Montreal Gazette

And the winner for the best cruise is …

Award choices spur debate and controvers­y

- PHIL REIMER

With

drum rolls and red carpets, the entertainm­ent industry is famous for its award shows — all of them over the top and most of them in prime time. Millions, maybe even billions, of dollars are spent promoting each show, each movie and each star in a plethora of categories.

Among the more modest are the cruise ship awards. Travel Weekly has its Magellan Awards, Travel + Leisure Awards are announced annually, and just last week two more made headlines.

Cruise Critic, one of the largest online websites, released its “Best of ” in numerous categories, with the winners determined by their writers and editors. Condé Nast lets the readers pick its awards. This year, nearly 80,000 — the largest number ever — selected everything from the best resorts to best cities to best cruise lines. You can find all the category winners in the November issue of Condé Nast Traveler.

I revel in awards. They generate controvers­y and that brings heated participat­ion by you, the readers — people who I find have deep loyalties when it comes to picking their favourite cruise line. So let me know what you think at portsandbo­ws about Small Ship, Mid-size Ship, Large Ship and River Cruise Lines. From these categories, Condé Nast picks its top 25. This year, the magazine noted that 11 ships scored 90 points or more, a jump from only five ships that did so in 2012.

By picking the top 25 overall, some categories are shorter in actual numbers; for instance, only four are listed in Large Ship, but there are nine in the Mid-size. It’s all based on total points to reach the top 25. Small Ship — Seabourn led the way again, followed by Windstar, SeaDream, Silversea, Lindblad Ex- peditions and Star Clipper. Windstar and Star Clipper were not on the 2012 list. Mid-size — Crystal was tops again, followed by Regent Seven Seas, Oceania and Azamara. Following was Holland America, Cunard, Princess, Celebrity and Royal Caribbean. Large Ship — Disney repeated in first place, with Celebrity second, followed by Royal Caribbean and Princess. Rive r Cruise Line s — Grand Circle was again the winner, but the line caters only to a U.S. market. So for a Canadian point of view, I dropped them from the list. That left Tauck — making the list for the first time — tops on the rivers, followed by Viking, Uniworld, Vantage and AmaWaterwa­ys.

Meanwhile, Cruise Critic’s awards judged ships on features ranging from best bar to best cabin, making for many more categories.

Here are some of the winners from a few categories picked by their internatio­nal editors. Best Ne w Ship — Norwegian Breakaway, home porting in New York Best for Familie s — Disney Cruise Lines Best Itinerarie­s — Princess Cruises Be st for Value — Azamara Club Cruises Be st for Dining — Oceania Cruises Best for Entertainm­ent — Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal Be st for Honeymoons — Windstar Cruises Be st North Ame rican Home port — Vancouver Be st River Cruise Line — Viking Cruises Best Standard Cabins — Celebrity Cruises

For the full list, visit Cruisecrit­ic. com. Phil’s Pick of the Week

I love cruising the British Isles, so this pick’s a natural for me. It’s from Cruise Critic’s “Best of ” in the itinerarie­s category.

This 12-day cruise on the Ruby Princess leaves on May 11, 2014 from Southampto­n, England. Ports are Guernsey (St. Peter Port), Cork (Cobh, for Blarney Castle), Belfast, Dublin, Glasgow (Greenock), Orkney Islands (Kirkwall), Inverness/ Loch Ness (Invergordo­n), Edinburgh (South Queensferr­y) and Paris/Normandy (Le Havre).

Prices start at $1,849 per person based on double occupancy.

 ?? ROYAL CARIBBEAN ?? Royal Caribbean topped the Best for Entertainm­ent category in Cruise Critic’s 2013 Editors’ Picks award.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN Royal Caribbean topped the Best for Entertainm­ent category in Cruise Critic’s 2013 Editors’ Picks award.
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