Thanks to small ships like Windstar's, those of us who value no queues, no casinos, no ear-splitting “entertainment,” great personal service, well prepared meals properly served and true relaxation, also have cruses to enjoy.
@@People_of_the_Mousebut it did and you could open it. A Juliet balcony. I’d much rather a bigger cabin than a balcony you occasionally used: and with a Juliet balcony you so can open the doors/windows but sit in the comfort of your cabin.
No shows, no casino, no hordes. All sounding pretty good to me. Quality food, space to sit and enjoy bring at sea, comfortable cabins. I’m sold - but then we’re all different. Good review. Thank you.
What you call limitations or trade-offs are in fact advantages. We sailed exactly this ship almost exactly 10 years ago when it was the Seabourn Pride. Simply fantastic. Food, amenities, excursions, all great. But the massive advantage is no crowds and the intimate atmosphere. That was our first cruise and we were permanently spoiled. We will never, ever book a ship >500 passengers. Ever.
When you get off of a Windstar ship you get to see what the port or town is really like. When you get off a 3,000 + passenger ship, the port becomes the people on your ship walking around the town.
Some people want to cruise on a floating Las Vegas, but not me. This sounds like my kind of cruise: informal, unique ports of call, small tour groups, good food and comfy cabins. Most of my cruising has been on rivers in ships smaller than this one, and you have enumerated the benefits. The lack of onboard entertainment wouldn't bother me a bit.
Windstar is my absolute favorite cruise line. F un. Friendly. Most people rarely go out on any balcony on any ship and just like to open the slider. As far as a table for yourself arrive at 7PM. I find a great selection of food more than on larger ships with great food.
We love cruising windstar. It's by far our favorite cruise line. Everyone knows your name. The food is made from scratch. They have an open bridge. You are waited on hand and foot. We were on Windsurf for 18 days in January. We have booked 18 days from Venice to Rome in October and we have booked 15 days from Rome to Lisbon. As far as excursions have found a good mix of tours in all price ranges.
I’ve been retired a couple of years and, only being aware of big flashy busy casino ships, have never previously had any temptation at all to go on a cruise. This excellent overview, including all the “downsides”, sounds absolutely wonderful and I’ll now definitely be looking into experiencing this for myself.
I love windstar. We did 2, 18 day trips in 2023. We had a fabulous time. Food is wonderful and made from scratch. We booked 3 more back to back trips. As experienced cruisers this is our favorite cruise line. Regarding the excursions there are plenty of non active excursions in my experience. Fyi the staff from our trip in January that stayed on actually remembered our names on our return in October. I prefer the socialising of a small ship although I am conversational.
Thanks much Gary. As a repeat Windstar cruiser, I was trying to describe the experience to an interested couple. Your clear framing allowed them to make a better informed decision. They booked.
It's a french balcony and that's exactly what they call it. We've never had an issue getting whatever seating we asked for. And thank goodness they don't have those horrible shows to suffer through. The food is wonderful and nonpretentious. They have the best excursions and if in Alaska you get expedition trips. No better cruiseline than windstar. We love, love everything about WS!
We did 14 days cruising the Caribbean on the Star Pride last March. It was amazing. The entertainment director at that time was also an Opera singer who entertained us several times. This was a huge plus. The ship also has an area where one can jump off the ship into the ocean & go for a swim. Not as casual as it may sound as there were many currents & it was often closed…but a highlight for sure. Twice we had BBQs ashore & they brought the paddle boards, kayaks & swimming platforms ashore for all to enjoy. The crew was wonderful & it was one of our favorite trips.
Some of the issues you see as a bug, I tend to look at as a feature. I dislike larger cruise ships as I am averse to big crowds, I don't care for 24/7 entertainment, and am not a big fan of lots of noise. When it comes to entertainment, I'm pretty low maintenance. If I have a couple of good books packed, the chances are that I am going to be set for sea days. Give me peace and quiet, some open deck space to walk on and get fresh air, and maybe a quiet corner to sit with a book and smoke my pipe and I am likely to be a happy passenger. Throw in some good food that won't spike my blood sugar level too much, and you can sign me up right now.
We’ve sailed numerous times with Windstar and feel this was a very fair and realistic view of the cruise line. For the reasons you mentioned, we tended to avoid their itineraries that have sea days, unless the day involved going through a scenic passage, like the Corinth Canal. While the pools are small, on warm weather itineraries they do open the back of the ship to form a swim platform; it’s an unique experience lying on a swim mat tethered to the back of a ship 😊
My very first cruise, back in 1993 was on Windstar to French Polynesia. I loved it. The cabin was very comfortable, excellent food as you mentioned, and all round, the experience was fantastic. I had nothing to compare it to. But, having cruised over the years, on larger and more active lines (most recently Cunard's Queen Elizabeth to Alaska) I would still happily cruise on Windstar again. It's just as you put it. A very different experience. And, as I'm not a person who has to or wants to be busy all the time, I would find it relaxing.
As a less-experienced cruiser, my cruising experience extends only to some of the largest commercial cruise lines, such as Princess, RCL, and NCL. What strikes me the most about your Windstar experience is the focus being primarily on exploration rather than the “floating resort” experience the larger ships offer. This cruise experience is very reminiscent of what’s offered on some of the smaller expedition-intensive luxury cruise lines where passengers attend a briefing every evening on the next day’s expedition, which requires rigorous exercise. Windstar seem to be much more in that vein. The whole ship experience has more to do with supporting what’s really important to guests, which is EXPLORATION. I love that. Don’t give me any shows. I don’t care about huge food variety, but the food *must* be somewhere between excellent and exceptional. Excellent cuisine always lends itself to convivial atmosphere among guests. As a solo cruiser, I’m ecstatic about sharing my dinner table with other guests. I hate dining alone. Bottom line: I find myself yearning for a smaller, more sedate ship experience, good food on offer, and less being CRAMMED in with the masses. I adore children, but when it comes to cruising, I detest families with all the drama they bring. Enough with the party atmosphere, which lends itself to unruly, uncouth behavior by passengers who can only afford to vacation “on the cheap.” Sorry to sound like such a snoot. I’m just over the “floating resort, loud family-friendly, drink till you drop, party hardy”experience the larger cruise lines offer.
Gary, I love that you are so comfortable in being by yourself on these cruises. This is one aspect that terrifies me: that I will find myself alone, which is fine, but forced to table share and feel like a third or fifth wheel. You are so at ease, taking it all in. Good for you! ❤
My first and only cruise so far was on a smaller ship. My dining options were to be seated at a six top or a ten top. I chose a six top and felt like a fifth wheel to a lovely family. I switched to a ten top for the rest of the cruise, and there were only five of us total - two younger ladies who were cousins, a couple who were a tad older than I, and me. We had a blast and hung out together in the evenings. I plan to retire soon and travel more. I likely will be traveling solo and will feel somewhat safer on a cruise and/or going on trips sponsored by my university alumni society.
