Orlando Sentinel

Norwegian Cruise Line will offer

- By Richard Tribou

cruises to Cuba from Port Canaveral starting in summer 2018.

Norwegian Cruise Line will offer cruises to Cuba from Port Canaveral starting in summer 2018.

The cruise line will send Norwegian Sun fresh off a dry-dock overhaul to the port, offering four-night voyages with overnight stops in Havana, as well as Key West, and threenight itinerarie­s to the Bahamas.

“We felt that Port Canaveral was the ideal location to offer our guests a value-rich onboard experience and exciting actionpack­ed ports of call, including an overnight call in Havana, Cuba,” said Norwegian Cruise Line president and CEO Andy Stewart in a news release.

The cruise industry continues to double down on Cuba sailings, while airlines have cut back on service to the island nation. JetBlue flies to Cuba daily from Orlando Internatio­nal Airport and said earlier this month it plans no changes.

Travel to the communist island, which under the Obama administra­tion had been allowed for individual “people-to-people” visits, is being rolled back under President Donald Trump. Now, these mostly educationa­l and cultural visits must be done as part of a group, something the cruise lines are banking on.

Carnival Corp. was the first U.S.-based cruise line to visit Cuba on a regular basis in nearly 50 years when it sailed on May 1, 2016, on its Fathom brand. In 2017, the company shifted service to Carnival Cruise Line, which began sailing to Cuba last month from Tampa. Royal Caribbean also sails from Tampa, while Norwegian this year offers Cuba sailings from PortMiami.

The Port Canaveral plans are something new for Norwegian Cruise Line, which had always previously vacated the port in the summer months. Currently sailing from the port, Norwegian Epic will migrate to Europe next April for Mediterran­ean service before its return in November.

“Port Canaveral is proud of our cruise partner, NCL, and we welcome their growth plans for the future,” said port CEO John Murray. “Today’s announceme­nt validates the port’s ongoing investment­s in state-of-the art facilities and continuous improvemen­t in cruise operations. Our record numbers of passenger movements year after year demonstrat­es we are working hard and meeting the expectatio­ns of today’s largest and most sophistica­ted cruise ships.”

Before its arrival, the 1,936-passenger Norwegian Sun will sail the fall and winter season in South America, and then undergo a 2½-week dry dock in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. On April 19, the ship will make its way to Port Canaveral via the Panama Canal on a 17-night sailing from Seattle.

The 78,309-gross-ton ship, which was built in 2001, will begin Port Canaveral sailings May 7, with Monday-Friday voyages to Cuba and Friday-Monday Bahamas trips with stops that include Nassau, Freeport and the line's private island Great Stirrup Cay.

Both the Cuba and Bahamas itinerarie­s will include free drinks as part of the price point, including wine, beer and some premium alcohol for those 21 and older. The line said booking for the new itinerarie­s will be available at the end of the month. Call 888-625-2784 or visit www.ncl.com for details.

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