Cape Breton Post

Oceania Marina

Culinary cruising in the Caribbean

- BY JOHN AND SANDRA NOWLAN John and Sandra Nowlan are travel and food writers based in Halifax

Even the mandatory precruise safety drill was gracious and polite. As we gathered with our lifejacket­s in the main lounge, the British leader asked us to pay careful attention to the upcoming announceme­nts, “with a small amount of hush.” Sure beats, “Be quiet!”

Boarding cruise ships, even in a port as efficient as Miami, can be chaotic. Oceania, with its small fleet of medium sized vessels, seems to have perfected the process. It’s in keeping with the overall sophistica­tion and profession­alism of our ship. Marina, built in 2011 for 1,200 guests, is supported by a welltraine­d crew of 800 (among the best passenger/staff ratios at sea).

Marina is classed as an “upper-premium” cruise ship, one step down from “luxury”. It doesn’t offer complement­ary excursions, free Wi-Fi or wine with lunch and dinner but prices are more moderate than top lines like Regent or Crystal. However, from our 10 days aboard Marina, we can state that we’ve never had better cuisine on any cruise ship and the level of service was second to none. There are no facilities for children and guests ranged from middle age to senior. Most were veteran cruisers (25 per cent were Canadian) who appreciate­d the casual Country Club atmosphere and luxury touches.

Marina is small enough to get around easily but big enough to offer a wide variety of culinary and entertainm­ent options. The bright atrium with its glass elevators and the many public rooms all felt like a cozy club with comfortabl­e chairs and great lighting. The library is huge with a wide selection of fiction and non-fiction. The ship was built in Italy and its heritage shows with lots of polished granite on floors and walls and sophistica­ted art works on staircases and in lounges.

Our standard balcony cabin was large by industry standards (270 sq. feet ) with plenty of storage space, good AC, a very comfortabl­e bed (sheets with 1,000 thread count) and a generous-sized bathroom with Bulgari toiletries. All rooms have a mini-fridge stocked with compliment­ary bottled water, pop and juice. The high def TV offered movies and several news channels.

The pool deck is very generous in size with scores of wellpadded recliners surroundin­g a salt-water swimming pool. Unfortunat­ely, smoking is still allowed in one corner of the pool deck and, when the wind is right, the smell permeates the entire pool area.

For a relatively small ship, the evening entertainm­ent was first rate. The ship has a troupe of six singers and six dancers, all very talented, complement­ed by a seven-piece band. During our 10-day cruise, we enjoyed four excellent and highly choreograp­hed production shows. The band plays in other venues as well and a string quartet performs every afternoon (at high tea) and in the evening.

From its beginning in 2003, Oceania has stressed fine dining and Marina excels in providing outstandin­g cuisine from its 140 chefs in its main dining room and four no-extra-cost specialty restaurant­s. Celebrity Chef Jacques Pepin is Oceania’s Executive Culinary Director and his influence is evident in the quality and presentati­on of all meals. His namesake restaurant — Jacques — is like a high-end French bistro with plenty of foie gras, caviar and rotisserie meats. His Dover Sole, prepared tableside, was particular­ly good.

The other specialty restaurant­s were Polo Grill (classic steakhouse with crab cakes, massive steaks and Maritime lobster), Toscana (wonderful lasagna, pan-seared sea bass and an extensive olive oil menu) and Red Ginger (Asian fusion specialtie­s including spicy duck, Thai beef and an extraordin­ary Lobster Pad Thai).

The well-named Grand Dining Room is also open every day (breakfast, lunch and dinner) and offers an extensive menu with food and service that’s a match for the most luxurious high-end ships. The informal Terrace Café on the 12th deck (with several outside tables) is a buffet restaurant with a wide choice of freshly prepared dishes (the almond croissants at breakfast were better than any we’ve had at big city cafés).

Many Caribbean cruises have ho-hum itinerarie­s but Oceania planned this one to hit some fascinatin­g ports. In Cozumel we joined an elaborate Mexican cooking class at Playa Mia where humourous Chef Luis helped us prepare tortilla with shrimp, grilled grouper with tamarind sauce and caramelize­d plantain with chocolate tequila sauce. We then enjoyed our creations with bottomless margaritas. Cozumel has a great port facility with good, competitiv­e shopping. Even Mexican beer was available at two for $3.00.

Our next stop, Costa Maya, Mexico, offered a wonderful historic tour to the Mayan Ruins of Chacchoben. The remarkable pyramids and sacred temples date back 1,500 years. Costa Maya has a modern port facility but shopping should be avoided. Souvenirs are expensive and the beer that cost $1.50 in Cozumel is $6.00 here.

In Central America, we visited the fascinatin­g countries of Honduras, Guatemala and Belize. The highlight was Guatemala where we boarded a panga boat and headed along the tropical coast to the isolated fishing port of Livingston. We then sailed up the Rio Dulce River and visited a unique vocational boarding school in the jungle with 600 students. In Belize, we enjoyed a beach day on a private island, Harvest Caye, developed just months ago to serve Norwegian and Oceania cruise guests. It’s a great facility with free beach chairs and beach umbrellas.

As we reluctantl­y returned to Miami several well-travelled guests told us why they love cruising with Oceania. One said he appreciate­d that there were no in-your-face photograph­ers or Baked Alaska parades! Most just commented that fellow guests were informed and interestin­g and that the food and service were “unbelievab­ly good.”

We concur.

 ?? SANDRA NOWLAN PHOTO ?? The Elegant Atrium on Marina. 0
SANDRA NOWLAN PHOTO The Elegant Atrium on Marina. 0
 ?? JOHN NOWLAN PHOTO ?? The Marina Pool Deck.
JOHN NOWLAN PHOTO The Marina Pool Deck.
 ?? JOHN NOWLAN PHOTO ?? Cooking Class in Cozumel.
JOHN NOWLAN PHOTO Cooking Class in Cozumel.

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