All the world’s a cruise: for the super-rich few, the ocean party never stops
People are scrambling to sign up as full-time passengers aboard the most luxurious of ships. But fantastic voyages are not cheap. By
In days of old, when seafarers got shipwrecked, scurvy or succumbed to both, the great sage Dr Samuel Johnson observed: “Men go to sea before they know the unhappiness of that way of life”.
“A ship,” he said, “Is worse than a gaol. There is, in a gaol, better air, better company, better conveniency of every kind; and a ship has the additional disadvantage of being in danger.”
Things seem to have changed slightly – as was revealed this week when The Independent reported on the life of Leonard Berney, one of the first British officers to liberate Bergen-Belsen.
Mr Berney became a wealthy clothing manufacturer. Then in 2009, at the age of 89, he embarked on a new adventure: living full-time on a cruise ship.
The veteran boarded The World, built in 2002 to be a vessel from which passengers never had to disembark – they could simply buy one of the 165 permanent berths, called “residences” and, if they wished, spend the rest of their days sailing the Seven Seas.
Mr Berney lived permanently on board until his recent death, aged 95, from a heart attack in the Caribbean – visiting more than 100 ports a year, voting with his fellow residents to decide where the ship would go next.
If that sounds unusual, maybe it won’t be for much longer. It seems, people are now scrambling to join the ranks of full-time cruise ship seafarers. Look at the reaction to the latest innovation from cruise company Crystal Cruises: 48 purpose-built residences, to be bought as permanent or second homes, on each of its three new ships. “Initial demand has been phenomenal,” said a spokeswoman.
The happiness of Lee Wachtstatter and about three others who are already permanent Crystal Cruises ship inhabitants had been noted.
“It’s a lovely way of life for someone who has been widowed,” said the spokeswoman. “You follow the sun around the world, you have dance partners [Crystal has ‘ambassador hosts’ who dance with the ladies] you meet different people, you have constant company.”
You may also need lots of money. A spokeswoman for The World said prices ranged from $1.5m dollars (£1m) for a one-bed studio to $15m dollars for a three-bedroom top deck penthouse. Plus annual “ownership charges” of about 12 per cent of the residence price.
This makes your shipmates a rather niche crowd.
“Some have had their own superyacht and just decided The World was a more hasslefree option,” said the spokeswoman. So forget about hard tack and grog.
“Your wine preferences