Several cruise lines cut Carribean: will this affect your gay cruising?
Is the Caribbean is losing its appeal as a cruise destination? Four major cruise lines recently announced that they are pulling ALL ships out of the Florida-Caribbean market in the Spring/Summer 2011 Season. The lines are Norwegian, Princess, Celebrity and Holland America. All are moving their ships to Europe and other areas.
Royal Caribbean and Carnival are keeping a handful of big ships and older ships in the Florida-Caribbean area during the summer months.
Famed travel writer Arthur Frommer wrote a big piece on this for Canada’s Toronto Star newspaper, where he lays out possibilities for the change:
“It is entirely possible…[Americans have tired] of Caribbean ports (like Charlotte Amalie in St. Thomas) that have been converted into giant shopping malls. They have wearied of being dumped on artificial private beaches in which the only local residents are employees of the cruise line; there’s consumer fatigue with fake villages.” Arthur Frommer in the Toronto Star.
Frommer further asserts that cruise company executives “have removed cruising from the experience of travel [by replacing] authentic foreign countries with fake replicas of foreign countries.”
Personally I think it’s simply that these destinations were never really sexy to start with. With few exceptions, the islands all seem very similar, and few of them has done a good job of making me believe there’s much to do if I even get off the ship there. I’ll never forget RSVP’s legendary comedian and host Danny Williams joke in the bingo hall as our ship sailed away from Guadaloupe; he called it Gaudapoop. 1,500 gays had not been terribly impressed with the place. (In all fairness, I realize that we are talking about 3rd world islands, and that few are equipped to actually provide thevacation experience most Americans want).
Since my first Caribbean cruise in 1988, island cruising for me has never been much about the destinations (notable exceptions being Puerto Rico and Curacao…I do also quite like the Caribbean’s mainland destinations including Mexico, Costa Rica, and Venezuela). It has been more about the ships themselves, and my experience with my partner or whomever else I travel with. If the Caribbean islands want American cruisers to keep coming, I think they need to do a better job of differentiating their cultures, highlighting their natural resources, and dropping the shopping altogether.
What do you think?





Thomas Waters 11:37 am on October 19, 2010 Permalink |
For me the real pull back to the Caribbean, is the water and the ease of snorkeling. Especially a gay cruise, the caribbean is a perfect trip to snorkel by day, and dance and party by night.
Alfred Dolge 11:39 am on October 19, 2010 Permalink |
Well also, I think it’s a case of both over capacity in the market, as well as the economy. Vacationers may now be less inclined to lay out a lot of money for a cruise. Passengers may be indeed choosing other itineraries, and as a result, the lines are going where the demand is; also , as pointed out, the big Caribbean destinations may have become “lowest Common Denominator” locations, which is why interestingly, Carnival and RCL still may be in the market, although I have noticed that the “Bahamas run” as I call it now has fallen on older ships..
Paul 1:44 pm on October 19, 2010 Permalink |
They’re going where the money is! Shore excursion prices and first time visitor’s sense of security comes plays in for Europe cruises. Airlift will be up next summer to Europe, though I doubt fares will go down. Also there is untapped demand from the Europeans.
mas 2:25 pm on October 19, 2010 Permalink |
I know full well when traveling to the Caribbean that I’m there for the incredible water, water sports, sun, sand and relaxation.
When I feel I need a bit more culture–cruise to Mexico and central America and sight see on the excursions.
Escape cruise? Bahamas or something short, here out of Tampa (generally Cozumel, Cayman…). Cheap, quick fix. Drink a lot.
I’d be happy to see more pull out quite honestly. Quiet it down a bit.
James Ascher 5:43 pm on October 19, 2010 Permalink |
Cruise lines may be pulling back in the Caribbean due to over saturation of ships. Just look at all the new builds being home-ported and primarily based in Florida! Other than next year’s Carnival Magic which will sail from Galveston, TX the vast majority of new ships are on the East Coast.
There’s also an increasing amount of crime in the region, not just notable hot spots like Jamaica and The Bahamas.
Lesbian Cruises 12:41 am on February 22, 2011 Permalink |
Hi,
Thanks for sharing this useful post. Please keep sharing more and more information.