Marin Independent Journal

SMOOTH SAILING AGAIN TO HAWAII

Dozens of voyages scheduled now that large cruise ships can return

- By David Dickstein

Paradise lost is paradise refound for those dreaming of a Hawaiian vacation by sea.

The end of a nearly twoyear ban on large cruise ships means that air travel is no longer the only way to reach this tropical treasure. And none too soon, apparently. Hawaii's economy is so dependent on tourism, even the arrival of a half-full Grand Princess was met with fanfare and sighs of relief in January when the 2,590-passenger ship pulled into Honolulu Harbor.

“Welcoming the cruise industry back to Hawaii is an important part of our economic recovery, particular­ly for our local shops, restaurant­s and tour operators,” said John De Fries, president and CEO of the Hawaii Tourism Authority.

The recent restart of cruising in the Hawaiian Islands is expected to help offset the 30%-40% drop in tourism that state officials said was caused by the emergence of the omicron variant of the coronaviru­s. Doing their share to shore up these numbers are at least nine major cruise lines with Hawaiian itinerarie­s this year. Besides Princess, which successful­ly retested the waters earlier this year, brands renewing their aloha spirit include Carnival, Celebrity, Disney, Holland America, Norwegian, Oceania, Royal Caribbean, Seabourn and Viking.

By year's end, just over 20 cruise ships will have taken nearly 150 trips with Hawaii on the itinerary, according to the Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n. Nearly half of those voyages will be on Norwegian's Pride of America, making the 2,186-passenger ship the big kahuna in Hawaiian waters. Home-ported in Honolulu since its maiden voyage in 2005 — save for times during refurbishm­ent or a pandemic — the luxury liner is scheduled to return to active duty April 9.

Through at least 2024, Pride of America will visit four Hawaiian islands and five ports every seven days. Between embarkatio­n and disembarka­tion on the two Saturdays, there's a Sunday-Monday overnighte­r in Kahului on Maui, Tuesday and Wednesday calls on the Big Island (Hilo and Kona, respective­ly), then a Thursday-Friday overnighte­r in Nawiliwili on Kauai.

Notice there are no sea days, and Pride of America being the world's only active U.S.-flagged cruise ship is the reason. The Stars and Stripes wave proudly on its stern because Pride of America was partially built in the United States — the first in nearly a half-century when it was completed — and thus was given congressio­nal exception from the 135-year-old Passenger Vessel Services Act, which requires a call in a foreign port.

That's why every other cruise that includes Hawaii on the itinerary must pay an internatio­nal visit in adherence to the Civil War-era law. These include the eight remaining round trips this year out of Southern California. The longest left in 2022 is a 45-night journey on Holland America's 1,964-passenger Zuiderdam from Oct. 3-Nov. 17. The enviable voyage out of San Diego includes a six-night Hawaiian leg that consists of five ports on four islands. Other stops are Fiji, Niue, Samoa, Tonga, the Cook Islands of New Zealand and several in French Polynesia.

For those not ready to cruise just yet, Holland America has more round trips from San Diego that can be booked now and put on an extended layaway. They range from a 17-night voyage in January on the 2,650-passenger Koningsdam (five Hawaii ports plus an obligatory stopover in Ensenada) and a 94-night odyssey a year later on the 1,432-capacity Volendam, which will roam Oceania after calls in Oahu, Maui and the Big Island. At 131/2 weeks, this January-April 2024 odyssey is over three times longer than any other Hawaii-bound round trip scheduled out of Southern California.

Even with coronaviru­s-related concerns and restrictio­ns still afloat, demand is high for lengthy itinerarie­s that tend to draw the experience­d cruiser and well-traveled guest, according to Seattle-based Holland America.

“Our guests relish the Hawaii cruises because they love the extra time on the ship and opportunit­y to cruise to the islands from a mainland gateway,” said Holland America President Gus Antorcha. “We have departures that sail from San Diego and Vancouver, so we have a couple of options for guests to drive to the pier or take a short flight.”

