If it’s Monday it must be Muscat – Ali Bacon offers some tongue-in-cheek advice on taking a cruise
We loved the sunshine but if you’re thinking of doing it, you might want to
take this short test to decide if cruising is for you!
1. Time to pack! So do you:
a) Start
planning your wardrobe a month in advance, using a printed timetable of which
nights will be formal, casual, or themed and with your favourite weather app to
hand. (You can always pay for extra baggage).
b) You assemble most of last year’s summer
wardrobe and your one posh frock, throw in a few panic buys then throw them out again in case you go over the baggage allowance
c) Your Rohan gear is light and crinkle-proof. You
share a rucksack as usual
2. After an overnight flight you’ve been embarked (yes, this is
a transitive verb) but have yet to be reunited with
your luggage.
Embarkation day - now where are those flipflops? |
Do you:
a) go straight to the pool, slap on the sunscreen and have a swim using the gear from your carefully
packed day bag.
b) go
straight to the all-day café then throw
yourself on a lounger and fall asleep, waking to discover you are red all over
(apart from the sleeve and trouser marks)
c) go straight to the walking track where you complete your daily step quota despite having to negotiate all those plebs on the sun-loungers.
3. At dinner:
a) you’ve
opted for ‘freedom dining’ which means you have a different audience each night
to regale with your previous cruising experiences (of which this is by far the
worst)
b) you’ve
gone for ‘fixed dining’ as it was cheaper. By the third night you hate your fellow-diners so much you fork out for freedom dining and run straight into the people from a)
c) you dine a deux in the sushi restaurant because some extras are worth it
4. First day ashore:
a) Ashore? You’d rather have the pool and spa to yourself for the
day. (Anyway you saw this place last time around).
b) Despite
the extravagant cost of the ship’s excursion and the fact that it leaves at
dawn, you take it. At least you’re guaranteed not to miss the evening sailing
time and won't have to grapple with local currency, or food, or locals.
c) This is the life. You
have a copy of Lonely Planet and supplies of Omani Rial. If only you didn't have to be back by four p.m. At least there's time for some authentic local cuisine
5. Day two:
a) As
day one. You may stroll off the boat in the afternoon as the TV channels on
this ship are a bit rubbish, or catch up with friends using the on-board internet (easily worth the $20 a day).
b) You
don’t really miss being online, honest, but you’ve spotted a café advertising free wifi.
After two coffees and half an hour’s internet rage you decide there’s something
wrong with the wifi or your phone or both. Too late you discover the café has
no loo.
c) You
left your phone at home so you can give yourself entirely to the holiday experience.
6. Dressing up:
Party time! |
a) You
knew tonight was going to be the 'Arabian white party' and have brought your white palazzo
pants .
b) As
it happens you brought a white top which you throw over some trousers. You add some dangly earrings for good measure and think this looks okay until you sit next to someone you could have really got
on with if they weren’t suspicious of your dress sense.
c) After
dinner you’ll be in your cabin reading from a selection of novels by local
writers.
7. Day three: a sea day (this means you’re not
getting off)
Towel-folding anyone? |
a) This is your favourite kind of
day but you have to get up early to bag a sun-lounger. You signed up in advance
for the ladies pamper session as a break from sunbathing
b) Since you don't have to rise at dawn you linger over breakfast then can’t find a sun-lounger except in the wind-tunnel on deck
b) Since you don't have to rise at dawn you linger over breakfast then can’t find a sun-lounger except in the wind-tunnel on deck
4. The only activity
with spaces left is decorative towel-folding as practiced by the cabin staff.
You decide your life has been adequate without knowing how to fold a towel in
the shape of a rabbit or a bull-dog and settle for watching T.V. under the bedclothes as the cabin air-con is quite chilly
c) You spend the day on the top deck with your travel binoculars but fail to spot a single dolphin (unlike those who took the pre-paid boat-trip on day 1).
c) You spend the day on the top deck with your travel binoculars but fail to spot a single dolphin (unlike those who took the pre-paid boat-trip on day 1).
8. Swimwear choices
a) you
have a sarong that matches every swimsuit
b) you
brought a baggy t-shirt you thought would do
c) you
only swim before breakfast when the pool is empty, do your 20 lengths (that’s 100
in this size of pool) and go straight back for breakfast in the cabin
Seventies night, apparently |
9. Evening entertainment
a) you’ve
seen most of it before and prefer to hit the all-in drinks package
b) you
can’t afford to drink all night so you experience a mime-artist who looks suspiciously
like the guy who served ice-cream by the pool and an act rumoured to have won BGT.
Actually, it could have been worse.
c) Book,
cabin, smug.
10. Beauty routine
a) you’ve
brought your enriched handcream to counteract the constant sanitising and your acrylic nails should easily last
the week
b) after
two days of constant sanitising, the nail polish administered pre-cruise by
your daughter is looking a bit ragged, so rather than shell out $15 in the shop you
brave an on-shore pharmacist who sells you
something you’re too scared to use.
c) nail
polish is bad for the environment and remover is worse. Anyway you’re not going to dinner tonight having picked up a bug, possibly at the Omani lunch.
11. Tipping
a) you
signed up for set tipping but will obviously give a little extra to the cabin
boy who folded the towels so nicely
b) you
signed up for set tipping by mistake, you’re certainly not shelling out any
more no matter how many towel creations are lined up
c) you
waived the set tipping and have been keeping a log of every crew member who has
gone beyond (or beneath) the call of duty so that you can reward them
appropriately
a) now’s the time to make sure
you get full value from the drinks package. You can sleep it off on the
flight home
b) now’s the time to have a
single cocktail then put your back out in the disco
c) now’s the time for a last
foray into local culture. Unfortunately your desert trip takes longer than expected and you get lost on your way back to the port. You can’t contact the ship as you have no phone and so you miss the evening sailing time. You need all your remaining cash to pay for a night in the Abu Dhabi equivalent of a Travelodge, for whose cleanliness and convenience you are profoundly
grateful, even if the lack of dinner leaves you feeling decidedly empty.
So how did you do?
Obviously you’ve done this before and have the whole thing
sussed. Just try not to make it quite so obvious - please!
Mostly B’s
A good try but you have a lot to learn. Next time consider going with
friends. That way you can create your very own dining club.
Mostly C's
Well really what were you thinking? You would clearly be
happier trekking across the Indian sub-continent or touring the coast of Ireland in your
camper van.
But if you do decide to do it again, please bring something
decent to wear!
She's now back at her desk concocting short stories and blog posts for Authors Electric. Find out more about her published writing here or at alibacon.com.
Comments
Ali - you've confirmed me in my deepest suspicions of cruises. I don't think I'd survive one.
also the gulf although gorgeously hot and sunny probably had less to offer in the way of local colour than Mediterranean or other European itineraries. A case of pros and cons, but I suspect if offered 5 days in one beautiful European city or a 7-day cruise I would go for the stay.