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Originally Posted by MJG2007
I'll be on the Legend 11/2/08 and have never cruised before. Anyone have any suggestions on the best interior cabins? My travel agent got us in a interior gurantee, which I still don't understand. Anyone been on the Legend lately? I would love to know what the interior cabins are like? I'll be traveling with my husband who isclaustrophobic and I hear the cabins can be small. How much time do people really spend in their cabins? Also, when should we get to the port for embarkation(is it a long wait?) Thanks for any help!
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I've been in some inside cabins on Carnival ships that were a bit smaller (the Jubilee, the Sensation, the Paradise, and the Ecstacy). We usually book insides to save money and also to give my hubby a dark cabin at night as that's what he prefers. Even with three people (including a little one), we've managed it. And we do try to spend much of our time out of the cabin and about the ship. Usually just going back after whatever post-dinner show we see, watch a little tv and go to sleep.
One tip: keep the light on in the bathroom and the bathroom door ajar...or else have a small flashlight for each person for any 3am trips. Also, many people like to keep the in-cabin tv on with either the sound off or tuned to one of the audio channels. I can't remember if Carnival has one with a channel that shows the outside of the ship (Princess does, which is great for passengers with inside cabins to know if it's morning without referring to their watches).
The last couple of cruises we selected a cabin and marked our booking "no upgrade," so we don't risk getting stuck with an undesirable location. On my first cruise, we were upgraded to another inside cabin that was up a couple of decks, but ended up under a dining room. Heard vacuuming late at night. So I would recommend talking to your TA and asking for a midships cabin (just in case one of you tends to get motion sickness). Have a deck plan in front of you. Talk to your doctor about some remedies and try them out ahead of time on land. Bring at least two of them with. I took ginger (candied and Altoids) on our last cruise, which is a typically rough seas one, and took the ginger as soon as I started feeling woozy.
As for the embarkation time, we've only started cruises from San Pedro, Miami and Seattle, so I'm not sure about other places. We are the type who are trying to get there by 11am (one time we left home about 9:30am with an hour drive). We lucked out timewise our last time, got to the pier by 12:15pm (darn traffic on the San Diego freeway) and found absolutely no lines whatsoever. We were in our cabin with carryons unpacked by 1:15 and ready to explore the ship. The funny thing is that the docs said not to arrive until after 1pm.
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