The 3,080-passenger Crown Princess is on tap for two round trips sailing out of L.A. Harbor. Both are 15-day trips to four Hawaiian ports, including Maui's seldom-called Lahaina, with a brief visit in Ensenada on the penultimat­e day. From San Pedro's World Cruise Center, the ship also will embark on a four-week sail in November that blends the South Pacific with a Hawaiian punch. Most of the 28 days are sea days, but with such exotic stopovers as Tahiti, Moorea, Samoa and American Samoa on the schedule, in addition to three Hawaiian islands and Ensenada, those poor passengers will just have to suffer through 19 days spent solely on a four-star floating resort with food, entertainm­ent and activities galore.

While Crown Princess is navigating the Pacific for nearly a month, its older Grand Class sister will fill in with a 15-day sail of its own out of Los Angeles. Class namesake Grand Princess is departing SoCal in April for a Hawaii-Mexico run and an October voyage that ends in New Zealand or Australia, depending on how much time and money you want to spend. More round-trip Hawaiian cruises from Santa Clarita-based Princess are scheduled through April 2023.

From Long Beach, Carnival Miracle will embark on a pair of 14-day voyages this fall, both with brief visits to Ensenada after stops in Honolulu, Kahului, Kona and Hilo. The 2,124-passenger ship will switch out Kona for Nawiliwili for two Hawaiian cruises in the early part of 2023.

The only remaining ultraluxur­y cruise ending in Southern California this year is on Oceania's 684-capacity Regatta. It embarks from Tahiti on April 6, and the 18-night journey — 10 of those being sea days — goes to Bora Bora and Rangiroa in the Society Islands, Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Islands, and three Hawaiian islands before dropping anchor in San Pedro on April 24.

With Hawaii returning to shipshape as a cruise destinatio­n, soon there could be more good news for wouldbe vacationer­s to the Aloha State. Based on the latest informatio­n at press time, nearly all travel restrictio­ns are expected to be lifted for domestic visitors come spring, barring any more coronaviru­s surges.

Getting to Hawaii would be easier with the end of SafeTravel­s Hawaii, a 21/2-yearold program that enabled qualifying domestic visitors to bypass quarantine. For Hawaii-bound cruisers, however, there will still be some hula hoops to jump through as, at least for now, Centers for Disease Control guidelines are still requiring cruise lines to demand proof of vaccinatio­n and a negative test.

Inconvenie­nt? Perhaps. Prudent? Maybe. But for a vacation destinatio­n that just a few months ago was one of the world's last holdouts to large cruise ships due to COVID-19 concerns, this is smooth sailing after two years of rough seas that kept cruise passengers anchored to the mainland.

 ?? COURTESY OF HOLLAND AMERICA LINE ?? Noordam, anchored off Lahaina, is a sister of the 1,964-passenger Zuiderdam that sails to
Hawaii in October.
COURTESY OF HOLLAND AMERICA LINE Noordam, anchored off Lahaina, is a sister of the 1,964-passenger Zuiderdam that sails to Hawaii in October.
 ?? COURTESY OF NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE ?? Norwegian Cruise Line has a monopoly on big-ship roundtrip cruises within Hawaii.
COURTESY OF NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE Norwegian Cruise Line has a monopoly on big-ship roundtrip cruises within Hawaii.
 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN ?? A party atmosphere is what cruisers can expect en route to Hawaii on the Grand Princess.
PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN A party atmosphere is what cruisers can expect en route to Hawaii on the Grand Princess.
 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN ?? Grand Princess heads for Hawaii in April and October out of San Pedro.
PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN Grand Princess heads for Hawaii in April and October out of San Pedro.
 ?? COURTESY OF NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE ?? Pride of America, homeported in Honolulu, is the only U.S.built cruise ship afloat.
COURTESY OF NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE Pride of America, homeported in Honolulu, is the only U.S.built cruise ship afloat.

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