Cross the border to sunny Mexico on the Celebration's 4- or 5-night cruise from Galveston, Texas. From exciting Vegas-style revues in the Astoria Lounge to ivory-tickling tunes in the Red Hot Piano Bar, the fun never stops. Dance the night away in the Galax Z Dance Club or enjoy great music and comedy at the Islands in the Sky Lounge. There's a reserved table for you in the dining room, or casual dining in the Seaview Bistro, where the food is just as delicious, but the atmosphere is relaxed. The convenience of leaving from this historic southwest city makes it easier to get away for a few days to see the Caribbean side of Mexico in less than a week.
Ship Highlights
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Two formal dining rooms offering gourmet fare and spa cuisine
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Multi-tiered Astoria Lounge with lavish Las Vegas-style productions
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Red Hot Piano Bar for more intimate live entertainment
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The Rainbow Club Casino
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Large health and fitness area with sauna, hot tub, and steam room
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Two swimming pools
- Camp Carnival program for kids featuring computer lab and arts-and-crafts center
- Bourbon Street, the ship's shopping promenade
- Revitalizing spa offering massage and beauty treatments
- Outdoor jogging track
Overview
There is a reason Carnival is called "the world's most popular cruise line" -- it is a favorite among those who are looking for a laid back experience, a safe and fun place for their families, and the best vacation bang for their buck. The 47,262-ton, 1,486-passenger Celebration, which launched in 1987, fulfills all of the above. However, cruisers should keep this in mind: Cruising has come a long way since 1987, and because Carnival's ships vary so widely in age, so do the amenities onboard.
Celebration
is the second oldest ship in the fleet, outlived only by Holiday, which launched in 1985 (Jubilee, which entered the fleet in 1986, exited service last year). And although it underwent a multi-million dollar renovation in 2003, the ship is still more of a tribute to the old days of cruising. Even with all of its upgrades and updates, this may not be the best ship for passengers who have grown accustomed to modern-ship amenities that aren't found here, such as a high ratio of balcony cabins, supper-club style alternative dining, high-tech fitness facilities and swank spas.
The most noticeable change is the practically all-new purser's lobby though which cruisers board the ship -- redone with new carpeting, furniture, wall coverings and artwork for a more contemporary atmosphere. The dining rooms were also redesigned for a more spacious atmosphere. Also, each of the Celebration's staterooms received new curtains, carpeting and wallpaper, as well as upgraded bedding, linens, pillows and bedspreads. New leather-bound directories were placed in each cabin, and bathrooms were updated and retiled where necessary. Elevator lobbies, stair landings, pool decks and lounges underwent minor cosmetic enhancements, and all corridors were re-carpeted.
Interesting factoid: The upgrades, which took 70 days, were overseen by Tillberg Design -- the lead architect for Cunard's Queen Mary 2.
Celebration is a great value for those that are looking to have a no-frills, lay-by-the-pool "Fun Ship" vacation. The food is surprisingly good, cabins are contemporary and comfortable, and service is friendly and fast.
Celebration kicked off the first-ever year-round cruise program from Jacksonville in October 2004, sailing four- and five-day cruises from the port to the Bahamas.
Public rooms
Passengers enter the ship not via a fancy atrium or promenade, but through the lobby, past the Purser's Desk. The lobby has been redone with new wall coverings, furniture and artwork in an effort to create a more contemporary atmosphere.
The core of this Fun Ship is the Promenade Deck's Bourbon Street, embellished with "brick" streets, a real trolley car, and splashes of purple, gold and green for a real New Orleans feel. This is an unlikely place to relax in the day, as it is not quite as busy as, say, a main drag at Mardi Gras (at night, however, these areas pick up). There are cozy chairs by windows where many passengers played cards or read books during daylight hours. There is also a player piano for live evening entertainment and the Trolley Bar, where cruisers gathered to watch sports, particularly the World Series playoffs that took place during our sailing.
Most of the ship's nightclubs and lounges are accessible from Bourbon Street, including Galax-Z, a disco-esque club in dark blue and steel with a small dance floor lit from below by neon a la "Saturday Night Fever." While there is no traditional game room, there is a small grouping of arcade games in the back of Galax-Z; these range from 25 cents to a dollar to play, and are open 24 hours.
Also off Bourbon Street is the ship's casino, Rainbow Club. The room is surrounded by chunks of colorful plastic, adorned with neon lights and a flashy art deco font from the eighties. Cruisers can try their luck on over 180 slot machines including the usual suspects like Wheel of Fortune, Red White & Blue. There are also several electronic poker machines that delighted in eating my money, and roulette, poker and blackjack tables. Slot tournaments take place throughout the week. The main bar at the end of this particular rainbow is aptly called Pot of Gold.
