I Ignore these 7 Much-Touted Cruise Tips. Should You?

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024

Комментарии • 229

  • @luvtravel6207
    @luvtravel6207 2 года назад +77

    My tip is to know what kind of passengers will be on the cruise line you choose. I’m currently on Carnivals Mardi Gras. The crowd in the Serenity deck is so loud and rowdy that I can’t relax, nap, or even read a book. I’ve come to the conclusion this is no longer the cruise line that meets my needs. Thankfully this is the last cruise I’ve booked with them.

    • @silviaeaston
      @silviaeaston 2 года назад +12

      This is such a “touchy” subject! (Yours is/was just right). Experts on which cruise line to pick will discuss, food, amenities, cost etc etc etc BUT the most imp to me is the people I socialize with in very tight quarters. Gracias!

    • @tonybussey8763
      @tonybussey8763 2 года назад +9

      We just had our first cruise on Carnival Sunrise and I totally agree, I booked my room near the elevator; big mistake! The amount of people standing in the hallway saying loud goodbyes at 1-30 am was annoying. We are not party people so found that nearly every show or venue was just horrendously noisy.

    • @micheleroyalty4092
      @micheleroyalty4092 2 года назад +11

      I like passengers that I will enjoy talking with. I am educated and keep up on world events. Children irritate me. I choose ship that are smaller, all inclusive, with speakers who are interesting. I cruise with Regent, and have enjoyed meeting people most of the time.

    • @teentour1
      @teentour1 2 года назад +10

      This may be the most valuable tip you find in this entire forum. Sharing a cruise with large numbers of people that don't have the same lifestyle can cause you to look forward to the end of the trip every day.
      The writer mentioned Carnival Cruise lines. It may simply be coincidence, but that was the cruise line I first had this problem with.
      Do your homework to find out as much as possible who your cruise partners will be. It really makes a difference!

    • @StillPooh62
      @StillPooh62 Год назад +6

      @@tonybussey8763 we sailed in an aft balcony cabin on the Carnival Pride, and it was SO quiet back there! Yes, it was a long walk to the midship elevators, but I didn't care. It was worth it to not have noisy passerbys in the corridor.

  • @yvonneboyd3690
    @yvonneboyd3690 2 года назад +31

    I used to use a travel agent and then on a cruise this passenger told me about Costco travel. I would get quotes from Costco and then call my travel agent, give her the particulars and told her if she could come close, within a couple of hundred dollars, I would book with her. After doing this twice she told me Costco doesn’t have to make a profit and businesses compete to be on their website. She said 90% of the time she couldn’t come close to Costco prices so just book with them. I have for years now and haven’t had a problem. But in listening to you, I’m considering using an agent again. Thanks for the content.

    • @usavvy2
      @usavvy2 2 года назад +6

      Costco is fine when things go smooth but it's just a giant call center. After needing to cancel a European cruise booked by them for spring of 2020, it was painful waiting in queue to cancel due to the pandemic as many others were doing the same. That was enough; I'm back to using a well respected, local agency! And recently I've found the price elsewhere has been better unless one factors in the cash card post trip.

  • @gowithgid3274
    @gowithgid3274 2 года назад +61

    As an agent for one of the largest cruise agency in the country, you are spot on with not booking direct. People have no idea how the pricing works for cruises. A single cruise may have twenty booking codes from which to select. Agents spend a lot of time making sure you get the best rate. Our agency often has lower group rates with on-board-credit for a given cruise.

    • @gwenivercall
      @gwenivercall 2 года назад +3

      Depends on which country. As someone who lives in a country with the absolute worst travel agents in Europe, if not the world, I can't agree. In my direct experience, booking with a travel agent in my country meant saving a couple of 100 Euros at the expense of terrible excursions (in one of which my mother was almost left behind), being talked out of visiting the ship's doctor (even though we were insured - I guess the travel agency did not want to pay for that) and some other problems. Never again.

    • @larry4111
      @larry4111 2 года назад +18

      I used to book direct and then decided to try a travel agent when I saw all the cruise RUclipsrs and bloggers talking about how advantageous it is to use a TA, and how it would never ever cost more - only the same or less and maybe with more perks like OBC. Well, that turned out to be a big no. I went with the company that bills themselves as the largest cruise agency in the world. First of all, they charge a service fee. The fee isn't a lot but it made the cruise cost more than direct. So much for "it will never cost you more." It did. And when the cruise bloggers talk about this topic, they always say the TAs make their money from commissions. Well, when I asked about the fee they told me "that's how we make our money." So they literally contradicted what all the bloggers said and told me the fee is how they make money. Then when I decided to change the date, I called. They charged me the service fee - again - and didn't refund the first one. They said it was nonrefundable. They also told me my deposit with the cruise line was nonrefundable even though the cruise line, right on its homepage, bragged about how you can change and not lose your deposit. So in order to change dates I lost the deposit, lost the service fee, AND was charged another service fee on top of the first one. If I booked it on my own there's no service fee, and I can routinely cancel and rebook if the price goes down and not lose my deposit.

    • @johnkean6852
      @johnkean6852 2 года назад +1

      @@larry4111 😓 Makes things really stressfull. (I'd love to know the cruise line. 🤔)

    • @owensmith7530
      @owensmith7530 2 года назад +5

      I've found in the UK travel agents add nothing other than hassle to booking a cruise. I once missed an excursion I wanted to go on because the travel agent didn't tell me I had to login and book them myself with the cruise line, even though I had no login details. What country do you live in Gary?

    • @suejames3208
      @suejames3208 2 года назад +2

      @@owensmith7530 I think it's finding the right travel agency that matters. He lives in London. He has a webpage. I think he is unbelievably informative and easy to watch and listen to.

  • @busymom7729
    @busymom7729 2 года назад +29

    Just to make it clear: A passport card is for land and sea but not flights if you get sick or they throw you off the cruise ship.

  • @jackmcgonegal8728
    @jackmcgonegal8728 2 года назад +29

    Excellent advice. We're Platinum Plus on NCL and almost always book our cabin as far out as possible to get what we want. We booked next year's Transatlantic crossing on Epic a year ago. Since that time the fare for the Haven cabin we booked has increased nearly $2000 pp. And as a retired airline pilot, I can't tell you how many times I had passengers onboard who were connecting to a cruise on the same day and missed their sailing because of blizzards, thunderstorms, mechanical issues, etc. In the summer the popular cruise departure ports in Florida are plagued by afternoon thunderstorms. This translates into arrival delays, holding patterns, and diversions, all of which eventually results in Air Traffic Control instituting ground stops for all traffic bound for that area. In winter the major hubs of New York and Chicago are prone to snow, sleet, ice, etc. Some people have no choice but to fly in the day of the cruise but if at all possible, arrive at least a day early. If you can't, then get the earliest flight possible to avoid the creeping delays. Love your channel.