This looks right up my alley-small numbers and more intimate. As a solo traveller these things are important. The big Shows are not so important to me. I like my personal space so the small balconies are concerning
Personally, I would prefer the smaller ship and the destinations. If I want shows, I can see them at home-I guess there is something for everyone in cruising. The movement on a small ship would be another issue, but getting to amazing destinations would be a trade off.
But it’s a Juliet balcony. You can sit in a far larger than normal stateroom and virtually have your entire wall open at one end. And the seats in your cabin are far More comfortable than any balcony chair generally.
I didn't know cruise ships this small even existed. Thank you for introducing!! As an introvert, this would probably be fine for me. It would just be many more laps around the deck to walk off the food!!!
Very valid point! I like living in a city instead of a small town for that reason. As an introvert I thought I might like small ships because I wouldn't miss a large itinerary of on-boat activities, the hum n buzz of so much going on.@@katieNgg-tj8lj
My wife's second cousin, Caroll Spinney, who was better known to the world as BIG BIRD on Sesame Street, raved about Windstar Cruises. Sadly he died in his 80s a couple of years ago. But the small size and the itineraries and shore excursions were the things he would go on about. Nothing but good.
Twenty years ago we took the Windstar sailing ship from Barcelona to Nice and it was fantastic. The food was great and the experience of being under sail was unique.
I’ve been cruising since the Ile de France and Queen Elizabeth, and we settled on Windstar as our favorite cruise line. We’ve always made friends, and have had repeats with many of the excellent crew members. We have 48 Windstar cruises under our belts including transatlantic repositioning cruises, and love the more freeform, less frenetic pace, the smaller places they visit. (There has been a casino, just forward of the Compass Rose starboard side.) Windstar is not for everyone, but they have a committed audience.
We LOVE Windstar and have been on all of their ships. Going back to the ship we always see lines of hundreds of other passengers waiting to board their large cruise ships, when we just walk up to the Windstar tent, have some ice tea and a snack and get on our tender.
It reminds me a lot of being on a river cruise like Viking. Not a whole lot going on, but great food and a small ship and very social. Personally, I really liked it and think I would enjoy this type of a small ship.
I absolutely love your channel! I have never been on a cruise before - I definitely want to go on one, and watching your channel makes me feel as though I am on a cruise. Thank You for all of the information you give as well 😊
My first cruise in 2013 was on Windstar, Wind Surf to be exact, the largest of their sailing vessels. I adored the size, food, crew, the open bridge and the time it took to disembark in ports. In Ibiza, for example, we docked inside the town centre and I went back on board to use the washroom and was back with my friends in town in 10 mins. In other ports we'd pop back on the ship for lunch as the food was so wonderful.
We are going to Greece-Amalfi Coast-Rome Oct. 14. Our ship is called Windstar. It only holds 148 people and is one of their saining ships. I was so excited to hear your thoughts even though your ship was a bit larger. Thank you!
Was on my first Wind Star cruise earlier this year in Costa Rica and will soon be on them again for Turkey/Greece. I've been on larger ships and just loved the Wind "Star" which has sails and only like 132 people. Being able to get into smaller places was great, I enjoyed the food and the lack of most of the things that some people seem to want! Great experience..
Windstar is a great fit for us, outstanding destinations, best crew by far and comfortable accommodations. Dining better than most big ship lines. Did I mention the crew? Our last trip had impromptu morning coffee on bridge with captain. Deck bbq night 1st officer spent at least half hour with us chatting. Genuinely made us feel welcome and special. Thankfully Windstar is not for everyone.
Hi Gary, My wife and I have cruised only once so far. Late bloomers, I suppose. This was on the Regent Explorer to Alaska. As I’ve mentioned before, we absolutely loved our Regent cruise. Now that we have had a taste for smaller ships and have seen the thrill of larger more shipboard oriented cruise ships, we are looking forward to our next cruise. We have decided to downsize and have chosen the Windstar Breeze for its 11 day Tahitian cruise. We enjoyed the shows aboard the Regent so it will be interesting to experience the smaller venue of the Windstar. We took several excursions on the Regent but I think the access to local Tahiti and the Society Islands will be far more immersive. The swimming platform looks excellent as well. Can’t wait to swim among the little beasties of the sea. Thanks again for your wonderful videos and recommendations.
Now, that ship actually "looked" like a proper ship. LOL That would be a good ship for people with visual, and other accessibility challenges to cruise on. Thanks for sharing.
We are just beginning to look at cruising. We have traveled many places by with tours or by ourselves, but we love nature , we love water, and so are looking at cruising - your information is very helpful.
I’m glad I watched this. I’ve been considering a small ship cruise. I can see the up side with the excursions and different locations that are not the typical ones on larger boats, but the lack of nightlife and entertainment seems boring and is a deal breaker for me.
I have only been on two large, ~3,000 passenger budget line cruises. Windstar actually sounds to me appealing and similiar to the way people describe European river cruise ships. Both my cruises on large ships were much more about a party than the destinations.
I did a 14 day Greek Isle and Dalmation Coast cruise on a Windstar sailing ship and absolutely loved it for all of the positive reasons mentioned and many of the negative as well. I have been on the bigger cruises that go to ports every other cruise ship goes and quite frankly didn't like the experience of being in a port with four or more other large cruise ships. In the Caribbean, each ship has its own neon color stickers that passengers wear to keep them from getting on the wrong bus or ship. I am also a solo traveler so maybe that had something to do with it. I wasn't up for the shows or dancing, and I don't gamble. The stuff they sell is overpriced and the shore activities are also packed with hundreds of people going to the same tourist spots hundreds of people from the other ships in port go. If that is what you like then the larger ships are for you. If you have kids then the larger ships have many more activities for them which allows the parents to have a vacation too which is nice. One of the things not mentioned in this video about larger cruise ships is that frequent passengers get perks like first off the ship privileges in ports so if you are not one of them you have to wait to get off. In the final analysis, if you are looking for a ship that is an entertainment experience then the larger ships are best, or even the smaller luxury ships if you can afford them, but if you are looking for a personalized, comfortable mode of transportation to experience different ports or places then the small cruise ships can't be beat. There is just something about walking around in a beautiful place without being surrounded by throngs of other tourists. JMHO.
Love Windstar, we've done two cruises on them, going on our third next year. The only minor nit is that the excursion options are a bit more limited than other cruise ships and as you point out, pricier. Well worth the trade off for the quiet, lack of lines/chaos.
Sir, Love your channel! My wife and I have sailed on six Windstar Cruises with our seventh scheduled for February 2025. As a few people have commented, we like the cusine, the quiet, the ports we visit, and the interesting folks that you meet onboard. A couple of other points, one you mentioned and one you did not, I love the fact that you can wander up to the bridge at four o'clock in the morning and interact with the crew. The other item is, you rarely see children onboard, and if you do see them, they are abnormally well behaved. It is a very relaxing and quiet place to be. Of the six we have sailed on, five were on the sailing ships and one on the Star Legend motoryacht prior to "the stretch".I would recommend to you traveling on one of the smaller sailing ships (Windstar or Windspirit), it is an even more intimate and enjoyable experience.
