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Alisa: yes, the ports were all unique and off-the-beaten-path, compared to the ports we visit on the mainstream cruise lines. The age demographics had a nice spread at least for our cruise, but by far our small group was the most active and outgoing-we danced a lot each night - we likely provided most of the entertainment for most of the other passengers, although the Aussie couple and the mid-thirtyish couple from Santa Barbara were on the dance floor a lot, too. We had a really good time. Every cruise is as much fun as you make it.
My favorite cities, largely from a photographic viewpoint were Hoorn, Dordrecht and Bruges-very interesting, old cities with a lot of charm. Overall favorites though are Amsterdam and Bruges. Amsterdam seems to have something for everyone and is extremely walkable and interesting. It has great restaurants, canals, museums and just seems so vibrant. Bruges is just simply a medieval city frozen in time in many respects. It is hard not to really become enchanted with Bruges--my wife just loves it there: lots of lace, awesome Belgian chocolates and waffles, buckets of steamed mussels and Belgian beer, ivy covered walls and flower boxes/pots on window fronts, horse-drawn carriages with the clip-clop of hooves on the cobblestones, etc. It is just a neat city. There are sections truly touristy, but not obnoxiously so, IMO.
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