is unveiled on the line for 12 to 14 year olds. (Look for deals that start at $199 for the third person in a stateroom.)
— Norwegian Cruise Line (www.ncl.com) has more connecting staterooms — penthouses to small cabins — than any other cruise line. Families also like the “Freestyle Dining” option offered in every NCL onboard restaurant. Now there’s no need to get dressed up or eat with others, if you don’t want to.
— Disney (www.disneycruise.com), which provides day care (at an extra fee) for infants and toddlers too young for the organized kids clubs, debuts the stage adaptation of “Toy Story” aboard the Disney Wonder this spring, complete with a new eight-song score and a nearly 9-foot-tall Rex the dinosaur, as the Magic sails from the West Coast to Mexican ports of call.
— Regent Seven Seas (www.rssc.com) offers an “Ambassadors of the Environment” youth program on certain Alaska and Tahiti voyages that was created by Jean-Michel Cousteau, son of Jacques Cousteau. The program, designed to provide families, through the use of hands-on activities, the awareness and skills needed to build environmental sustainability into their lives. (Ask about third person sail-free deals in Tahiti.)
— A record number of ships will sail Europe and the Mediterranean this year and more families will decide that, despite the week U.S. dollar, there is no easier way, or more economical way, to show kids the great sites than from the deck of a cruise ship. Your food, lodging and transportation costs are all paid for in U.S. dollars. There’s a pool, the food is familiar and there are plenty of organized kids’ activities. Princess Cruises (www.princess.com) and Holland America Line (www.hollandamerica.com) will each have six ships overseas this summer.
THE KEY TO A SUCCESSFUL CRUISE VACATION: Choose the right ship for your family. (Hear that grandparents? Visit www.cruising.org) Make sure there are programs for your kid’s age group. (You don’t want to get onboard with a 2-year-old and discover all of the kids programs are for kids 3 and over, nor do you want to see that your tween is too old for one group, too young for the teen club. A cruise lines’ Website is a good resource.) If you can, splurge on a second stateroom for older kids. (You’ll all appreciate the extra bathroom and you can book them a less expensive inside cabin.) And especially in Alaska and Europe, book shore excursions ahead. The best ones (trekking on a glacier, touring the Sistine Chapel) often get full before the ship sails. A tip: Remember you don’t have to book a pricy excursion at every port.
There’s just one downside to showing kids the cruising world, said 7-year-old Brandon Abzug. “You have to go home when it’s over.”
“I wish I could live on a cruise ship,” said Allison Clayton.
SIDE BAR:
THE 411 FOR FIRST-TIME YOUNG CRUISERS
Cruise Industry officials note that half of the projected 12.8 million cruisers this year have never cruised before. That includes many families. Here are some tips for kids cruising for the first time from the veteran junior cruisers I talked to:
1. Know what you are getting into. “Look on the Internet,” says Matthew Moris, “so that you can learn a little about the ship and plan what you want to do onboard, as well as what you want to do in the different ports.”
2. Opt for adventure – on the ship and off. “You only get to do this once,” said Brooke Abzug. “You’ll be sorry if you missed it.”
3. Stow your stuff. It will help to make the cabin seem bigger. And ask for extra pillows — “good for pillow fights,” said Allison Clayton.
4. Go to the teen club the first night, suggests Alyssa Baron, a high school freshman. “If you wait, everyone will already have made friends,” she explained.
5. Ditto for the kids club.
6. Head to an elevator if you get lost onboard – “easy to do on these humongous ships,” said Serena Clayton, 8. There are always maps posted at the elevators, the kids explained.
7. Be open to new experiences. “Try everything once,” advises Brooke Abzug. “It’s not every day that you can go rock climbing on a cruise ship!”
8. Opt for adventurous shore excursions. “You can always go to the beach or shopping,” said Alyssa Baron. “Adventures don’t get boring!”
9. Don’t over pack! You won’t need nearly as much clothes as you think you will.
10. If you are prone to getting seasick, bring along remedies, though if you are lucky, you won’t need them. “The boat is so big you hardly feel that you are moving,” said Matthew Moris.
© 2008 EILEEN OGINTZ, DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.