Mike Miller

Alaska Cruise Preview 2007: Another 'Blockbuster' Year in the Making



Posted: Monday, August 07, 2006

by
Mike Miller

This is for would-be cruisers who had hoped 2006 would be their year for an Alaska cruise – but things didn't quite work out:

Not to worry. 2007 is coming and you're not going to miss a thing.

Virtually all the lines in the 2006 Alaska cruise trade, with one exception, have announced plans to return to Alaska cruising in year 2007 and it's going to be another blockbuster year up north. Alaska-sized choices will vary from the traditional “Inside Passage" sailings from Seattle and Vancouver – a choice that has pleased travelers for more than a century – to expedition sailings as far out as the Aleutian Islands chain. At least two lines have scheduled port calls in Russia.

15 Cruiselines, 45 Ships

At present, 15 companies have announced plans to dispatch 45 large and small cruising vessels. Passengers aboard these vessels will, as usual, cruise steep-walled fjords that make Norwegians homesick. They'll see mammoth glaciers (one of them five miles wide at its face) which “calve" giant thundering, splashing, wave-making icebergs the size of tour buses.

Sealife, Wildlife

Elsewhere, humpback whales will breach in full view then dive only to rise again, sometimes bursting completely out of the water.

Travelers may spot white mountain goats negotiating precarious mountainside paths on lofty cliffs. Along forested or rocky shores cruisers may see brown bears or blackies or Sitka black-tailed deer.

Too, there are authentic 19th century goldrush towns where visitors can still pan for “color" in creeks and streams. Alaska Native communities and cultural centers offer fascinating glimpses into Alaska's rich human history from centuries past.

Great Variety in Vessels

The ships in Alaska's cruise fleet again vary greatly. They range from large and “mega" floating resorts (guest capacity up to 2,670) down to cruise yachts with staterooms for a pampered dozen. (There are even fewer guests aboard a century-old “tall ship" sailing vessel that accommodates ten.) Too, you can book passage aboard a converted and decidedly upscale former mine sweeper circa World War II, a genuine sternwheel paddle boat, or a completely modern vessel cleverly disguised as a turn-of-the-20th-century coastal packet steamer.

Or, if you're a do-it-yourself cruiser you can plan your own itinerary and port calls by booking stateroom space aboard sailings of Alaska's state ferry system.

Following are the lines that will dispatch their “ships of summer" to Alaska waters in 2007 along with phone contacts and internet URLs. Many companies offer reduced fares for early bookings.

Lines With Large to Mega Ships

Carnival Cruise Lines, 1-800-CARNIVAL, www.carnival.com
Celebrity Cruises, 1-800-437-3111, www.celebrity.com
Holland America Line, 1-877-SAIL HAL, www.hollandamerica.com
Norwegian Cruise Line, 1-800-327-7030, www.ncl.com
Princess Cruises, 1-800-PRINCESS, www.princess.com
Royal Caribbean International, 1-800-327-6700, www.royalcaribbean.com

Mid-Size Vessels

Regent Seven Seas Cruises, 1-800-285-1835, www.TheRegentExperience.com

Smaller Ships

American Safari Cruises, 1-888-862-8881, www.americansafaricruises.com
The Boat Company, 1-360-697- 4242, www.theboatcompany.com
Clipper Cruiseline, 1-800-325-0010, www.clippercruise.com
Cruise West, 1-800-888-9378, www.cruisewest.com
Discovery Voyages, 1-800-324-7602, www.discoveryvoyages.com
Lindblad Expeditions, 1-800-EXPEDITION, www.expeditions.com
Majestic America Line, 1-800-434-1232, www.majesticamericaline.com
Maple Leaf Adventures, 1-888-599-5323, www.mapleleafadventures.com

Alaska Ferries

Alaska Marine Highway System, 1-800-642-0066, www.FerryAlaska.com

Copyright © 2006 by Mike Miller All rights reserved

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Mike Miller lives and writes travel stories and guidebooks from his home office in Juneau. For a comprehensive report on all aspects of Alaska cruising in 2007 – including family cruising, ports of call, shore excursions, plus land-and-sea cruisetours – visit the author's website at http://www.AlaskaCruisingReport.com.

Alaskan travel writer Mike Miller lives in Juneau where his current passion is publishing an information-packed website about Alaska cruising and ferry travel: http://www.AlaskaCruisingReport.com. The site covers all the ships, all the lines, and all the Alaska cruiseline and ferry ports plus excursions, health afloat, Alaska family cruising, and even a fun Alaska travel trivia quiz. Miller has authored or contributed to a number of books (Fodors, Sierra Club Books, Globe Pequot, The Milepost and others). He also writes for TravelAge West (for travel agents) as well as for major newspapers and magazines.

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