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Topic: RSS FeedNorthern European ferries: these innovative vessels offer enticing point-to-point cruises for independent travelers - Cruise Roundup
Cruise Travel, May-June, 2003 by Theodore W. Scull
The world "ferry" rarely conjures up happy thoughts of gourmet meals, comfy cabins, lots of daytime activities and evening entertainment. Instead, we think of something plain and mundane, shuttling back and forth across a harbor or river.
But those seafaring Scandinavians, whose lands are widely separated by saltwater, have taken the utilitarian and turned it into an enticing travel experience well beyond merely getting there. Recent cruise-ship innovations such as multiple dining venues, soaring atriums, and vast indoor promenades actually got their start on the huge overnight cruise ferries operating between Sweden and Finland. Naval architects and interior designers work on both types of ships, so it is natural there would eventually be a cross-fertilization.
For independent travelers who like creating their own itineraries, Northern Europe's ferry network, when integrated with car, motorcoach, or rail travel, provides a joyful way to tour and travel from England to Estonia, France to Finland. When buying one of the many European rail passes, there is often a discount and sometimes even free ferry travel included.
The major sea routes radiate from Britain across the North Sea to Holland, Germany, and three Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden) and also between Scandinavian capitals, with routes such as Copenhagen-Oslo and Stockholm-Helsinki. All services provide dinner, bed and breakfast, entertainment, and often some pretty sensational scenery leaving and arriving port. On some routes you can spend two continuous nights aboard, bracketing a full day of city sightseeing in Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, or Helsinki.
My most recent voyage was aboard the Danish-owned Prince of Scandinavia sailing from Newcastle-on-Tyne in northeast England overnight through the North Sea to Ijmuiden, a port near Amsterdam. The line, DFDS Seaways, has operated European ferry services for 137 years, and I have used them a half-dozen times, including my very first overnight crossing in 1960 between Copenhagen and Oslo. (DFDS translated means "The United Steamship Company.")
The journey began in Scotland aboard the Great Northeastern Railway's Flying Scotsman from Edinburgh along the North Sea coast to Newcastle Central Station, where a dedicated connecting bus ran down to the Tyne River dock. The Prince of Scandanavia, a sleek 22,578-gross-register-ton ship with a white Maltese cross in a blue circle emblazoned on her impressive funnel, was ready for boarding both passengers (1,519 in cabins) and vehicles (up to 379 cars).
Traveling Commodore Class, I was shown to a windowed cabin high up and forward on deck 7, a double arranged for single occupancy, with one bed made up and the other for use as a couch. The complimentary mini-bar contained two whisky and two gin miniatures, two beers, soft drinks, and bottled water; on the table top was a basket of fresh fruit.
The Filipino cabin steward arrived with afternoon tea and dinner menus. The choices were the a la carte Blue Riband Restaurant; the Scandinavian-style buffet Seven Seas, at a fixed price and set starting times to avoid queues; the Jolly Roger, a cafe with hot and cold items; and a snack bar out ondeck. I opted for the Blue Riband, and the steward made my table reservation. The restaurant's name came from the fact that this ship and her sister were, until the arrival of the Superfast Ferries in 2002, the fastest ships on the North Sea, with service speeds of 26 knots.
Sailing at 6 p.m., the Prince of Scandinavia first headed up the Tyne to a turning basin and then sailed downriver past a former Danish State Railway ferry undergoing a refit into a medical missionary ship. The Tyne was once second only to the Clyde as a British shipbuilding center, completing great liners such as Cunard's record-breaking Mauretania of 1907 and several Canadian Pacific Empresses. Now the work is mostly ship repair.
Soon after the 180-degree turn the captain opened the bridge wings to passengers so they could enjoy 270-degree viewing of the residential and commercial architecture ranging up the north bank and the strategic locations at the river mouth for substantial fortifications. Soon the Prince of Scandinavia reached the North Sea, picked up speed, and took on a gentle movement in a slight head sea.
The ship's public spaces offer several bars with entertainment, a nightclub with a band for dancing, two small cinemas, slot machines, children's playroom, and a sizable shop for reasonably priced but--since the European Community rules came into being--no longer duty-free food, beverages, clothing, jewelry, and souvenirs. Shortly after sailing, the public rooms were nearly all crowded with people having a fine time.
All ages and incomes travel on the ferries--couples, singles, families, student groups--and on this route, mostly British, Dutch, and German--hence announcements are made in three languages. The ship carries cars, camper vans, motorcycles, and trucks, and the commercial drivers have their own dining, lounge, and cabin facilities.
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