The Red Hot Piano Bar is hard to miss with its striking, bright decor. Ebony and ivory keys are set around the bar for decoration, and fire-engine-red walls and booths surround accent tables and chairs. In the back there is a narrow, spiral staircase that leads to the Rainbow Club casino.
Warning: this lounge is smoky as it is one area where cigarette smoking is allowed.
Directly across from the piano bar is Admiral's Library, lovely with teakwood-paneled walls, nautical memorabilia including a bell from Caronia, metal napkin rings from ships of yesteryear including one from P&O, a model of a typical sailing ship's wheel circa 1920, and oil paintings of ships at sea. There are cabinets with a small selection of books and board games that can be borrowed throughout the week.
The library also doubles as Celebration's Internet "cafe." Six computer stations are available for Web surfers, as well as a very reliable and easy to use wireless program for laptop owners. Even if some parts of this ship are stuck in the eighties, the wireless Internet certainly isn't -- it is the fastest, most reliable Internet access I've used at sea (but that could also be due in part to the ship's proximity to the equator on my particular sailing). The library is the only place onboard where wireless access is offered, but the signal IS strong enough for use in the Red Hot Piano Bar, so you can have a cocktail and listen to music while checking your e-mail if you've brought your laptop. Very relaxing.
Connection can be pricey, and is available through packages, or a la carte (at an insane $0.75 per minute). Packages are the way to go -- the more minutes you buy, the more you save, and the more free minutes you earn. Pricing for using either their computers or the wireless network works out to be about the same in the end (you can buy 250 minutes at $0.40 per minute for either method), though wireless can be a better bargain because you avoid the $3.95 activation fee (ouch) required to connect to the Internet via one of Carnival's computers.
Shoppers will want to head to Holiday Square, where they can browse a handful of modest shops offering logo wear, Carnival souvenirs (such as mugs, spoons and pens), sunscreen, perfume, duty-free liquors and cigarettes, t-shirts, and jewelry (including the requisite gold-by-the-inch). Actual space within the shops is limited, though, so tables are set up in the "square" sidewalk-sale style during the day.
Activities
Once you're within the perimeters of Carnival's Celebration, all activities are available for enjoyment purposes. We provide such an array of activities to indulge in that it would be virtually impossible to conquer them all within your cruise. We accommodate relaxing activities, action packed, and everything in between.
- Game Room
- Beauty Salon & Barber Shop
- Galleria Shopping Mall & Duty-free Shopping
- Logo Shop
- Admiral's Library - a quiet place to relax
- Children's Playroom
- 3 Outdoor Pools including a Children's pool
- Radio Room
- Spa & Sauna
- Gymnasium
- Shuffleboard & Table Tennis
- Closed Circuit TV
- Photo Gallery
- 2 Whirlpools
Entertainment
As expected on Carnival ships, which are known for their entertainment, stage productions are as excellent as cast members are talented. A country music show played to a nearly packed house, but I fell in love with Standing Room Only, a great medley of Broadway tunes. You can clearly see how much work goes into this, with uncountable costume and set changes, and toe-tapping tunes. There were also numerous daily activities to keep cruisers happy, including art auctions, bingo games, slot tournaments, fun contests and game shows like "Newlywed, Not-So-Newlywed," comedians, and more.
Most of the action happens in the ship's two-deck-high main theater, Astoria Lounge, one of my favorite spaces on this ship. The decor is tasteful, and the layout is more comedy club than arena with tiered rows of rounded couches and swiveling love seats in a muted blue. Arriving early guarantees good seating; drink service is friendly and fast.
A caveat for short folks: you may want avoid the upper tiers; a glass panel borders every tier, and the edge of that glass panel was directly in my line of vision.
Additional entertainment can be found in the Endless Summer lounge, lined with boat hulls and sunrise/sunset shades (rather amusing Karaoke takes place here every single day, and draws a huge crowd at night), and Islands in the Sky in ethereal pinks, purples and blues, a lounge for comedians and daytime activities such as art auctions.
As day turns into night, the festivities begin. It's time for the children to clock in to their rooms and the adults to clock out and proceed to the utmost entertainment known to cruising! We invite you to peruse out many bars and lounges and nightclubs. We also provide the Rainbow Club Casino to talk hand in our assortment of games.