  • @rickymclaren
    @rickymclaren 2 года назад +12

    I am in the UK and I can't agree that booking direct is a problem. I booked direct with Princess for a cruise that was just over £5000. Before the cruise I got an email from the cruise line that the same cruise was available for £3200. I called up and they moved to the new price with an extra £100 admin fee. I regularly get email deals direct from the Princess agents..
    The worst case would have been that if they would not honour the lower price I would just cancel the expensive one and rebook with the new price for about the same cost.
    The moral of the story is to keep track of the price after you book.

  • @coolbreeze253
    @coolbreeze253 2 года назад +33

    One area where I feel cruise lines miss the boat (couldn't help myself) concerns airfare. Don't use their deal and you're on the hook for transfers, delays and more. However, their bulk airfares are all economy with upgrades to business class very pricey. Over years of travel accruing award miles and points and taking advantage of credit card bonuses, I accrued several million redeemable miles. The cruise line however has no way for one to use these in conjunction with their offers. Worse, the cruise line makes no concession for one not making use of the discounted or free deals. This may not be the case everywhere, but with my last several cruises (Celebrity and Viking) I was essentially told to go pound sand. Still, flying from the U.S. to or from Singapore, Rome, Barcelona, Hong Kong, Istanbul, London in business class was worth it, not only for comfort, low, low cost and fewer hassles, but the ability to move about frequently. After one long trip in cramped quarters six years ago I developed blood clots that nearly killed me. Never again fly coach I vowed. Can't afford it, won't go.

    • @kvom01
      @kvom01 Год назад +1

      Same here. I always book airfare and hotels myself using points

    • @katherinkeegan8601
      @katherinkeegan8601 5 месяцев назад

      If you are a frequent flyer, your advice is sound.
      As for the cramped flight, I think it's the person's responsibility to educate themselves on the possible dangers of the flight accommodations. Did anyone make an attempt to move around or were you told not to? If they wouldn't let you move around, they should have been made to pay part/all of the medical bills. They know what can happen and should make sure steps can be taken to decrease the danger.
      The one perk about booking flights and excursions through the cruise line is if you go through them, when anything unforeseen happens they will take care of it and wait for you or make other arrangements for you. Yes it costs more, but you have to ask yourself if peace of mind or potentially saving money is more important.
      No matter how sound the piece of advice, nothing works well for everyone. Which is why to get a more comprehensive understanding of cruising, I have watched several sites. It's very confusing when you get contradictory advice only to realize so much advice is geared toward specific cruise lines.

  • @naomieg1041
    @naomieg1041 2 года назад +14

    Great advice. I don’t understand why some people refuse to get passports. Everyone in my family have passport because we’re a get up and go and never know what can happen when you’re in another country

    • @arokh72
      @arokh72 2 года назад

      Is that a US thing? I'm in Australia and I can't leave the country without a valid passport, and visa for those nations that require one.

    • @GeeBee212
      @GeeBee212 Год назад +3

      @@arokh72 It may well be a US "thing" only because the US covers an extremely vast area of land with many cultures, climates and 4 time zones. You can travel from coast to coast and experiences as many internal cultures as when you travel from England to Spain. California is a whole different experience to someone from New York. We have natural formations like the Grand Canyon and a National Park system that is amazing. We have amazing cities and then there is Hawaii and Alaska! Of course to leave the island of Australia you will need a passport wherever you land. So not everyone in the US has a passport, nor does everyone desire to have one. I've traveled the world and some of the most amazing places that I've experienced were right at home.

    • @cherifurr3935
      @cherifurr3935 Год назад

      Me either-they’re good for 10 years!

    • @angierecovering_clutterer2434
      @angierecovering_clutterer2434 Год назад

      If people aren't big travelers, I see why they don't have them. We let ours lapse several years ago because we didn't have the necessary $270 to get them, but now that we're going on a cruise, and have almost three years' worth of pent-up vacation demand, we are springing for new ones. Of course, now we had to go to the post office and interview to get them, which cost ANOTHER $70! Ugh!

    • @paulgerrard9227
      @paulgerrard9227 Год назад

      Europeans can travel without passports within the european union. However passports can avoid a lot of issues if a incident occurs.

  • @raymullen3583
    @raymullen3583 2 года назад +7

    As always Great Advice for any Cruisers ....No matter
    how many You have Taken ....Always Mid--Ship and
    3 or 4 Decks from any Rest . or Bars ....

  • @stevenm.2597
    @stevenm.2597 2 года назад +13

    Gary, Love your videos. I found it is usually better to book pretty far in advance.
    Booking close to the sailing, may get you a cheaper price, but less desirable cabins are available.
    Also, if you notice after booking, that the price of your cruise has gone down, the cruise line will often tell you, you have to cancel your first cruise first, to get the second cruise and the
    second cruise, while the room rate may be less, it may not have the same promotions or the
    promotions may be better, but the actual cruise price may be higher.

  • @argonaut816
    @argonaut816 2 года назад +5

    My tip on booking a cruise in say a year's time, would be take out insurance that covers cancellation. Who knows one of your party could fall ill or there could be another pandemic or war.

  • @Clutching.My.Pearls
    @Clutching.My.Pearls 2 года назад +3

    Gary you are the best with honest and thoughtful information. We river cruise which is more our style and always make our own flight arrangements. BUT we always stay at least 2 to 3 days pre cruise to enjoy the departure city and to make sure we're ready and not panicking in an airport. I always pack an emergency kit, flashlight,, and we bring our passports plus leave a copy with our daughter just in case they are lost or stolen.

    • @cherifurr3935
      @cherifurr3935 Год назад

      I also put a copy of my passport in my luggage.

  • @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog
    @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog Год назад +3

    Dear Gary - thanks for vouching for us - the hard working travel agents. Can not express how much it means to us!!!

  • @3716anderson
    @3716anderson 2 года назад +3

    Me too on the Dramamine advice. Always bring it with me after the first cruise where I didn't. Seasickness, even mild, is the worst!

