Montreal Gazette

MUCH MORE TO DISCOVER WITH THESE AVALON RIVER CRUISES

- AARON SAUNDERS

If you sail all the way from Amsterdam to Budapest on Avalon Waterways’ (cruise.center/avalon) magnificen­t 15-day Magnificen­t Europe river cruise, you’ll cover five countries, three rivers, one canal and 68 locks on a single voyage. That’s impressive.

I only joined the pretty, 166-guest Avalon Expression for half of that voyage, disembarki­ng in Nuremberg, and I was still particular­ly pleased with the entire experience.

I always feel a good measure of a cruise is a reluctance for the journey to end, and I certainly could have used another week aboard Avalon Expression.

Following the successful introducti­on of its Active Discovery cruises on the Danube this season, Avalon is introducin­g its first Active Discovery cruises on the Rhine in 2018; eight-day sailings from Amsterdam to Frankfurt (Wiesbaden) or reverse. These new itinerarie­s pack multiple ports of call into a single day, mixing big-name cities with smaller, off-the-beaten path locales.

On my sailing, Avalon previewed some of its Active Discovery excursions for us. Despite having been to many of these ports before, I found Avalon had something new and unique to show me in every port of call.

Some of these excursions were so-called “soft adventures” suitable for a range of people, like the off-the-beaten-path tour of Cologne, where we visited a local neighbourh­ood filled with hipster laundromat­s, cafés and beer halls. Other tour options showcased on our voyage down to Nuremberg included a soft hike and wine tasting in the picturesqu­e town of Rudesheim, famous for its boozy Rudesheime­r Coffee of whipped cream and local Asbach Uralt brandy; and a guided cycling tour of medieval Bamberg.

Of course, Active Discovery isn’t all hiking and cycling through the countrysid­e. In Amsterdam, I joined an afternoon painting class in the city’s fashionabl­e Jordaan district.

Then, there’s the overall river cruising experience itself.

Avalon makes a big deal about its 443-foot-long Suite Ships like Avalon Expression, and rightly so.

More than 80 per cent of staterooms are 200-square-foot Panorama Suites featuring what Avalon calls “wall-to-wall panoramic windows.”

Like its contempora­ries, Avalon Waterways is semi-inclusive. That means you can expect compliment­ary Lavazza coffee and specialty coffees throughout the day along with bottled water and tea. Beer, wine and soft drinks are free-of-charge with lunch and dinner, and drinks outside those hours come at a reasonable cost.

Service from the ship’s charming European crew was spot-on throughout.

Avalon’s culinary director, Jörg Pennecke, summed it up best during my voyage to Nuremberg: “On the ocean, you are a number,” said Pennecke, who has had a 17-year maritime career on several high-profile ocean and river cruise lines.

“On the river, you are a name.”

Visit portsandbo­ws.com, sponsored by Expedia Cruise Ship Centers, 1-800707-7327, cruiseship­centers.com, for daily updates on the latest cruise news, best deals and behind-thescenes stories from the industry. You can also sign up for an email newsletter on the site for even more cruise informatio­n. Aaron Saunders may be contacted directly at portsandbo­wsaaron@gmail.com.

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