Thanks for all the videos you do that help us understand the differences between the lines. We have sailed with Windstar for 5 cruises (with a 6th coming in November). I believe you have accurately focused on the main reasons people repeatedly cruise with Windstar. For us the ship itineraries are the top reason, followed by the friendliness and familiarity that the small ships have. Because we are off the ship on excursions in every port, by the time we have finished dinner we enjoy some down-time to prepare for the next day's activities. I agree that too many sea days can be boring on Windstar because of the lack of shows and a decent casino, but it is something we accept for the speedy check-ins, the absence of line-ups, etc. You have presented the Windstar cruise fairly and accurately to my mind. Well done Gary!
I suspect you are simply more accustomed to larger ships. I'm more used to small ships of around 30 people. I consider BIG to be a Viking river cruise ship. 312 passengers seems huge to me. I'd love to see you review something on the size of a catamaran Galapagos tour.
We really enjoy Windstar. My only downside, which a personal thing, is that when my husband wants to catch a nap, do his meditations, or just lay down (due to a back issue) I have nothing to do on the ship. I do get bored occasionally. I can only sit so long. I'm not sure what can be done to accommodate that since I'm not very chatty. That said, we have been on 5 cruises with Windstar and plan many more.
If I had a choice between a small ship such as this or in my case Viking cruises or one of the Genormous of the Seas theme park roller coaster monstrosities I would take the small ship any time.
Their fans all grew up watching the Love Boat, this is a Cruise they expect. It would make me happy to know Gopher and Doc. Had I wanted to be on boat with 3000, I would have joined the Navy😂
The smallest cruise ship I have been on was the Marco Polo a Christmas cruise in 2019. Like you I met many people who had been on her many times and loved her. After one day I knew her inside out. It had most of the things the bigger ships had, a library , a game room and a craft room which was if you didn't come early the door would be shut . The shows and games were all connected to Christmas. They had something called a reindeer game which involved the people in the theatre at that time. I've been listening to you for a few years now and I've never heard you mention the library. My last cruise in July/August on the ambassador line. There was a situation ind the library was empty , no books . I was very unhappy because I always take a book almost finished and exchange it for another book in the library . I'll talked to other people on the cruise and they did the same thing. So many of us were very disappointed that there were no books on the shelves. Also the game room had no games. I had brought a deck of cards and have recently taken a bridge so I asked people if they played bridge and ended up finding quite a few people and we had a few games on sea days in the card room. You could do that on a very small ship as well. That's the wonderful thing about cruises if you can keep looking around to find out what activities are taking place either to watch or take part.
This is really appealing to me. I'm not interested in a floating city. Love live music but not big productions. I don't gamble, so casinos are worthless to me. The destination and good food are important. I've never cruised before but would be willing to give this a go.
Once again, I find myself happy to share this planet with you. Your videos are very well thought out, very informative, very pertinent, but most of all very Gary Bembridge.
This was really helpful. I'd always wanted to take a Windstar cruise on one of their sailing ships. We started to watch a ship tour on another channel and we weren't 10 minutes into it, when my husband said he thought it would be too small for him. Turns out, he really enjoys being able to just wander the bigger ships and 'get lost' (as much as you can, haha). I came here because I know Gary will be very unbiased. I think it would be too small for me too unless, as Gary mentioned, there was a very specific itinerary. Sea days are always one of my favorite things!
Thank you for pointing out about the balcony feature. I am planning to book a Windstar cruise and will certainly opt out the balcony option. Windstar is definitely a good choice for me for I value smaller crowds and low key trips where I can relax and enjoy the journey and destination.
Great review. As a solo traveller who has shared tables with people that were to intrusive for my liking I’ll give it a miss. The non choice of dining alone on any cruise I would find a little stressful. I like a small ship but this one a little to small
I'm a solo cruiser trying Windstar for the first time. I do not usually sit with strangers at dinner, but other folks have reported that it's not a problem getting a solo table. I hope they are right and Gary's experience of them saying it may not be possible to sit by yourself was a one off! Great review as always. This sounds like my style......we'll see what I think after my cruise!
Although this Windstar ship seems a little too large for my taste, I would probably enjoy sailing on her. The only benefit I can see from larger ships is their lower risk of seasickness (and of course the ease of avoiding certain other passengers who annoy me).
Sounds good but for my lovely wife, food allergies/restrictions are VERY important. Twice burned on RCCL, we feel quite "safe" with DCL . . . but/still open to other lines especially if they can take us on new itineraries to Canada, South America and/or Mediterranean.
I would definitely try this once, at least! I think the 600-passenger ships are the MOST my style, but I absolutely love the learning while traveling vibe. The approach to destinations is awesome.
Hi Gary, thanks for this review and for sharing your opinion. I would def try Windstar. I like the idea of experiencing being on the water, feeling the elements with little distraction from scenery.
One thing I noticed, as a fellow introvert, at 9:41 you mentioned that you really had to make an effort to integrate, yet earlier in the video, you mildly complained about perhaps not being able to dine alone. It seems to me that you’ll meet people if you dine at a table with others more so than at activities like shows. This seems like it has elements of both ocean and river cruise ships. Personally, I like the idea of not having so many people on board, as the one big cruise ship I’ve been on (Royal Caribbean on a short Caribbean cruise) turned into a cattle car at every port, packed like sardines waiting to get off the ship. Thanks for your videos, as they highlight positives and negatives that I might not have thought about.
Excellent. I didnt know much about Windstar. This video was very informative and is going to help me in picking future cruises. You are so good at this!
Your comments haven’t out me off sailing French Polynesia with Windstar but I think your comments about making sure it is a port intensive trip make sense to me. Usually the ship is very much the destination for me though. Thanks once again for your varied coverage.
Great video, Gary! On a recent cruise to Iceland, we were able to make port on the smaller than most, Viking Star while bigger ships like an NCL liner had to tender in. At the island of Heimaey, we had to tender in, but I saw the Star Pride was small enough that they could dock downtown. I will take your guidance when planning our next sail-away. Thanks again!
I would not be worried by the lack of entertainment but I get that that would be an issue for many. I would enjoy the smaller size ship I think and hang out in my cabin with a pile of books! Thank you for the video!
Really fantastic review of Windstar. I took a Windstar cruise about twelve years ago and you echoed many of the thoughts I had from that experience. The entire James Beard connection seems very misleading as it seemed to imply that the cruise line itself actually won some James Beard awards. In reality, we found the food on the ship to be mediocre at best, and I’ve since had much better food on NCL and Royal Caribbean. Great description of the essence of the onboard experience, which was one of the most appealing parts of the cruise. Your video even made me reconsider the possibility of trying Windstar again! Thank you for a wonderful presentation of the Windstar experience. This was very informative and entertaining.