  • @maximusanddraco
    @maximusanddraco 2 года назад +83

    My wife and I booked a Grand Suite on RCCL and was traveling with another couple. They wanted to get the drink package. My wife and I don’t drink. I called RCCL and told them my situation and they allowed my wife and I not to purchase the drink package even though we were in the same cabin. Just a heads up if you are sharing a cabin with drinkers.

    • @Remomba
      @Remomba 2 года назад +5

      Sounds like you all had some great four-way action

    • @suejames3208
      @suejames3208 2 года назад +9

      Do you think the fact that you had a Grand Suite helped any? I wouldn't expect that to be cheap!🤣🤣🤣

    • @lawjones2177
      @lawjones2177 2 года назад +1

      Do you get 2 free drinks in a Grand Su ?

    • @joycegreer9391
      @joycegreer9391 2 года назад +3

      @@Remomba Bad

    • @donnatidwell2212
      @donnatidwell2212 2 года назад

      You still have to get the beverage package without alcohol! At least I did! Maybe Grand Suit different!

  • @bryanitz8401
    @bryanitz8401 2 года назад +4

    Gary, just to add on to the comment about Royal Caribbean and your statement that if an adult purchases the all-inclusive alcohol drinks package, other adults in that cabin must also purchase the all-inclusive alcohol drinks package. This is not true. My wife does not drink alcohol, and for years Royal Caribbean has done an override so we can purchase for her the all-inclusive non-alcohol drinks package while at the same time, I purchase the all-inclusive drinks/alcohol package. There has never been a problem doing this other than the fact that you have to call Royal Caribbean to have this override done.

  • @Joe-lb8qn
    @Joe-lb8qn 2 года назад +5

    Sea sicknes; "Bonine" works for me. First came across it in the 90's on a dive boat when the captain handed it out to anyone who wanted sea sickness tablets, he said he'd rather pay for that than clean up puke. Never been sea sick since i started using it. Ive only ever been able to buy it in the US I dont think its available in the UK.

  • @nichtsistkostenlos6565
    @nichtsistkostenlos6565 2 года назад +4

    If you're not flexible, then you ALWAYS book as far in advance as you possibly can for every cruise. There are lots of tools available to alert you for price drops, so you can call up the line and get them to match the better price or give you some credit. You should only ever wait last minute if you're not really married to any specific details of a cruise and you don't care that much about the cabin you're going to stay in. My cruises are always with my family, so the details matter a lot, I never wait for a better price. I book VERY early, get exactly what I want and just turn on price alerts.

  • @Hawkeye2001
    @Hawkeye2001 2 года назад +4

    I have a 16 day Norwegian cruise this summer. My travel agent was able to re-book my cruise when the price dropped. She managed to save me $2000 and get a room up-grade in the process. The upgrade room was within my location preferences.

  • @abigailgerlach5443
    @abigailgerlach5443 2 года назад +5

    I had a travel agent and thank heaven I did. I got covid, and my agent was able to transfer my flights more than once from Heathrow to Denver! She was essential!
    I love a cabin on a higher deck from the aft. I know that's unusual, but it works for me.
    I didn't buy the drinks package, mostly because I can't drink that much. I wish they'd had a soft drink package for adults!
    I took dramamine just in case, but didn't need it. Mostly I found it to be advisable to wear flat shoes on rough days. Falling off high heels is just dumb!

    • @suejames3208
      @suejames3208 2 года назад

      I agree about a soft drinks package for adults! I don't drink and would want one that included speciality coffees also.

  • @terrifromm5085
    @terrifromm5085 2 года назад +4

    I always use a TA. I also have learned to purchase our air travel from the cruise line as well. Peace of mind is important to us. We don't want added stress on a vacation.

    • @evahenry4981
      @evahenry4981 2 года назад

      Travel Advisors are worth their weight in Gold. Has anyone held for hours with the cruise line just to get a new agent who knows very little about the destination or the ships. I have been a Travel Advisor for 40 years. I am still stressed about changing health protocols, etc. A Travel Advisor has your best interest in mind. It does not cost any extra. Most of the time we offer a special amenity. I am not going to work for free. So, if you are looking for just the cheapest price with no Customer Service, then you might as well book it on your own. I'm not Costco and I don't ever plan on giving away my knowledge and awesome customer service for free. These have been trying times for these past few years. We are all in this together. So stay safe and enjoy a cruise.

  • @joeo7693
    @joeo7693 2 года назад +3

    My wife uses Sea Bands, which you wear around your wrist, as they are also effective preventing seasickness. If there are really rough seas, she will take a Bonine too.

  • @shaunbava1801
    @shaunbava1801 2 года назад +7

    I've done both through the cruise line and through an agency. It really depends, if you have a good travel agent(I've had some that were terrible), the agent is better and agents usually offer additional perks at the same rate as cruise line. Now that being said when you book through the line you do need to deal with the call center which can be very irritating BUT in the past I've traveled with people we booked through the line and they used a travel agent, the line sent us an offer to upgrade 2 or 3 categories up to suite for something silly like $250 per person on a 2 week cruise so something that was like 3k more per person when we booked. We tried to get the same for the other people who booked with us and they flat out told us and them it was only for those who booked with the line. I also had situations where they offered us loyalty rates agents couldn't touch, so do a price compare sometimes you do better through the line other times the agents have a lower rate.
    As for booking flights with the cruise line, yes if it is competitive, if not get travel insurance that covers interruption and missed connections, yes you'll have the headache of coordinating the arrangements at the airport but the insurance will cover the cost. A small premium to book through the line is one thing but hundred or thousands more for the same flight is not a deal even with the guarantee. The key is flying in days before the cruise or if you are going same day make sure it is an early flight so you have buffer and that there are no connections, airlines do not want to pay compensation for the late flight so they will go through extreme lengths to keep the delay below 5-6 hours when they have to pay. We had people in our party miss a connection and miss the boat, no insurance and not through the cruise line but the airline got them to Greece and the people in the airport really helped them make their arrangements to meet the boat. In the end the airline got them to Greece and they had to get a hotel and catch a small plane to an island but it was really not terrible maybe like $800, in any even based on EU rules they should have been compensated but I don't think they complained.
    Booking too close to the cruise is risky as a lot of times as it fills the prices are higher, we have had people come in late and usually they paid more, don't book more than a year out around 6 months to one year when the lines are running promotions/sales gets the lowest price. I've gotten good deals around 4th of july for cruises in the winter or spring so around 8 months or so out during a holiday promotion.

