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Cruise lines are on board with youngest passengers

By Arline and Sam Bleecker, Chicago Tribune
In print: Sunday, June 1, 2008


At Disney’s Oceaneer Club, Captain Hook stops by to visit his new pirate recruits.
At Disney’s Oceaneer Club, Captain Hook stops by to visit his new pirate recruits.
[Disney Cruise Line]
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With so much to do for kids aboard today's jam-packed megaliners, your brood — from toddlers to teens — would have every right to be miffed if they were left behind while you sailed the Seven Seas.

Kids at sea are not an afterthought. For many lines they are an essential part of the cruise picture.

Carnival Cruise Lines, for instance, expects to carry more than 600,000 kids aboard its fleet of 22 ships this year — a six-fold increase from just a bit more than a decade ago.

More than a third of the passengers aboard each Disney Cruise Line sailing are kids under 18. In fact, Disney built its fleet of two 2,700-passenger ships primarily around kids and its family of trademark characters such as Mickey and Minnie Mouse and Goofy. But even lines you might not expect to be especially kid- friendly, such as upscale Celebrity or Crystal Cruises, have initiated special programs and allocated separate spaces for the current generation of millennials.

Among the grandest playpens at sea will be Carnival's two-level 5,500-square-foot kids area aboard its new Carnival Splendor, which debuts in July. This will be the largest play area ever featured aboard a "Fun Ship," according to the line.

As part of a retrofit program, Carnival also is rolling out a new aqua park on select ships featuring a 300-foot-long twister water slide, dual-lane racing slides and water spray apparatus.

Special services

Though focused on fun, Carnival has not forgotten that kids don't necessarily care about fine food and, consequently, has created a special menu for its younger passengers, with such items as chicken nuggets and peanut butter and jelly. The line even has a children's turn-down service offering freshly baked chocolate chip cookies at bedtime.

In order for parents to enjoy their cruise vacation and get some private time, Carnival also offers babysitting services from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. at Camp Carnival. The cost is $6 per hour for the first child and $4 per hour for each additional child in the same family. (Even on luxury Crystal, babysitting fees compare favorably, ranging from $7.50 per hour for one child, to $10 per hour for two children and $12.50 per hour for three children.)

Disney's magic

Disney, as you would expect, is no slouch when it comes to entertaining kids (of all ages).

A child-friendly oasis, themed to Captain Hook's pirate ship, contains a play area with slide and rope bridge, a "captain's closet" filled with costumes, toys and games, and an open seating area for arts, crafts and movie watching. It is designed specifically for kids ages 3 to 7.

Kids ages 8 to 12 have a science-themed Oceaneer Lab to themselves. Twinkling starlike lights and giant planetary spheres fill the room along with an oversized Buzz Lightyear figure. Even teens get the Disney magic touch. The Stack aboard Disney Magic and the Aloft aboard Disney Wonder have comfy couches, a soda bar serving soft drinks and smoothies, Internet access, plasma-screen TVs, MP3 players loaded with popular music, board games and other chill-out necessities.

Teaming up

Other lines team with specialists in children's entertainment or education to set themselves apart. For instance, in 2006, Celebrity Cruises aligned itself with LeapFrog SchoolHouse, widely recognized for interactive electronic education programs for prekindergarten through eighth-graders, to provide younger passengers with engaging, multisensory learning tools and instruction.

Kids enrolled in Celebrity's "Fun Factory" will be entertained with hands-on activities, games, crafts and other interactive sessions, paired to itinerary and ship. For cruises south of the border, Celebrity's kids' programming includes learning about sun-dials, making pinatas, identifying the Mexican states, creating a scene featuring Pacific Coast sea life and designing their own mosaic frescoes.

As for partnerships, Royal Caribbean International has teamed with MTV's enormously successful Nickelodeon channel for a first-ever Nickelodeon cruise sailing from Miami Aug. 10 for a western Caribbean voyage aboard Freedom of the Seas.

The kid-friendly cruise will offer Nick-themed activities such as live game shows featuring the trademark Nickelodeon slime, visits with kids' favorite Nick characters such as Dora the Explorer and SpongeBob SquarePants, appearances by the network's live-action stars and more.


. IF YOU GO

Cruise information

For details, call a travel agent or visit cruise line Web sites:

• carnival.com

• celebritycruises.com

• crystalcruises.com

• disneycruise.com

• royalcaribbean.com.


[Last modified: May 31, 2008 04:30 AM]



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