To me, most big cruise ships are like going to Las Vegas on a holiday weekend. I hate Las Vegas and I hate crowds. This ship sounds wonderful for what interests me.
Thank you for sharing you view of the smaller ship cruises. That is nice it would feel like a super yacht scene on the smaller ships. And when you show us the balcony on this ship then I totally agree with you not a wide space at all. And I stand at 6'2" so, I need space.
The only time I was on a ship for several days was when I was 13 years old and my family was moving back to the USA from France and my parents decided we would do a transatlantic ship! We took the SS France and and as I recall there was a movie theater and a couple pools but I don't remember their being casinos and what not. The ship was decommissioned a few years after, sadly.
Great video, thanks! My family and I had our first and, to date, only cruise in Norway some...5-6 years ago? Rather different ship, MSC Splendida at around 130K tons. New experience in October/November 2024 with a Danube river cruise, no kids this time! Have perused your river cruise videos which bought much information, thank you!
Great update, something I would definitely consider. Like the smaller ports concept, and the small number of people. Like you though I enjoy the buzz of slightly bigger ships. Thank you Gary
This sounds superb to me but I agree it would be best suited to a port-intensive itinerary - which suits me just fine! I’ll have to look into Windstar.
Would thoroughly recommend Scenic (Eclipse I and II) as a small ship option, they sure know how to look after passengers. Great itineraries, awesome food, fantastic staff and the ships are just beautiful (only 200 passengers which suit us). Worth checking out…
We have done two windstar cruises and have booked a third. Tahiti had no sea days and a Mediterranean cruise had one sea day out of 17. Yes it can be a bit American orientated (they can’t do bacon correctly) but the food is generally great. Most were well travelled and knowledgeable. We loved sharing for meals and made lots of new friends. Most guests do the same. No casinos is great. Excursions are expensive but we found in Europe you were so close to the town that you just walked and did your own thing. In Tahiti we organised a number of our own excursions for roughly half the cost. Our one and only sea day was fun. We rate them highly.
We have cruised on the windstar Breeze and the Pride and are booked for our next adventure starting in Tahiti in 2025. These ships have a greater appeal to senior travellers like us who enjoy the pace, easier access to smaller port destinations and meeting fascinating people and wonderful crew members who make the small ship experience such a pleasure.
Excellent review of Windstar and agree with your assessment. I have been on 3 cruises which them and have a 4th arranged for next spring! I agree with your positives and your negatives are things that are not important to me. The one downsize is the tours are expensive, but they are generally fine. We have often arranged our own tours at ports.
Windstar’s approach to cruising just might get me back onto a cruise ship! I’ve been on only one, a western Caribbean Carnival cruise back in 1986. I was so disappointed by the glitzy decor, the constant upsell of photos and shopping “sales”, the casino crowds, the flashy/noisy evening entertainment and the brief, tacky, touristy shore excursions. This cruise that left you wanting more buzz would be perfect for me.
OI! Thanks a million - once again Gary one of your videos is likely to cost me a small fortune. We are Azamara junkies specifically because of the size of the ship. Small, intimate, more than sufficient facilities to keep the two of us happy, and great food and service. And no mobs, and yes, even "mid sized" ships of 2000 to 3000 passengers are loud, chaotic, mobbed. Not our style unless the ports are great, and the price even better. Windstar looks a tad small, perhaps too small, BUT as you point out, the ship has access to ports we've never heard of. I've never done any investigating. Guess where I'm going as soon as this note is finished?
I saw one of the Windstar ships when I was in San Juan, PR last year. I thought that their website looked interesting but it would cost approximately 3x what i would pay on one of the premium lines. I think what would be most difficult to adjust to is trying to get my steps in on a ship that small. Another great video. I always feel like I am on the ship when I watch your videos.
Did Iceland to NYC back in 2018 on Star Pride. Enjoyed every minute and would go again in a heartbeat. Went to some places I’m never likely to visit again and the food was excellent. Back then it was 212 guests and I’ve been wondering how they squeeze 312 guests in. Now I know!
Ok after getting a few minutes in and reading some of the comments I had to go check out their website. I just might get to do a Panama Canal sailing. They have some affordable trips and I might even get to do one as a solo traveler. Thank you! This sounds like my cup of tea.
We have shared once or twice on cruise ships with TUI for evening meal, we knew one couple from another cruise , and one a family, Grandma, Mother and daughter who we met on one of the cruises but first time.
Thanks to small ships like Windstar's, those of us who value no queues, no casinos, no ear-splitting “entertainment,” great personal service, well prepared meals properly served and true relaxation, also have cruses to enjoy.
we would miss a balcony. that’s the trade off I couldn’t make. so it’s the train to bergen for me.
Absolutely why we cruise Windstar too. I’m there for the destinations.
I also value no casinos and you no queue , etc.
@@People_of_the_Mousethere are real balconies on the Star class ships, you just have to book those suites.
@@People_of_the_Mousebut it did and you could open it. A Juliet balcony. I’d much rather a bigger cabin than a balcony you occasionally used: and with a Juliet balcony you so can open the doors/windows but sit in the comfort of your cabin.
No shows, no casino, no hordes. All sounding pretty good to me. Quality food, space to sit and enjoy bring at sea, comfortable cabins. I’m sold - but then we’re all different. Good review. Thank you.
I agree, I’m tiered of the trashy bingo, show games type of cruises and would really struggle to accept it in this price class
I agree and I'm 45 so it just goes to show we all like different things. What is a bonus to some is a negative for others.
Windstar is the best! We sail on many lovely lines, but Windstar has my heart!
I love Windstar. He nails the Windstar experience. The food is great, the rooms are great.
This is exactly why we love WINDSTAR, it is the non "cruise" cruise. Low-key, relaxing and quiet.
And plenty of rich folks for company…
What you call limitations or trade-offs are in fact advantages. We sailed exactly this ship almost exactly 10 years ago when it was the Seabourn Pride. Simply fantastic. Food, amenities, excursions, all great. But the massive advantage is no crowds and the intimate atmosphere.
That was our first cruise and we were permanently spoiled. We will never, ever book a ship >500 passengers. Ever.
When you get off of a Windstar ship you get to see what the port or town is really like. When you get off a 3,000 + passenger ship, the port becomes the people on your ship walking around the town.
Well stated.
Some people want to cruise on a floating Las Vegas, but not me. This sounds like my kind of cruise: informal, unique ports of call, small tour groups, good food and comfy cabins. Most of my cruising has been on rivers in ships smaller than this one, and you have enumerated the benefits. The lack of onboard entertainment wouldn't bother me a bit.
Did their 7 Day Iceland cruise a few years back. This video accurately captures what to expect.