  • @marygillespie2028
    @marygillespie2028 2 года назад +5

    I've had great experience booking direct with Viking. Their agents are very well-informed and I've never had to wait to reach one.

    • @ronstewtsaw
      @ronstewtsaw 2 года назад

      I was surprised that Gary didn't say Viking is an exception. He has done so in a Viking video.

    • @owensmith7530
      @owensmith7530 2 года назад

      Viking are the only ocean cruise line I have booked with and I did it direct, and indeed I had a good experience. What I didn't like was having to phone them, I already knew what I wanted to book and would have preferred to do it online, less chance of a miscommunication.

    • @ronstewtsaw
      @ronstewtsaw 2 года назад

      Several years ago, a few weeks before an expensive Viking cruise, my father died. Nine months later, my mother also died. Our travel agent was not able to satisfactorily resolve the issue, but by calling Viking directly I was able to get a 50% refund and a 50% credit. The travel agent is a cruise specialist, and I used her for a Holland America cruise this summer.
      Of course, it is dangerous to extrapolate from a single incident, but I do think that Viking is an exception to the rule Gary states.

  • @WebbyWunda
    @WebbyWunda 2 года назад +4

    Another useful video, Gary - Thanks!
    Just in case there are any viewers like me who get side effects with motion sickness meds or prefer to avoid optional meds... I'd recommend trying some anti-nausea wristbands ('Sea Bands' is the brand I have) and see if they help. They're small, quite inconspicuous, knitted wrist bands with a little domed button which presses gently on the inner wrists. I don't know the science or whatever but, apparently applying a little gentle pressure there can prevent or reduce nausea. During a few of our cruises we've had a rough day and/or night, and as soon as I felt a hint of queasiness I put on the wristbands and have quickly felt OK again after that. Even if it's not rough, I always find a way to keep them with me 24/7 on board, just in case.
    I've spotted others wearing them over the years and the few I've chatted to about them would never cruise without them either.

  • @nkdgolf
    @nkdgolf 2 года назад +6

    I always book direct with Regent Seven Seas. I have had the same representative for 10 years and have always received updated benefits or reduced fares as they became available. Great cruise line, great service.

  • @roxanneonthemove4187
    @roxanneonthemove4187 2 года назад +3

    I learnt that by having a travel agent book your trip can be inconvenient. You may get some extra benefits with booking with them at the time of booking, but I find more often than not travel agents will not call you to tell you the fare has been dropped or there are additional benefits since booking, they already have the booking, that would mean extra work. One time in particular we had a flight with mechanical problems, there was another flight prior to ours that we could have changed to but because we did not book it ourselves but through a travel agency and they were closed we were unable to make the change ourselves. We were stuck with what the airline changed us to, missing our connecting flight, ended up being home 6 hours later than being able to be home on time.

  • @1992zg
    @1992zg 2 года назад +5

    I always tell people to book their cruise as soon as they think they want to take one. If fares go down you can almost always get it matched and if you are outside final payment you can always cancel and rebook. I also strongly encourage everyone I know to pay the extra for a refundable deposit. It is usually a small difference and saves so many headaches later.

  • @karichucko6243
    @karichucko6243 2 года назад +18

    By booking through a travel agent we have seen fares go down, sometimes by hundreds of dollars; received complimentary amenities; and once, we received an upgraded cabin. It can definitely payoff to go through a travel agent.

    • @vanceb1
      @vanceb1 2 года назад

      Couldn't agree more. If you get a good one they look out for you through the entire process. We've had the same experience when fares go down. The travel agent jumped on it and saved us some serious money.

  • @valerieg5674
    @valerieg5674 2 года назад +1

    I would never book direct with a cruise company. I am a solo traveller and have found Passion for Cruises, who specialise in those who travel solo, to be extremely helpful, whether communicating with them by email or phone.

  • @younglady2789
    @younglady2789 2 года назад +1

    You are so savvy about cruising...and it makes sense that you are since you've taken so many cruises! Thanks for sharing your tips about making your vacation plans through an agent.

  • @danielintheantipodes6741
    @danielintheantipodes6741 2 года назад +2

    I am always cautious about taking advice about anything. I have learnt that the hard way!
    Thank you for the video. Great tips.

  • @donnatidwell2212
    @donnatidwell2212 2 года назад +11

    I booked with Royal Caribbean and I kept checking every month to see what the price was . The price went down 600 each and they took it off my cruise!

  • @cmccloskey56
    @cmccloskey56 10 месяцев назад

    I use Sharri Mizel with United Cruises. She listened, and got me everything I needed.
    She's gold!

  • @Right-is-Right357
    @Right-is-Right357 2 года назад +5

    I completely agree that agents can give you a better fare. However, on one of my cruises, I found that an agent in a different city had given a better fare than my agent! 😊
    Yes, booking certain hotels and airlines directly, do give you the best rates!

    • @stewartscarborough4608
      @stewartscarborough4608 2 года назад +1

      If you go on a cruise and start comparing what people paid remember. You may have booked 6 months in advance, but they booked a year in advance. Pricing may have been better at that time. Your agent most likely got the best price available when you booked.

    • @Right-is-Right357
      @Right-is-Right357 2 года назад

      @@stewartscarborough4608 oh yes! That's what it must have been. My agent also told me that certain agents have "clout"! 🙂

  • @mandywalker3393
    @mandywalker3393 2 года назад +3

    I booked direct in Oct 2021, because I didn't know any better. After watching all the cruise Vloggers, I WILL use a travel agent should we chose to cruise again. First is in June 2022. Soon! I called the cruise line because the cabin I was in was being offered for less than I booked and they gave me a $400 plus on board credit. I was pretty proud of myself. But now i'm STILL wondering if I over paid. LOL.
    I also booked the exact suite I wanted in the location I wanted with an adjoining room for our sons. Only the upcoming cruise will let me know if that was a mistake.

  • @silviaeaston
    @silviaeaston 2 года назад +2

    Dramamine is included FREE at the guest services and / or medical office (at no charge)

  • @donkiml5805
    @donkiml5805 2 года назад +3

    So glad we booked our Australia🦘/New Zealand New Zealand 🇳🇿 cruise on Celebrity 18 months in advance, as the cost eventually went up $1000 and did sell out. We have used Shawn Power in the USA from “Nancy and Shawn Power” for 4 of our 6 cruises. We were referred to them from Avalon Waterways and just kept using them as we got great deals and service. $💵 They, like Gary, have cruised over 60 times so have lots of first hand knowledge and information. We use our VISA travel card for free airfare. ✈️

  • @jameskenyon8873
    @jameskenyon8873 2 года назад +1

    I'm going on Freedom of the Seas next month and eating up your tips as fast as I can. Thank you for doing this video.