- Astoria Lounge - nightly entertainment in this beautiful two story Lounge
- Red Hot Piano Bar
- Rainbow Club Casino
- The Trolley Bar
- The Bistro Bar
- Endless Summer Dance Lounge
- Galax-Z Dance Club - nightclub
- Islands in the Sky Lounge
- Pot of Gold Bar
- The Wheelhouse Bar & Grill
Fitness and Recreation
There are three pools onboard Celebration. The main lido pool is surrounded by two tiers of deck chairs, and topped off with snaking slide that seemed more popular with adults than kids. There is one whirlpool next to this pool. A smaller pool, aft, provides a quieter atmosphere and a great view of the ship's wake. It is also steps away from the ice cream machine in Wheelhouse Bar & Grill -- a huge plus in this sweet tooth's book. The third pool is a children's wading pool, located next to the staircase leading down to Camp Carnival's children's center. I didn't realize right away that it was a kids' pool due to the large number of adult sunbathers who choose to relax there; youngsters were often whisked to other areas of the ship for activities, and so this spot was surprisingly peaceful. Only the animal-shaped slide gave it away.
There was no warm reception area when I stepped off the elevator by Spa Carnival -- just a dim, institutional hallway with treatment rooms. The staffer I flagged down didn't seem too interested in answering my questions, or showing me about, and quite frankly treatments were on the high side price-wise -- a simple facial was $109. The salon was almost as disappointing upon first glance, a small space cramped with haphazardly placed nail tables, ominous about-to-tip-over stacks of towels on shelves and sitting areas, and extension cords snaking visibly across the floor. It is also in a noisy corridor just off the shopping area, and screams 1980's with big bright bulbs surrounding mirrors, reminiscent of those in Miss Piggy's dressing room in "The Muppets Take Manhattan." However, Ceri who did my treatments was a complete doll, and my salon experience ended up being quite pleasant.
Note: Port-day "discounts" are deceiving -- you may be paying less for a treatment, but be sure to ask whether your treatment is the same length. A chunk of time is shaved off of certain "sale" treatments, so at that point are you really getting a good deal? I was psyched to save $25 on my exotic hand and foot treatment ... until I found out I was receiving a 90-minute procedure while sea-day customers were spending a full two hours being pampered.
There is a small but functional gym with six treadmills, four cycles and two steppers. Despite its size, it never seemed exceptionally busy -- but was never empty during my trips up there, either. Activity-minded folks can also get their fix on the Sun Deck, complete with volleyball net, shuffleboard and a jogging/walking track. (Thirteen laps equals one mile. The track is easily walk-able; one woman claimed she circled 20 times in just 30 minutes.) Cruisers can also play chess with jumbo pieces off the lido deck pool, or tee off on the small putting green near the aft pool.
Family
Families are a major market for Carnival -- and Carnival's kids' program, Camp Carnival, is excellent in that it is tailored for many age groups. Children are broken up into four categories: Toddlers (ages 2 - 5), Juniors (ages 6 - 8), Intermediates (ages 9 - 11) and Teens (ages 12 - 15).
The children on our sailing were always well occupied and well behaved, especially when with their counselors. I saw them marching through the promenade one day, and having an ice cream sundae party in the Wheelhouse another. There's even a kids-only turndown service featuring fresh baked chocolate chip cookies. Other activities kids may participate in include arts and crafts and sing-alongs (for the younger crowd), puppet shows and t-shirt painting (for juniors), and talent shows, scavenger hunts and pool parties (for older kids). Teens can participate in disco parties in Galax-Z early in the evening, and watch late-night movies.
An additional perk: baby-sitting services, basically a slumber party in the play room, are available for a very reasonable cost -- $6 for the first child and $4 for each additional child in the same family -- from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m.
The only downfall is the actual Camp Carnival facility, which is smaller and less innovative than those on newly launched ships. However, because there are so many things going elsewhere, families should definitely consider Celebration for a family vacation -- parents can be out and about having their own fun while Carnival staffers entertain the tykes.
Fellow passengers
On our cruise, passengers were mostly middle-aged couples and groups. There was a sprinkling of younger and senior travelers as well, plus many families with children. This ship seems to attract the majority of its passengers from southern U.S. locales (Florida, Georgia, Texas, etc.) near its homeport of Jacksonville.
Dress
Casual dress prevails during the day, with most passengers sporting swimsuits, shorts and t-shirts. (Swimsuits are not allowed in the dining rooms.) There is one formal night on four- and five-night sailings; most men opt for a suit and tie while women tend toward cocktail dresses. Sensible, smart casual attire works well for dinner on other evenings.
Gratuity
Gratuities are automatically added to shipboard accounts (though amounts can be adjusted at passengers' discretion), broken down as follows: $3.50 per person, per day, for the cabin steward; $3.50 per person, per day, for the waiter; $2 per person, per day, for the busboy. Carnival adds an automatic 15 percent gratuity to all bar and wine bills.