Windstar is my absolute favorite cruise line. F un. Friendly. Most people rarely go out on any balcony on any ship and just like to open the slider. As far as a table for yourself arrive at 7PM. I find a great selection of food more than on larger ships with great food.
We love cruising windstar. It's by far our favorite cruise line. Everyone knows your name. The food is made from scratch. They have an open bridge. You are waited on hand and foot. We were on Windsurf for 18 days in January. We have booked 18 days from Venice to Rome in October and we have booked 15 days from Rome to Lisbon. As far as excursions have found a good mix of tours in all price ranges.
I’ve been retired a couple of years and, only being aware of big flashy busy casino ships, have never previously had any temptation at all to go on a cruise. This excellent overview, including all the “downsides”, sounds absolutely wonderful and I’ll now definitely be looking into experiencing this for myself.
I had the same idea of cruising as that. A few years ago I did a week around Iceland with Windstar. Outstanding! Highly recommended!
I love windstar. We did 2, 18 day trips in 2023. We had a fabulous time. Food is wonderful and made from scratch. We booked 3 more back to back trips. As experienced cruisers this is our favorite cruise line. Regarding the excursions there are plenty of non active excursions in my experience. Fyi the staff from our trip in January that stayed on actually remembered our names on our return in October. I prefer the socialising of a small ship although I am conversational.
Based on your comments, this is the first cruise I’ve been tempted to take.
Thanks much Gary.
As a repeat Windstar cruiser, I was trying to describe the experience to an interested couple. Your clear framing allowed them to make a better informed decision.
They booked.
All I can say is, this sounds PERFECT!! for me. I wouldn't miss the crowds and buzzy activities a bit-the leisurely approach floats my boat.
On my terrific Windstar cruise, we far from boring stick-in-the-muds, but party animals? No.
It's a french balcony and that's exactly what they call it. We've never had an issue getting whatever seating we asked for. And thank goodness they don't have those horrible shows to suffer through. The food is wonderful and nonpretentious. They have the best excursions and if in Alaska you get expedition trips. No better cruiseline than windstar. We love, love everything about WS!
Just don't fall out over the railing. You're done for.
We did 14 days cruising the Caribbean on the Star Pride last March. It was amazing. The entertainment director at that time was also an Opera singer who entertained us several times. This was a huge plus. The ship also has an area where one can jump off the ship into the ocean & go for a swim. Not as casual as it may sound as there were many currents & it was often closed…but a highlight for sure. Twice we had BBQs ashore & they brought the paddle boards, kayaks & swimming platforms ashore for all to enjoy. The crew was wonderful & it was one of our favorite trips.
I would rather compromise on a small ship with 300 passengers, than fight a mega crowd nightmare on a larger ship. And no screaming kids!
There are adults-only cruise lines with larger ships, too, in particular Viking and Virgin.
There is a humongous gap between mega ships and 300 passengers. My preference is ~700 passengers or so.
@@TorIverWilhelmsennot Virgin. Anything but the insufferable trendiness of Virgin.
Some of the issues you see as a bug, I tend to look at as a feature. I dislike larger cruise ships as I am averse to big crowds, I don't care for 24/7 entertainment, and am not a big fan of lots of noise. When it comes to entertainment, I'm pretty low maintenance. If I have a couple of good books packed, the chances are that I am going to be set for sea days. Give me peace and quiet, some open deck space to walk on and get fresh air, and maybe a quiet corner to sit with a book and smoke my pipe and I am likely to be a happy passenger. Throw in some good food that won't spike my blood sugar level too much, and you can sign me up right now.
Apart from the pipe, I totally agree!❤
@@sylviekins Never trust a man with no vices.
Good to hear from a fellow pipe smoker! With you all the way.
We’ve sailed numerous times with Windstar and feel this was a very fair and realistic view of the cruise line. For the reasons you mentioned, we tended to avoid their itineraries that have sea days, unless the day involved going through a scenic passage, like the Corinth Canal. While the pools are small, on warm weather itineraries they do open the back of the ship to form a swim platform; it’s an unique experience lying on a swim mat tethered to the back of a ship 😊
The swim platform sounds amazing!
My very first cruise, back in 1993 was on Windstar to French Polynesia. I loved it. The cabin was very comfortable, excellent food as you mentioned, and all round, the experience was fantastic. I had nothing to compare it to. But, having cruised over the years, on larger and more active lines (most recently Cunard's Queen Elizabeth to Alaska) I would still happily cruise on Windstar again. It's just as you put it. A very different experience. And, as I'm not a person who has to or wants to be busy all the time, I would find it relaxing.
As a less-experienced cruiser, my cruising experience extends only to some of the largest commercial cruise lines, such as Princess, RCL, and NCL. What strikes me the most about your Windstar experience is the focus being primarily on exploration rather than the “floating resort” experience the larger ships offer. This cruise experience is very reminiscent of what’s offered on some of the smaller expedition-intensive luxury cruise lines where passengers attend a briefing every evening on the next day’s expedition, which requires rigorous exercise. Windstar seem to be much more in that vein. The whole ship experience has more to do with supporting what’s really important to guests, which is EXPLORATION. I love that.
Don’t give me any shows. I don’t care about huge food variety, but the food *must* be somewhere between excellent and exceptional. Excellent cuisine always lends itself to convivial atmosphere among guests.
As a solo cruiser, I’m ecstatic about sharing my dinner table with other guests. I hate dining alone.
Bottom line: I find myself yearning for a smaller, more sedate ship experience, good food on offer, and less being CRAMMED in with the masses. I adore children, but when it comes to cruising, I detest families with all the drama they bring. Enough with the party atmosphere, which lends itself to unruly, uncouth behavior by passengers who can only afford to vacation “on the cheap.” Sorry to sound like such a snoot. I’m just over the “floating resort, loud family-friendly, drink till you drop, party hardy”experience the larger cruise lines offer.
hallelujah
Gary, I love that you are so comfortable in being by yourself on these cruises. This is one aspect that terrifies me: that I will find myself alone, which is fine, but forced to table share and feel like a third or fifth wheel. You are so at ease, taking it all in. Good for you! ❤
Yes, it is not for everyone. I hate sharing tables......
@@tipsfortravellersMe too! In fact for me that's the only downside to this type of cruise, and it's a big one.
My first and only cruise so far was on a smaller ship. My dining options were to be seated at a six top or a ten top. I chose a six top and felt like a fifth wheel to a lovely family. I switched to a ten top for the rest of the cruise, and there were only five of us total - two younger ladies who were cousins, a couple who were a tad older than I, and me. We had a blast and hung out together in the evenings. I plan to retire soon and travel more. I likely will be traveling solo and will feel somewhat safer on a cruise and/or going on trips sponsored by my university alumni society.