  • @larry2436
    @larry2436 2 года назад +2

    I book direct with Princess. For our upcoming Iceland cruise the initial price was over A$12k. They have had 3 price drops, now paying A$8k. Cruise planner does this instantly. Why would busy travel agents bother to monitor price drops which equals lower commission. Also, booking direct enables you to manage your booking online yourself. I just paid the final payment and no more changes but up to 60 days before travel - I made numerous changes - so easy if booking direct. No hassle.

  • @fredrosenbaum8630
    @fredrosenbaum8630 Год назад

    I tried everything for seasickness and finally discovered raw ginger. A dollars worth of it from the grocery stored a single edged razor blade for slicing it lasted me for an 18 cruise with ginger to spare. I slice off a paper thin piece, suck it for a while then chew it up and swallow it. It tastes good and does wonders. I usually start a dy or 2 before the cruise and take some every few hours when I remember. Cheapest and best solution I've found.

  • @owensmith7530
    @owensmith7530 2 года назад +3

    I sometimes book the drinks package simply to avoid the hassle of arguing about the bill on checkout. But sometimes the drinks package doesn't include anything other than the most basic drinks and then I don't have it, but I find the system of writing your cabin number on the wine bottle and it coming out again tomorrow so down market.

  • @owensmith7530
    @owensmith7530 2 года назад +2

    Best times to book river cruises are different. The ships only have about 100 cabins of which 2 or less will be for single travellers and if you want a larger cabin there may be only 2 or 4 on the ship. These cabins at the bottom and top end of the price range tend to sell out first (especially the singles) so if you want them you have to book as soon as the cruise goes on sale. Even doing that I've sometimes had to be flexible on date to get them.

  • @Love2Cruise
    @Love2Cruise 2 года назад +3

    Last minute cruise sales are great, if you live near one of the departure ports. I haven been checking out Alaska cruises lately, and the remaining May and June departures are bargains compared to what the lines are charging for 2023. But the flights to Seattle or Vancouver from US east coast cost as much 2/3 of the cruise fares. Thanks, but no thanks.

  • @geoffreystone1598
    @geoffreystone1598 2 года назад +1

    When you book through an agent you gave a contract with the agent! If you have a problem don’t call the cruise line. Some agents have gone broke before booking the cruise with the cruise line. In Australia we don’t have the ATOL protection.
    Beware cabins at the front of the ship where the ports do not have piers. The sound of the anchors going down at 6am is disconcerting. If you suffer seasick don’t take a forward cabin.
    If you want a cheap cruise go for a repositioning cruise.

  • @2000konnie
    @2000konnie 2 года назад +2

    If people are thinking about last minute cruises, they better be coming driving distance to their embarkation port. But if you need to book flights, you will pay higher prices and get lousy flight choices, such as having to make connecting flights, and will may wind up only having middle seats left.

  • @williamd9205
    @williamd9205 2 года назад +1

    We always book with our travel agent and sign up on Cruise Watch to get alerts if fares drop. We also always book our flights through the cruise line after watching others scramble when our cruise disembarked in Miami rather than Lima. Thanks for the info Gary.

  • @kathryncashner3294
    @kathryncashner3294 2 года назад +6

    Some of this advice varies by cruise line. For example, Disney does not offer specials thru agent--the price is the price. The benefit of using an agent is their service, experience, and sometimes some Onboard credit. They have some very strange rules about booking air thru the cruise line. If you want to come in a day early, they require you to also book the overnight in one of their "cruise hotels.: You lose the flexibility of choosing your own hotel and your own way to the port (which might be cheaper or more convenient than their transfers.) My Virgin booking was "non-refundable," and I believe this was the case whether I did the deal to pay now and save 10% or not. I could change one or both names on my reservation--essentially sell it to someone else if I couldn't cruise, but no refund from the cruise line even though my booking was made 7 months before sailing. The advice you gave was accurate for the other lines that I'm familiar with--Princess, Celebrity, Norwegian, etc.
    For years, I've worked with a family owned agency that does the majority of their work on line. Yes, they have (or had before Covid) a "brick and mortar" location, but they specialized in cruises and sailed enough so that in the days before RUclips they could give you a personal opinion about lines or often specific ships. And, as you suggested, I had a real person to ask for whenever I called, although I did get to "know" a few others when she was not available. There are those "on line" agencies that are basically call centers, but there are also great agencies that do a lot of work on line.

    • @cherifurr3935
      @cherifurr3935 Год назад

      Not true. I have cruised Disney twice, and I booked my own hotel the night before-NOT a Disney hotel.

    • @kathryncashner3294
      @kathryncashner3294 Год назад

      @@cherifurr3935 But did you book your air thru DCL? Each time I cruised with them, if you booked air thru DCL, your hotel choices were a WDW resort hotel or they Hyatt at the airport. If you book air on your own, you could stay at any hotel you booked. But again, things might have changed as that was several years ago. I've cruised DCL 30 times, but not recently.

  • @petergilbert144
    @petergilbert144 Год назад

    I like the end. Nothing like getting rocked to sleep like a big baby if you like that thing and don't get sea sick.

  • @CruiseHog
    @CruiseHog 2 года назад +6

    Regarding having the cruise line book your air; We got hit by a major glitch in the Princess EZAir system. We went on a Panama Canal Cruise, FLL to SFO, embarked March 12. Princess EZAir made us reservations on Delta a several months in advance. We paid to upgrade the tickets to Comfort Class. The Princess website showed our flights and we also got several notifications about scheduling changes. The trouble is, I couldn't seem to bring up the flights on the Delta website. A couple days before the flights I called Delta and they told me that I don't have any tickets! What? Delta told me that on Jan 6, my travel agent (Princess EZAir) cancelled my tickets! Talking to Princess they told me that a "glitch" in their system cancelled my flights. The flights were still showing on the Princess website. Well Princess did some scrambling around and got us tickets on Southwest, routing through 5 airports. We were originally going to arrive the day before the cruise and stay in a hotel in FLL. The new routing got us to FLL the morning of the cruise. We didn't get any sleep the 2 days and we also lost our fees paid to upgrade on Delta. That was the first and the last time we'll use that "service".

