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This guide is part of the 🌍 Travel Resources Hub
— a collection of practical pages for traveling light, smart, and well.
🛳️ Cruises: Floating Cities, Slow Mornings, Big Views
A cruise is a moving hotel with a new skyline every morning. It’s not the sprint of air travel or the contemplative rhythm of trains—it’s its own thing: unpack once, roam a lot, and learn to love the gentle thrum of engines underfoot.
🔎 What to Expect Onboard
- Sea days vs. port days: Sea days are for exploring the ship, reading nooks, and shows. Port days are early alarms and off-ship adventures.
- Wi-Fi: Available but not always fast; download before you sail and expect “good enough,” not fiber.
- Payments: Most ships run cashless—your key card is your wallet. Watch those add-ons.
- Motion: Big ships = gentler ride, but bring motion aids if you’re sensitive.
🛏️ Cabins & Dining
- Cabins: Interior (dark & quiet), oceanview (natural light), balcony (fresh air, morning coffee heaven). Choose by sleep and budget.
- Dining: Main dining room, buffet, and specialty venues. “All-inclusive” often excludes specialty restaurants, premium coffee, and some drinks.
- Room control: Pack a small nightlight and magnetic hooks; walls are often metal—hello, vertical storage.
💙 Health & Accessibility
- Medical center: Ships have one; it’s basic care, not a full hospital. Bring your meds and a summary of conditions.
- Accessibility: Request accessible cabins early; elevators can be busy on port days—plan buffer time.
- CPAP & power: Ask for distilled water in advance; bring a power strip (non-surge) and an extension if allowed by your line.
- Hygiene: Hand-wash like it’s a sport; ships are small cities—stay ahead of the shared-space germs.
🧳 Packing for Cruises
Cruise packing is part ship, part shore. Think layers, sun protection, and one “nice” outfit if your sailing has formal nights.
- Day bag for shore days (ID, meds, water, hat, light jacket)
- Motion aids: bands/patches/meds—test what works for you
- Magnetic hooks, over-door organizer, small nightlight
- Refillable water bottle and a collapsible tote for souvenirs
My printable checklist can be downloaded here:
Cruise Packing List →
🗺️ Ports & Excursions
- Ship tour vs. DIY: Ship-booked = easy and guaranteed back before sail-away; DIY = cheaper and flexible, but time management is on you.
- Dock or tender: Some ports require tender boats—plan extra time and wear easy shoes.
- Energy budgeting: Pick one highlight per port. It’s a marathon, not a sprint.
🔗 Helpful Links & Articles
- First-Time Cruiser’s Booking Guide (Condé Nast Traveler)
Covers everything from choosing the right itinerary & ship, to what to expect on embarkation day. Helps you plan so you arrive relaxed, not frazzled. - Accessible Cruising & Special Assistance (Royal Caribbean)
Insights into accessible cabins, adaptive shore excursions, and how to make your cruise more comfortable if you have mobility or accessibility needs. - Cruise Travel Health & Safety (Travel.gc.ca)
Advice on staying healthy aboard ship and during port stops. Good medical prep, hygiene tips, and what to have on hand. - Tips for Staying Safe on a Cruise Shore Tour (Cruise Critic)
How to pick safe excursions, avoid bad-actors, and make the most of shore days without risking your peace of mind (or your passport). - Advice From Veteran Cruisers (Business Insider)
What seasoned cruisers wish they’d known: packing light, budgeting for extras, port timing, etiquette, and how to avoid rookie mistakes.
📌 Christine’s Takeaways
- Unpack once, explore often—that’s the cruise magic.
- Budget for add-ons (Wi-Fi, drinks, specialty dining). “All-inclusive” has fine print.
- Pack motion aids and plan rest on port-heavy itineraries.
- Ask for accessibility/CPAP accommodations early—ships do better with notice.
🌐 Planning and Gear
🧳 Prefer to let someone else plan the details? My former colleague runs a trusted travel agency I’m happy to recommend. Explore Travel Agency → 🧳
Need gear for your next adventure? From luggage that actually fits overhead bins to the adapters you didn’t know you needed, visit the Travel Shopping page →.