Amsterdam/Budapest-How many people are usually on the trip/ship??
Just curious how many people are usually on this trip. I was expecting around 120-130 people and it looks like our cruise is fully booked. Was just reading other comments where some cruises only had 50-70 people.
I read where there is a tour director assigned to each group of 40 people.
Thanks for any input.....also, do you travel with the same tour director/group of people the entire time or do they move you around. We have only done one other tour with Tauk and it was a small group with just 1 tour director and only 20 people.
I read where there is a tour director assigned to each group of 40 people.
Thanks for any input.....also, do you travel with the same tour director/group of people the entire time or do they move you around. We have only done one other tour with Tauk and it was a small group with just 1 tour director and only 20 people.
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I can't answer for you particular trip, but if you read the cruise description or the information about the particular boat, you'll see a maximum number of guests. If the trip is fully booked (and everyone shows up) you can expect close to the maximum. There are exceptions, e.g. a single person reserves a room intended for two (Tauck doesn't force you to share, and if the room isn't covered by a single traveler exception, you pay more.) On the other hand, I believe they will allow 3 people in a Cat 7 cabin designed for two.
If the cruise is not fully booked the number on board will be less than max. On our recent Blue Danube river cruise we were on the MS Joy, one of Tauck's (Scylla's) new (2106) boats. The MS Joy "accommodates a maximum of 130 guests in a total of 67 cabins." We had only 88 guests on our 12 April cruise. We are looking at taking Rendezvous on the Seine on the MS Sapphire which accommodates "no more than 98 guests."
You can sail on either the MS Treasures or MS Esprit on the Amsterdam to Budapest river cruise. Both accommodate 98 guests.
On Blue Danube we had one Tauck cruise director and 3 tour directors. I don't know how many are on the smaller boats. We were broken into groups for touring, but did not use chips like Ed and Sealord. In some locations we had the choice of totally different excursions (selected 2 months earlier) so the size of a particular group and the number of groups depended on how many signed up for each option. Like Tauck land tours, we usually had local guides in most locations, in addition to the Tour Directors. No one was assigned to a specific group or TD.
On the Budapest/Amsterdam cruise, like any that have to traverse the Main canal, Tauck only uses the shorter, older ships in it's fleet like the Treasure, Esprit, Sapphire, Emerald, etc which are only 110 m long. These were all redesigned in 2017/18 to convert all the Ruby Deck 150 sqft staterooms into larger 225 sqft mini suites. That lowered the max passenger capacity to 98.
As to how many will be on your cruise, it's impossible to tell. We were on a Seine cruise in June 2017 on the Sapphire and only had 59 passengers. We've also been on cruises that were at the max.
Yes, they estimate 1 TD per 30-40 passengers plus the Cruise Director who generally stays on board at a desk in reception handling alot of the paperwork and the behind the scenes coordination that a land tour TD has to do on their own. You aren't designated a specific TD that you stay with the entire tour. One day you might be with one and the next one of the others. On the Seine we only had a CD, 2 official TDs and one who was cross training from the Danube to the Seine.
I'm not sure the poker chip system is still in use. It was kind of nice if you were traveling with a group because you could make an agreement each day to pick a specific color (we always picked green) or send one person up to the lounge to pick enough chips for all your group. We used it for 2 cruises then on the Seine cruise they didn't and I was told then that Tauck wasn't using it any more. You just got on which every bus you wanted to. Of course that may have been because our group was so small. Also, unlike the land cruises, there is no assigned seating on the bus. We almost always head to the back door where there is seldom a wait to get on and just grab a seat.
For Alan, are you sure about the Joy being refurbished? It only joined the fleet in 2016. It's part of the longer 135 m ships that started with the Inspire and Savor in 2014, then the Joy and Grace joined in 2016. They are completely different than the older fleet and the only ones with the loft cabins.
We noticed that an iron/board are in the cat 7 rooms but not listed as an item in cat 6 rooms. Does this mean there is no iron/board in cat 6 rooms? Is there a an option to iron somewhere on the ship if this is the case or do you rely on laundry service?
We hope to minimize an iron need but it would come in handy if we didn't need to pack one.
Thanks!
You are correct, I confused the Joy (new in 2016) with MS Sapphire and MS Emerald, which along with Treasures and Esprit, has undergone total refits ("totally gutted") in 2016 and 2017. While having fewer cabins than MS Joy, I wish the others had been modified to the Joy configuration with loft cabins.
You're correct that only the Cat 7 suites have their own. However, if you need an iron/ironing board you can ask at the reception desk and they will loan you one.
One of the big advantages of a river cruise is unpacking and hanging up your clothing as soon as you arrive (they supply hangers). I always bring a small empty spray bottle that I fill with water there. Using it and a blow dryer I can pretty much take care of any thing minor.
They have been known in the past to refresh the decor on the ships after a few years. Our first experience on the Swiss Emerald they had just eliminated the old crimson/gold bordello decor with the more neutral cream/tan.
While I loved our Cat 6 on the Sapphire last year (and same cabin booked on the Treasures next) I would have been fine if they'd left the smaller 150 sqft cabins with just a refresh/modernization like new decor, usb plugs, etc. You aren't the only one that wishes they had loft cabins on all their fleet.
I’ m curious if your transfer coincided with a transfer of Tauck guests from Treasures to Esprit? That might explain the three hours- time to collect luggage and deliver it to the other ship, and also time to change sheets and to give each stateroom a quick cleaning. Tauck will often do something similar on land tours- when you arrive in a new town/new hotel, they will herd you into the lobby for a hot towel and refreshing drink (while bags are taken off the bus), then have you re-board the bus for a city tour (while the porters take bags to the rooms.)
What a good idea! I always hang my clothes as soon as I arrive and even when I had a suite, I didn't bother with ironing anything. But your suggestion would be so much easier. That and the Downey wrinkle releaser should handle anything.
Thank you
Oct, 2018: After Tauck River Cruise, we flew to Prague. We used Context Travel. They picked us up at the Four Seasons. First day was a half-day walking tour with a guide. 2nd day was a full day countryside with same guide and driver. Amazing trip. Context Travel was on time, attentive, and very knowledgeable. May 2019: Tauck Tour Venice and Dalmatian Cruise. Returned to Venice and flew to Athens. Did the Windstar Cruise, Greek Islands. Returned to Athens. Did a 2 days trip with Context Travel. I have an excellent travel agent and she organized all. I live on Maui and leave it up to her to get us off Island and all of our flights and all have run smoothly.