    • @IMOO1896
      @IMOO1896 2 года назад +3

      How could the cancelling agent not be held responsible for you loss of flight fees?

  • @DennisMatheson
    @DennisMatheson 2 года назад +2

    Well, I've already broken at least one of these rules (I booked my next cruise while on the previous cruise) but at least one of the things supposedly included in my package on the then-current cruise from the agent didn't actually show up. (I'm still talking to both.)
    One tip I will add is that, if you are prone to sea-sickness, before reaching for the Dramamine try drinking a ginger ale (a real one, made with real ginger). Not saying this will work for everyone so keep that Dramamine handy, just in case, but my personal experience is that ginger ale does the trick. (Ginger snap cookies are also an option if you aren't so bad off that you can't eat anything.) I leaned this trick on small dive boats and dive cruises and it has always worked for me. (But remember, anecdote is not evidence so again, try it, but keep the Dramamine handy.)

  • @jeffreyclinard2002
    @jeffreyclinard2002 2 года назад +1

    I can attest that booking flights via the cruise line is the way to go. I ran into issues twice over the past few years when booking my own, notably when cruises were canceled. The short version is that I was able to get cash refunds of my tickets. It just took a lot of time and energy. That included getting money back from the refundable tickets I bought from a certain well-known online travel agency.
    I am planning to switch to a local travel agency. I've been using a major online one, but their service has declined a great deal over the past few years.

  • @barnum4244
    @barnum4244 2 года назад +1

    Paying to select a cabin will vary depending on the line. For example, P&O charge a small fortune for select cabins. In my experience, £200 to £300 a week more. The extras that come with it don't plug this huge gap.
    Only once has the price difference been low, and that's the one time we've used it.

  • @pandastamps
    @pandastamps 2 года назад +3

    My issue with booking flights through the cruise is that most cruise lines fly you in to arrive day of the cruise--if you want to arrive a day early, then you have to pay extra for a deviation--Oceania does this for sure and Viking too. As well as the deviation fee, you have to pay any fare difference too. But a bonus if you do the flights with the cruise line is transfers from the airport are often included at no additional cost.

    • @bobhowe2234
      @bobhowe2234 2 года назад

      I always fly in a day early and have never paid extra when booking thru the cruise line.

    • @pandastamps
      @pandastamps 2 года назад

      @@bobhowe2234 I know that certain levels of the loyalty program get the fee waived, but a new to Oceania cruiser like me will fork out $175 pp plus any fare difference.

  • @Smellynelly67
    @Smellynelly67 2 года назад

    The only reason we book with Cunard directly is we can get the exact suite we want and sometimes (like Xmas & new year) it is open to us a day before the general public,also the onboard spending is good and the free parking

  • @ruggerwoman6785
    @ruggerwoman6785 2 года назад +4

    I’m someone who suffers from motion sickness, mostly when gaming, so I really appreciate you taking this issue into consideration. From my personal experience, my additional advice is to avoid the fitness center while the ship is moving. Maybe if the machines faced the front of the ship or the ship was in port, I would have been fine but spending time on an elliptical while facing the side of the ship was a mistake. (And at that point, once you feel sick, I believe Dramamine is less effective given that it is designed as a preventative measure.) I had to drink some ginger ale and take a nap before I felt better.

  • @BeechSportBill
    @BeechSportBill 2 года назад +2

    Johnna at World Wide Travel in Walla Walla. She and the boss Paul have booked us the most complex arrangements AND fixed many delays and even cancellations! 30 couples from here are on the Rhine on Viking Gersemi on a group junket put together (and led by) the WWT TEAM. SUPER prices also!

    • @ZStitchDisneyFan
      @ZStitchDisneyFan 2 года назад +1

      I’m glad that your travel agents are amazing

  • @richardparmenter188
    @richardparmenter188 2 года назад +1

    We just booked a cruise through Iglu. Firstly they couldn’t find the quote they emailed me so had to go through all our wants again over the phone. Agreed a price which was slightly lower than the original quote. Paid deposit (and their £55 fee) but when the email came through with confirmation we didn’t get what we wanted nor expected. Emailed the company who said they call back within 10 days-still waiting. We did get an email saying they would have to talk to the cruise line before they could upgrade us! It is totally their mistake and need to sort it but now they have our money they don’t seem to care

  • @mea3665
    @mea3665 2 года назад +2

    With today's issues Travel Agent it is.
    I won't fly in the US without passport and Driver's license.
    Patch and ginger etc. Packed always

  • @1531W
    @1531W 2 года назад +1

    My wife uses the OTC Seaband which is very effective for sea sickness

  • @adrianne7882
    @adrianne7882 2 года назад +2

    When I cruise I always bring a passport (the actual passport and not the passport id card because some places won’t accept it). Unfunny enough the state I live made it mandatory that if anyone was flying into or out of my state they needed a passport. I also always buy cruise insurance. You never know what might happen. I think it’s better to have it and not need it then to need it and not have it.

  • @heluce174
    @heluce174 Год назад

    Be careful eith Dramamine and scopolamine (patch). Both can be powerfully drowse-inducing. Dramamine2 and Bonine are non-drowsy. I used to own a sailboat, we'd be out every chance we could. I got seasick frequently, my husband, never. I tried the scopolamine parch, and actually fell asleep while standing at the wheel steering! I'll never forget waking up to find myself standing, at the wheel. Yikes!

  • @richpontone1
    @richpontone1 2 года назад +1

    What irks me
    is when I book special cruise deals on these online Cruise agencies, they always hit me with "Promotion Fees" when I book their Free drinks and Wifi specials.
    Taxes, I din't mind but if they are free specials, why am I paying "Promotion Fees"?

  • @jec6613
    @jec6613 Год назад

    When it comes to the airline advice, there's one big exception: if you're a top tier flier on some airlines, you're much better off booking your own. I was returning from a (non-cruise) trip some months ago and due to weather we suffered numerous cancellations, delays, and misconnects. We were able to get onto the only flight that even made it anywhere near home that flew that day from our origin airport on any airline, but only because I was able to access the special booking agents when hold times were over 6 hours on the phone, the line for the rebooking center was nine gates long, and travel agents were shut out completely to allow the IT systems to keep up. Even if the IT systems have a meltdown, those agents will interline me on another carrier by picking up the phone, leaving me with many more options than even travel agents have.