This looks right up my alley-small numbers and more intimate. As a solo traveller these things are important. The big Shows are not so important to me. I like my personal space so the small balconies are concerning
Personally, I would prefer the smaller ship and the destinations. If I want shows, I can see them at home-I guess there is something for everyone in cruising.
The movement on a small ship would be another issue, but getting to amazing destinations would be a trade off.
But it’s a Juliet balcony. You can sit in a far larger than normal stateroom and virtually have your entire wall open at one end. And the seats in your cabin are far
More comfortable than any balcony chair generally.
@@xr6lad That is not what the video showed that he had. A door with glass panels on both sides. Hardly all open to the sea.
I didn't know cruise ships this small even existed. Thank you for introducing!! As an introvert, this would probably be fine for me. It would just be many more laps around the deck to walk off the food!!!
Very valid point! I like living in a city instead of a small town for that reason. As an introvert I thought I might like small ships because I wouldn't miss a large itinerary of on-boat activities, the hum n buzz of so much going on.@@katieNgg-tj8lj
My wife's second cousin, Caroll Spinney, who was better known to the world as BIG BIRD on Sesame Street, raved about Windstar Cruises. Sadly he died in his 80s a couple of years ago. But the small size and the itineraries and shore excursions were the things he would go on about. Nothing but good.
As soon as I read "Caroll Spinney", I knew EXACTLY who that was.
Twenty years ago we took the Windstar sailing ship from Barcelona to Nice and it was fantastic. The food was great and the experience of being under sail was unique.
I’ve been cruising since the Ile de France and Queen Elizabeth, and we settled on Windstar as our favorite cruise line. We’ve always made friends, and have had repeats with many of the excellent crew members. We have 48 Windstar cruises under our belts including transatlantic repositioning cruises, and love the more freeform, less frenetic pace, the smaller places they visit. (There has been a casino, just forward of the Compass Rose starboard side.) Windstar is not for everyone, but they have a committed audience.
We LOVE Windstar. Just booked them for summer 2024 in Tahiti & Bora Bora. Expensive, yes - but WELL worth it !
We LOVE Windstar and have been on all of their ships. Going back to the ship we always see lines of hundreds of other passengers waiting to board their large cruise ships, when we just walk up to the Windstar tent, have some ice tea and a snack and get on our tender.
It reminds me a lot of being on a river cruise like Viking. Not a whole lot going on, but great food and a small ship and very social. Personally, I really liked it and think I would enjoy this type of a small ship.
I absolutely love your channel! I have never been on a cruise before - I definitely want to go on one, and watching your channel makes me feel as though I am on a cruise. Thank You for all of the information you give as well 😊
My first cruise in 2013 was on Windstar, Wind Surf to be exact, the largest of their sailing vessels. I adored the size, food, crew, the open bridge and the time it took to disembark in ports. In Ibiza, for example, we docked inside the town centre and I went back on board to use the washroom and was back with my friends in town in 10 mins. In other ports we'd pop back on the ship for lunch as the food was so wonderful.
We travelled Windstar several times. Absolutely loved it. Thank you for reminding me of some wonderful memories!
We are going to Greece-Amalfi Coast-Rome Oct. 14. Our ship is called Windstar. It only holds 148 people and is one of their saining ships. I was so excited to hear your thoughts even though your ship was a bit larger. Thank you!
Best ship ever!
Was on my first Wind Star cruise earlier this year in Costa Rica and will soon be on them again for Turkey/Greece. I've been on larger ships and just loved the Wind "Star" which has sails and only like 132 people. Being able to get into smaller places was great, I enjoyed the food and the lack of most of the things that some people seem to want! Great experience..
This sounds like my kind of cruise, and that food looks amazing.
Windstar is a great fit for us, outstanding destinations, best crew by far and comfortable accommodations.
Dining better than most big ship lines.
Did I mention the crew?
Our last trip had impromptu morning coffee on bridge with captain. Deck bbq night 1st officer spent at least half hour with us chatting.
Genuinely made us feel welcome and special.
Thankfully Windstar is not for everyone.
Hi Gary,
My wife and I have cruised only once so far. Late bloomers, I suppose. This was on the Regent Explorer to Alaska. As I’ve mentioned before, we absolutely loved our Regent cruise.
Now that we have had a taste for smaller ships and have seen the thrill of larger more shipboard oriented cruise ships, we are looking forward to our next cruise.
We have decided to downsize and have chosen the Windstar Breeze for its 11 day Tahitian cruise.
We enjoyed the shows aboard the Regent so it will be interesting to experience the smaller venue of the Windstar.
We took several excursions on the Regent but I think the access to local Tahiti and the Society Islands will be far more immersive.
The swimming platform looks excellent as well. Can’t wait to swim among the little beasties of the sea.
Thanks again for your wonderful videos and recommendations.
Has anyone ever told you this is the best cruise show? Loved the bonus train trip.
Now, that ship actually "looked" like a proper ship. LOL That would be a good ship for people with visual, and other accessibility challenges to cruise on. Thanks for sharing.
We are just beginning to look at cruising. We have traveled many places by with tours or by ourselves, but we love nature , we love water, and so are looking at cruising - your information is very helpful.
I’m glad I watched this. I’ve been considering a small ship cruise. I can see the up side with the excursions and different locations that are not the typical ones on larger boats, but the lack of nightlife and entertainment seems boring and is a deal breaker for me.
I have only been on two large, ~3,000 passenger budget line cruises. Windstar actually sounds to me appealing and similiar to the way people describe European river cruise ships. Both my cruises on large ships were much more about a party than the destinations.
Similar to river cruising, but not exactly. To me, Windstar was a bit less claustrophobic.
I did a 14 day Greek Isle and Dalmation Coast cruise on a Windstar sailing ship and absolutely loved it for all of the positive reasons mentioned and many of the negative as well. I have been on the bigger cruises that go to ports every other cruise ship goes and quite frankly didn't like the experience of being in a port with four or more other large cruise ships. In the Caribbean, each ship has its own neon color stickers that passengers wear to keep them from getting on the wrong bus or ship. I am also a solo traveler so maybe that had something to do with it. I wasn't up for the shows or dancing, and I don't gamble. The stuff they sell is overpriced and the shore activities are also packed with hundreds of people going to the same tourist spots hundreds of people from the other ships in port go. If that is what you like then the larger ships are for you. If you have kids then the larger ships have many more activities for them which allows the parents to have a vacation too which is nice. One of the things not mentioned in this video about larger cruise ships is that frequent passengers get perks like first off the ship privileges in ports so if you are not one of them you have to wait to get off. In the final analysis, if you are looking for a ship that is an entertainment experience then the larger ships are best, or even the smaller luxury ships if you can afford them, but if you are looking for a personalized, comfortable mode of transportation to experience different ports or places then the small cruise ships can't be beat. There is just something about walking around in a beautiful place without being surrounded by throngs of other tourists. JMHO.
