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Topic: RSS FeedYucatan Holiday: short sailings from Mobile to Mexico aboard Carnival Cruise Lines' classic "Fun Ship"
Cruise Travel, Sept-Oct, 2005 by Randy Mink, Karen Mink
A year-round slate of twice-weekly sailings to Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula onboard Carnival Cruise Line's oldest and smallest ship is creating the latest buzz in Mobile, Alabama, the Deep South's new cruise port. Introduced last October, four- and five-day Western Caribbean jaunts on the 1,452-passenger Holiday are selling like hotcakes, drawing a largely regional crowd. Folks feel fight at home heating conversations peppered with "y'all" and "over yonder."
Some 26 million people live within an eight-hour radius of Mobile, and most of them drive to the spanking-new Alabama Cruise Terminal, according to Al St. Clair, Mobile's director of waterfront cruise development and special projects. The spiffy, spacious complex on the Mobile River, complete with a massive parking garage, was built just for the Holiday and plays a big part in the ongoing renaissance of downtown Mobile. Thrilled with the economic impact, local officials say their ship has come in.
"We've never seen a city so supportive and so excited to have us," said Vance Gulliksen, a spokesman for Carnival Cruise Lines, which now counts 30 U.S. cities as home ports, a reflection of travelers' desire to drive to their ship. "Mobile has welcomed the Holiday with open arms."
The Holiday, which entered service in 1985, previously opened markets for Carnival in Los Angeles, Tampa, and San Juan. Because this is the only cruise ship sailing out of Mobile, passengers feel they're getting the red-carpet treatment, an experience enhanced by the hospitality that just comes naturally in this part of the country. (Curiously, Delta Queen Steamboat Company's historic paddlewheeler, the Delta Queen, was docked right next to the Holiday the day we boarded in February; she was in the middle of the New Orleans-Pensacola itinerary.)
The Holiday's five-night cruises, departing Mondays and Saturdays, visit Cozumel and Costa Maya or Calic/Playa del Carmen, all known for outstanding beaches and crystal-clear turquoise waters that attract scuba divers and snorkelers from around the world. Ours was the four-night Thursday cruise that calls only at Cozumel, the largest island (30 miles long and 10 miles wide) in the Mexican Caribbean.
Mobile was experiencing chillier than normal February weather, so we needed a coat out ondeck the first afternoon and a sweatshirt the next morning at sea. Many sunbathers, determined to get some tropical rays despite overcast skies, braved the cool breezes and snuggled under beach towels as the Holiday cut across the Gulf of Mexico on a straight north-south shot from Mobile to Cozumel, a distance of 640 nautical miles. One lady wrapped herself in her bed linens, including comforter. Few ventured into the pools, and the waterslide was closed the first morning. Things warmed up as we approached the Yucatan but never got superhot, a blessing in our minds.
While the 20-year-old Holiday does not have all the bells and whistles of a 21st century megaship, she's in remarkably good shape--you have to look hard to find blemishes and rust spots. The decor--glass, chrome, mirrors, neon--is a bit dated, and you won't find a multi-deck atrium lobby with glass elevators. But we were comfortable and felt as if we were on a ship, not a floating high-rise requiring long jaunts from top to bottom and end to end.
For passengers with just a few days to get acclimated (many sailing from Mobile are first-time cruisers), the ship is the perfect size and imparts a hint of nostalgia for those of us who remember smaller ships (not that the 46,052-gross-register-ton Holiday is intimate by any means).
The Holiday has all the "Fun Ship" flash we're accustomed to. Expect karaoke craziness, art auctions, and poolside festivities like "The Hairy Chest Contest." In the two-level Americana Lounge, with its star-spangled decor, we enjoyed everything from bingo and "Game Show Mania" to Vegas-style revues and a French foot juggler. Unfortunately, poles obstruct views from many of the couches and theater-style seats.
Doc Holidays--a country & western lounge with fake cactus, Navajo-pattern rugs, log tables, stone walls, and mounted cattle horns--anchors the aft end of Broadway, a "Little Old New York" streetscape that stretches along Promenade Deck from the Americana Lounge's balcony level forward. You can saddle up to the bar on hand-tooled leather saddles or relax in cowskin-upholstered chairs.
In between these two true, American gathering spots are the casino and smaller lounges. The Bus Stop Bar, next to the casino, has bar stools and yellow-and-white checked tables next to a traffic light, street lamp, and an antique bus headed to "Coney Island." By the windows across the way, black-and-yellow taxi chairs provide prime spots for people-watching and looking out to sea. Elevator banks on this level are marked "Times Square" and "Broadway."
Other hotspots on the indoor promenade include Cappuccino's, a sidewalk cafe for relaxing over coffee or cocktails, and the adjacent Tahiti Lounge, a Polynesian-themed tiki bar with carved wooden totems and masks, cane furniture, and bamboo rafters. A spiral metal staircase from the casino leads down to Rick's Care American, an Admiral Deck piano bar inspired by the watering hole in the classic movie Casa blanca. Sand-colored stucco arches, ceiling fans, mirrors etched with camels, and a grand piano ringed by bar stools set the tone in this "casbah" hideaway.
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