  • @wildeworld2426
    @wildeworld2426 2 года назад

    THANK YOU! Cruisewatch saved me $411 already, and I still have a long time before my cruise

  • @markwilliams1963
    @markwilliams1963 2 года назад +1

    Hi I can drive past our local duckpond and get seasick, I use Scopoderm patches and have never been seasick since. we recently did a Norway cruise in the worst weather I've ever seen and I was perfectly fine - we had a cabin in the bow!

  • @kentfrederick8929
    @kentfrederick8929 Год назад

    People talk about how great it is to book at the last minute. We just booked an RCCL cruise less than three weeks out. We could not get a first or second seating for dinner, and with My Time Dining, slots until 8:15 are filled. Every entertainment venue is booked. The good excursions are full. We can't get a cabana at Coco Cay. We have to be on a bus from the Orlando airport by noon, but we can't formally check in until 2pm. They tout how great having status is, but being Emerald status is getting us treated just the same as if this were our first cruise. I guess I'm filling up a suitcase with all of the books I haven't read and sitting on my balcony the whole time and eating three meals a day in the Windjammer.

  • @johnkean6852
    @johnkean6852 2 года назад +1

    I had 5 cruise cancellations during covid lost lot's of money.
    One agent took 6 months to give me my refund on cancellation.
    The cruise line gave me my refund in two weeks!
    Another agent, well known now out of business, on my first cruise, told us the ship leaves port in Venice at 6pm also couldnt tell us the address. ("6pm"on the ticket.) We got there at 4:15 pm - with very angry crew telling us they nearly left us behind, which put a dampener on our first day, as they were scheduled to leave at 4pm. 😓

  • @djba
    @djba Год назад

    Thanks Gary … I like your good advice to counter bad advice.

  • @mjgorges1502
    @mjgorges1502 2 года назад +2

    First of all, you are one of my favorite cruise bloggers. Matter of fact information without gimmicks or hysterics. That said I find number 1 and 2 confusing. Do not book your cruise through the cruise line, but do book your flight through the cruise line??? We have used our Princess PVP Rose Rigor (is it ok to put her name out there)for years and she is wonderful, always looking for our best possible deal and tracking refunds during the whole COVID debacle. I agree that booking a guarantee cabin is not a great idea, but we recently booked a cruise we wanted and our preferred category was only available as a guaranteed. will let you know how that works out. Since COVID restart our drink packages has been included. Since only one of us has more than two drinks per day, we will have to evaluate this when freebies end. We always carry passport, but put them at bottom of backpack, purse etc, so not easy for pickpockets to access. Finally, we have been on 17 cruises, including transatlantic and in the Pacific. Always have dramamine and ginger, have never used them. Hmmm, maybe I should check expiration on dramamine! Happy sailing.

    • @caroleanne8529
      @caroleanne8529 2 года назад

      I don't know what PVP means in regard to using Princess travel agent. How to you reach her? We had an agent with Princess save us $500 on a 7 day cruise, so I would use her again, if I could. I thought you just called the main line and took your chances.

  • @vanceb1
    @vanceb1 2 года назад +2

    Speaking of drink packages... One of my coworkers got a drink package on a cruise he took. Late in the afternoon, he went to order a beer and the bartender told him he was cut off (he can put away prodigious amounts of beer). It seems they track how much you drink and when you hit the limit they cut you off for the day. I'm retired from the USCG and I told him we spent a lot of time looking for drunk fools who fell overboard from cruise ships. Drunks falling overboard are expensive for the tax payers and the cruise lines hence the daily limit.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 2 года назад

      The limit is clearly stated when you book the drink package.

    • @vanceb1
      @vanceb1 2 года назад

      @@johnp139 You're assuming my coworker was going to read that. All he was thinking of was "beer!!!!" He didn't read much past that.

  • @genitagray6126
    @genitagray6126 Год назад

    Always a good video with great tips!

  • @jimjachimiak
    @jimjachimiak 2 года назад +1

    Your blanket statement that all “Planners” that work at the cruise lines are call centers is wrong where I work. I return direct calls and emails daily. This single comment will now have me watching your videos with more hesitation.

  • @user-fc9dd6ej9w
    @user-fc9dd6ej9w Год назад

    I can not stress too much about how I agree with NOT dealing directly with the cruise line. A year and a half ago I did this with Celebrity (21 day B2B cruises). With everything from double charging my credit card for the final payment, to later canceling this same cruise for non payment, to canceling but still charging me for our flights, I had to continuously fight with a call center that actually refused on 2 occasions to pass me to a supervisor. After over 16-1/2 hours on the phone (by far most of the time on hold) 3 days before we were due to leave I finally got the last bit semi corrected with out as much as a "sorry" out of them. Needless to say I will not be back.

  • @jpistella
    @jpistella 2 года назад +1

    assport card is $65 for adults first time be book is $165 for first time. The prices he listed are for renewals.

  • @donnalanphear3567
    @donnalanphear3567 2 года назад

    So true on a great travel agents. Saved my bacon several times!

  • @Tyler-mp7kh
    @Tyler-mp7kh Год назад +1

    I’ve tried at least 10 travel agents over 4 cruises over about a 5 year period. Every. Single. Time. They cost more than just booking from the cruise lines website.

    • @Tyler-mp7kh
      @Tyler-mp7kh Год назад +1

      I just booked a 2 person 7day port canaveral MSC cruise for $800 all the agents were quoting me $1000+

  • @EpicAdventureCouple
    @EpicAdventureCouple 2 года назад

    Good tips, we’re travel agents and allways give better prices through Expedia then Direct.
    They give us a block of discount cabins on EVERY CRUISE. Never book direct for a cruise.

  • @cydneystephen2814
    @cydneystephen2814 2 года назад

    Sir Gary. These are all great tips. We are eager to book and forget to be mindful of cabin location, comparing prices etc. Thanks so much and see you next video.

  • @philo8366
    @philo8366 2 года назад

    A point about sea sickness... If you understand the cause of sea sickness, no matter how prone to it you are, it can be completely avoided. Perhaps you can do a post on that???