Love Windstar, we've done two cruises on them, going on our third next year. The only minor nit is that the excursion options are a bit more limited than other cruise ships and as you point out, pricier. Well worth the trade off for the quiet, lack of lines/chaos.
Sir, Love your channel! My wife and I have sailed on six Windstar Cruises with our seventh scheduled for February 2025. As a few people have commented, we like the cusine, the quiet, the ports we visit, and the interesting folks that you meet onboard. A couple of other points, one you mentioned and one you did not, I love the fact that you can wander up to the bridge at four o'clock in the morning and interact with the crew. The other item is, you rarely see children onboard, and if you do see them, they are abnormally well behaved. It is a very relaxing and quiet place to be. Of the six we have sailed on, five were on the sailing ships and one on the Star Legend motoryacht prior to "the stretch".I would recommend to you traveling on one of the smaller sailing ships (Windstar or Windspirit), it is an even more intimate and enjoyable experience.
My best were the ships that hold between 300 and 600.
The smaller ships are more fun and easier.
Thanks for all the videos you do that help us understand the differences between the lines. We have sailed with Windstar for 5 cruises (with a 6th coming in November). I believe you have accurately focused on the main reasons people repeatedly cruise with Windstar. For us the ship itineraries are the top reason, followed by the friendliness and familiarity that the small ships have. Because we are off the ship on excursions in every port, by the time we have finished dinner we enjoy some down-time to prepare for the next day's activities. I agree that too many sea days can be boring on Windstar because of the lack of shows and a decent casino, but it is something we accept for the speedy check-ins, the absence of line-ups, etc. You have presented the Windstar cruise fairly and accurately to my mind. Well done Gary!
I suspect you are simply more accustomed to larger ships. I'm more used to small ships of around 30 people. I consider BIG to be a Viking river cruise ship. 312 passengers seems huge to me. I'd love to see you review something on the size of a catamaran Galapagos tour.
We really enjoy Windstar. My only downside, which a personal thing, is that when my husband wants to catch a nap, do his meditations, or just lay down (due to a back issue) I have nothing to do on the ship. I do get bored occasionally. I can only sit so long. I'm not sure what can be done to accommodate that since I'm not very chatty. That said, we have been on 5 cruises with Windstar and plan many more.
Drives home to me that the Azamaras and Seabourns are probably the perfect size. Excellent video, as always.
If I had a choice between a small ship such as this or in my case Viking cruises or one of the Genormous of the Seas theme park roller coaster monstrosities I would take the small ship any time.
Their fans all grew up watching the Love Boat, this is a Cruise they expect. It would make me happy to know Gopher and Doc. Had I wanted to be on boat with 3000, I would have joined the Navy😂
The smallest cruise ship I have been on was the Marco Polo a Christmas cruise in 2019. Like you I met many people who had been on her many times and loved her. After one day I knew her inside out. It had most of the things the bigger ships had, a library , a game room and a craft room which was if you didn't come early the door would be shut .
The shows and games were all connected to Christmas. They had something called a reindeer game which involved the people in the theatre at that time.
I've been listening to you for a few years now and I've never heard you mention the library. My last cruise in July/August on the ambassador line. There was a situation ind the library was empty , no books . I was very unhappy because I always take a book almost finished and exchange it for another book in the library .
I'll talked to other people on the cruise and they did the same thing. So many of us were very disappointed that there were no books on the shelves. Also the game room had no games. I had brought a deck of cards and have recently taken a bridge so I asked people if they played bridge and ended up finding quite a few people and we had a few games on sea days in the card room. You could do that on a very small ship as well. That's the wonderful thing about cruises if you can keep looking around to find out what activities are taking place either to watch or take part.
This is really appealing to me. I'm not interested in a floating city. Love live music but not big productions. I don't gamble, so casinos are worthless to me. The destination and good food are important. I've never cruised before but would be willing to give this a go.
Once again, I find myself happy to share this planet with you. Your videos are very well thought out, very informative, very pertinent, but most of all very Gary Bembridge.
This was really helpful. I'd always wanted to take a Windstar cruise on one of their sailing ships. We started to watch a ship tour on another channel and we weren't 10 minutes into it, when my husband said he thought it would be too small for him. Turns out, he really enjoys being able to just wander the bigger ships and 'get lost' (as much as you can, haha). I came here because I know Gary will be very unbiased. I think it would be too small for me too unless, as Gary mentioned, there was a very specific itinerary. Sea days are always one of my favorite things!
Thanks ! Great to hear it helped
Thank you for pointing out about the balcony feature. I am planning to book a Windstar cruise and will certainly opt out the balcony option. Windstar is definitely a good choice for me for I value smaller crowds and low key trips where I can relax and enjoy the journey and destination.
Great review. As a solo traveller who has shared tables with people that were to intrusive for my liking I’ll give it a miss. The non choice of dining alone on any cruise I would find a little stressful. I like a small ship but this one a little to small
Totally agree.
I'm a solo cruiser trying Windstar for the first time. I do not usually sit with strangers at dinner, but other folks have reported that it's not a problem getting a solo table. I hope they are right and Gary's experience of them saying it may not be possible to sit by yourself was a one off! Great review as always. This sounds like my style......we'll see what I think after my cruise!
This should appeal to people who like river cruises. Slightly scaled up!
Although this Windstar ship seems a little too large for my taste, I would probably enjoy sailing on her. The only benefit I can see from larger ships is their lower risk of seasickness (and of course the ease of avoiding certain other passengers who annoy me).
Sounds good but for my lovely wife, food allergies/restrictions are VERY important. Twice burned on RCCL, we feel quite "safe" with DCL . . . but/still open to other lines especially if they can take us on new itineraries to Canada, South America and/or Mediterranean.
We LOVE Windstar - everything you said was spot on. We did our first in 2021 and are presently booking one for this coming summer.
I would definitely try this once, at least! I think the 600-passenger ships are the MOST my style, but I absolutely love the learning while traveling vibe. The approach to destinations is awesome.
WOW all the things you listed as negatives were to me actually positives. I'll have to reconsider cruising.
Hi Gary, thanks for this review and for sharing your opinion. I would def try Windstar. I like the idea of experiencing being on the water, feeling the elements with little distraction from scenery.
Happy to see you getting there; I put 35,000 nautical miles on my sailboat over ten years of cruising. It was 32 feet long from bow to stern.
It looks wonderful. A juliet balcony on a ship. I prefer the smaller ships.
Thanks so much Gary! You showed off the cruise line would be a great fit for me!
One thing I noticed, as a fellow introvert, at 9:41 you mentioned that you really had to make an effort to integrate, yet earlier in the video, you mildly complained about perhaps not being able to dine alone. It seems to me that you’ll meet people if you dine at a table with others more so than at activities like shows. This seems like it has elements of both ocean and river cruise ships. Personally, I like the idea of not having so many people on board, as the one big cruise ship I’ve been on (Royal Caribbean on a short Caribbean cruise) turned into a cattle car at every port, packed like sardines waiting to get off the ship.