  • @elainechubb971
    @elainechubb971 2 года назад +1

    What a very useful and clear video! I have one question. I had a good friend (now, alas, deceased) who took a number of transatlantic crossings and cruises on Cunard and, when she was retired and could spend more time annually asea, took advantage of offers to book future trips when on a voyage. Cunard had customer service personnel set up to discuss the possibilities and take deposits. She got a discount if booking ahead (as a frequent passenger) and the discounts got better the more trips you booked at one time. Also, as a single passenger, this ensured she got one of the few single cabins. (Note: a tip for single passengers if you are booking on a ship that does offer single cabins--these are not many, so to save money, book early!) My question: does Cunard still do this? Do any other cruise lines do this? Or do any give a "bundling" discount when you book more than one trip at one time?

  • @helenhampson3749
    @helenhampson3749 2 года назад +1

    I use Travel Counsellors too

  • @annabuttimore6819
    @annabuttimore6819 2 года назад

    I just booked a cruise today through my local high street travel agent. They got us £30 off per person plus £105 on board credit and I didn’t have to do anything, so definitely better than booking direct so far.

  • @cp123106
    @cp123106 Год назад

    My girlfriend and I were able to book a Princess cruise for next month cheaper on the website via smartphone than at the agents office. But we were able to transfer the booking to the agent and get the agencies promo credit.

  • @MadeNCda
    @MadeNCda 2 года назад

    Thanks Gary. Always enjoy your videos and hope your recent cruise and stay in Las Vegas was fabulous 👌🏻

  • @davidlawton5553
    @davidlawton5553 2 года назад

    I book direct with Oceania, who link with the agent you last used, but done onboard as promise best price and it worked

  • @_itzastro4931
    @_itzastro4931 2 года назад +1

    You say it’s best to book with an agent, but to call the line (cruise line?) if you see the fate go lower than your purchase price. However, you mentioned that you were emailed from someone who booked direct with cruise line and when she called after seeing lower price the cruise line would not price match.

  • @johnkean6852
    @johnkean6852 2 года назад +1

    Some cruiseship prices only include food for 2 people in the cabin!!!! ...whilst advertising 30%-50% off. If you have 4 people you have to buy their food which can work out quite a chunk of money... ie more than if they didn't give 30-50 % off and charged normal price for e everyone to include food. (Perhaps choose seperate cabins?)

  • @kater.7563
    @kater.7563 2 года назад +1

    I strenuously disagree with several tips in this post!
    1. Booking via a TA: the Pro is that you get better bang for your buck, but there are a few Cons: 1.) the cruise line does not open all available cabins to TAs, 2.) If there is a problem the TA does not have the internal phone numbers and network to resolve the issue.
    2. Booking airfare via the cruise line. The issue I’ve had with this is that 1.) you don’t get the best price, 2.) don’t get the airline credit card miles that you get if booked direct (which cost me 15,000 miles on my flights to Europe, ) 3.) getting ahold of someone at the cruiseline air flight department is a nightmare and 4.) EZ Air is quick to charge your cc but not so quick on actually ticketing (holding onto your money. I actually lost a preferred seat after the airline cancelled my reservation due to non payment.

    • @cherifurr3935
      @cherifurr3935 Год назад

      You have the wrong TA. I get THEM to get the air ironed out through the cruise line. Mine always gets through and is able to make changes.

  • @larry4111
    @larry4111 2 года назад +2

    I always love your tips but the first one is not quite true. I decided to switch from booking direct to using a TA after seeing so many blogs and vids about how "they will never charge more than the cruise line" and how they make their money from commissions. The first time I used a TA I went with the company that calls themselves "America's largest cruise agency." Yes, the fare was the same but they charged a service fee. When I asked about it, they said "that's how we make our money." Not quite what everyone's been saying. Even worse, when I decided to change the date, they charged me a second fee for the new booking and said it was nonrefundable. And to make it even worse, they said my cruise deposit was nonrefundable even though the cruise line said you can change and not lose your deposit. I ended up paying about $800 more than if I'd booked direct and I had to fight them to get my money back.

    • @usavvy2
      @usavvy2 2 года назад

      Sounds like you used an online call center vs a brick and mortar travel agency?

    • @cherifurr3935
      @cherifurr3935 Год назад

      You had the wrong travel agent. I have never paid a service fee and get onboard credit.

  • @kathleenabell5933
    @kathleenabell5933 2 года назад

    Always such great advice provided! Thanks for the research .

  • @rachelgetchell8281
    @rachelgetchell8281 2 года назад

    We were just on NCL, and priced out with out the drink package and with it. There was only a 200 difference in having the drink package.

  • @brutusvk2
    @brutusvk2 2 года назад +1

    Booked directly through NCL after a canceled cruise. When paying my final payment, they overcharged me by almost $1,200. Cannot answer how or why. Can’t seem to refund me WEEKS later. This seems criminal to me. Ruined the excitement for our dream trip. That’s a ton of money for us. So bummed.

  • @julieolson9832
    @julieolson9832 2 года назад

    I bring scopolamine patches. They make all the difference for me.

  • @Charlesfernandez0
    @Charlesfernandez0 2 года назад

    Always so informative. 🙏🙏🙏

  • @Adam_Adamsky
    @Adam_Adamsky 2 года назад

    9:33 Be very careful taking Dramamine and drinking. It has a very strong synergic interaction with alcohol, so NEVER use both at the same time because it can actually get you absolutely legless drunk just having had a single beer.

  • @dantheman8279
    @dantheman8279 2 года назад

    Very good advice! Learned a lot!

  • @jaytpharaoh8411
    @jaytpharaoh8411 Год назад

    I got a travel agent price and I got the website price. Carnival gave the cheaper route

  • @paulgerrard9227
    @paulgerrard9227 Год назад

    The one big one i dont like. People who have never cruised who have poor opinion about cruises and yet they have no idea but are happy to share their ignorance. They also think sea sickness is common etc. I have a pretty solid view to never use a travel agent to book anything. The covid losses many faced was because the agent became the only contact point. Flights cruises or accom. Agents only sell product they are paid to sell. I was quited $16,000 usd for 2 alaska tours that i researched and booked myself for $8k. I flew syd to rome for Aud $880 return when agents cant sell the fare and quoted $1600 plus.

  • @Surfcityham
    @Surfcityham 2 года назад

    I have only gotten seasick once and that was while stuffing a jib back in the bag while going to weather in heavy seas on a 37-foot sailboat. HOWEVER, we did carry Dramamine Suppositories as well as oral Bonamine. We also had "Bucladin" a prescription drug that contained Bella Donna to keep you from throwing up and something (narcotic?) to make you feel good. I do not know if it is available anymore.