Thanks for your videos, as they highlight positives and negatives that I might not have thought about.
Excellent. I didnt know much about Windstar. This video was very informative and is going to help me in picking future cruises. You are so good at this!
Your comments haven’t out me off sailing French Polynesia with Windstar but I think your comments about making sure it is a port intensive trip make sense to me. Usually the ship is very much the destination for me though. Thanks once again for your varied coverage.
Yes, I think for French Polynesia it will work as there are ports every day and not that much sailing as the islands are all so close!
Great video, Gary! On a recent cruise to Iceland, we were able to make port on the smaller than most, Viking Star while bigger ships like an NCL liner had to tender in. At the island of Heimaey, we had to tender in, but I saw the Star Pride was small enough that they could dock downtown. I will take your guidance when planning our next sail-away. Thanks again!
I would not be worried by the lack of entertainment but I get that that would be an issue for many. I would enjoy the smaller size ship I think and hang out in my cabin with a pile of books! Thank you for the video!
Those prices looked so reasonable! I was on an Alaska cruise and the drinks were double that!
Really fantastic review of Windstar. I took a Windstar cruise about twelve years ago and you echoed many of the thoughts I had from that experience.
The entire James Beard connection seems very misleading as it seemed to imply that the cruise line itself actually won some James Beard awards. In reality, we found the food on the ship to be mediocre at best, and I’ve since had much better food on NCL and Royal Caribbean.
Great description of the essence of the onboard experience, which was one of the most appealing parts of the cruise. Your video even made me reconsider the possibility of trying Windstar again!
Thank you for a wonderful presentation of the Windstar experience. This was very informative and entertaining.
To me, most big cruise ships are like going to Las Vegas on a holiday weekend. I hate Las Vegas and I hate crowds. This ship sounds wonderful for what interests me.
Thank you for sharing you view of the smaller ship cruises. That is nice it would feel like a super yacht scene on the smaller ships. And when you show us the balcony on this ship then I totally agree with you not a wide space at all. And I stand at 6'2" so, I need space.
The only time I was on a ship for several days was when I was 13 years old and my family was moving back to the USA from France and my parents decided we would do a transatlantic ship! We took the
SS France and and as I recall there was a movie theater and a couple pools but I don't remember their being casinos and what not. The ship was decommissioned a few years after, sadly.
Great video, thanks! My family and I had our first and, to date, only cruise in Norway some...5-6 years ago? Rather different ship, MSC Splendida at around 130K tons. New experience in October/November 2024 with a Danube river cruise, no kids this time! Have perused your river cruise videos which bought much information, thank you!
Great update, something I would definitely consider. Like the smaller ports concept, and the small number of people. Like you though I enjoy the buzz of slightly bigger ships. Thank you Gary
This sounds superb to me but I agree it would be best suited to a port-intensive itinerary - which suits me just fine! I’ll have to look into Windstar.
Informative and thourough as always. Appreciate the range of your reviews.
Sounds perfect.
Great tip on focusing on port intensive itineraries. Thanks.
Sounds perfect. I care nothing about shows, casinos, or live music.
Would thoroughly recommend Scenic (Eclipse I and II) as a small ship option, they sure know how to look after passengers. Great itineraries, awesome food, fantastic staff and the ships are just beautiful (only 200 passengers which suit us). Worth checking out…
Outstanding video! The Middle East tour with all the exotic ports sounds shagadelic!
We have done two windstar cruises and have booked a third. Tahiti had no sea days and a Mediterranean cruise had one sea day out of 17.
Yes it can be a bit American orientated (they can’t do bacon correctly) but the food is generally great. Most were well travelled and knowledgeable.
We loved sharing for meals and made lots of new friends. Most guests do the same. No casinos is great.
Excursions are expensive but we found in Europe you were so close to the town that you just walked and did your own thing. In Tahiti we organised a number of our own excursions for roughly half the cost. Our one and only sea day was fun.
We rate them highly.
We have cruised on the windstar Breeze and the Pride and are booked for our next adventure starting in Tahiti in 2025. These ships have a greater appeal to senior travellers like us who enjoy the pace, easier access to smaller port destinations and meeting fascinating people and wonderful crew members who make the small ship experience such a pleasure.
We are going on our 8th Wind Star cruise this October in Greece. Love them!
Excellent review of Windstar and agree with your assessment. I have been on 3 cruises which them and have a 4th arranged for next spring! I agree with your positives and your negatives are things that are not important to me. The one downsize is the tours are expensive, but they are generally fine. We have often arranged our own tours at ports.
Windstar’s approach to cruising just might get me back onto a cruise ship! I’ve been on only one, a western Caribbean Carnival cruise back in 1986. I was so disappointed by the glitzy decor, the constant upsell of photos and shopping “sales”, the casino crowds, the flashy/noisy evening entertainment and the brief, tacky, touristy shore excursions. This cruise that left you wanting more buzz would be perfect for me.
As a Windstar veteran, what you saw here is what to expect. Passengers are an interesting group, just not party people.
I am on a Windstar cruise right now as I type this and it is amazing. Sailing to Visby now.
OI! Thanks a million - once again Gary one of your videos is likely to cost me a small fortune. We are Azamara junkies specifically because of the size of the ship. Small, intimate, more than sufficient facilities to keep the two of us happy, and great food and service. And no mobs, and yes, even "mid sized" ships of 2000 to 3000 passengers are loud, chaotic, mobbed. Not our style unless the ports are great, and the price even better. Windstar looks a tad small, perhaps too small, BUT as you point out, the ship has access to ports we've never heard of. I've never done any investigating. Guess where I'm going as soon as this note is finished?
I went on the star pride classic Caribbean st barts my new favorite place thanks to Windstar showing me. We liked it 🙂
I saw one of the Windstar ships when I was in San Juan, PR last year. I thought that their website looked interesting but it would cost approximately 3x what i would pay on one of the premium lines. I think what would be most difficult to adjust to is trying to get my steps in on a ship that small. Another great video. I always feel like I am on the ship when I watch your videos.
Did Iceland to NYC back in 2018 on Star Pride. Enjoyed every minute and would go again in a heartbeat. Went to some places I’m never likely to visit again and the food was excellent. Back then it was 212 guests and I’ve been wondering how they squeeze 312 guests in. Now I know!
It sounds wonderful. I'm really looking forward to my Panama Canal cruise on the Star Pride in December
Ok after getting a few minutes in and reading some of the comments I had to go check out their website. I just might get to do a Panama Canal sailing. They have some affordable trips and I might even get to do one as a solo traveler. Thank you! This sounds like my cup of tea.
I sailed on the smaller sail ship the Wind Surf one of my best vacations ever.
We have shared once or twice on cruise ships with TUI for evening meal, we knew one couple from another cruise , and one a family, Grandma, Mother and daughter who we met on one of the cruises but first time.