You're listening to the Cruise Tips TV Unplugged podcast.
Today it's part two in our Cruise Cabin series.
Last week we talked a little bit about some Cruise Cabin locations to avoid and a few that
we really like.
And this week we're talking about five smart ways to choose a Cruise Cabin.
Welcome to Cruise Tips TV Unplugged.
I'm your host Sherry and we invite you to join our Cruise Loving family.
As we travel the world creating Cruise videos and vlogs.
In this podcast we talk tips, tactics and strategies to help you make every Cruise your
dream Cruise.
Okay, so last time we talked a lot about sound based type issues.
What's on the agenda now?
We did.
Yeah, we talked a lot about cabin noise and how that can be an issue, right?
So last week we said, these are some cabins you might want to avoid.
Here's a few we usually really dig.
And then we decided that we needed to elaborate on how to choose a Cruise Cabin.
So we're going to go through five smart and relatively quick ways to choose a Cruise Cabin.
Mr. Cruise Tips TV, this is very scientific.
It is.
It also does kind of depend on who you are.
Sure.
Okay, so there's not a one size fits all when it comes to choosing a cabin.
That is correct.
There's not a one size fits all but there are some strategies that anyone can employ.
And Mr. Cruise Tips TV, I have to ask you a question and don't worry, this isn't a trick
or anything hard.
It's a trick.
It's a trick.
It's a trap.
If you had to think about our audience and you had to go, hmm, I wonder what kind of cabin
they book.
Do they book insides, ocean views, balconies, suites or something else?
What do you think that you would find that there is one that maybe was a little bit more
popular than others?
I'm going to try and hit it in the middle and say ocean view.
Interesting.
Would you like to know the scientific answer from my poll that I took?
Sure.
I think this is kind of fun.
I thought this would be a good way to start off.
Now, this poll is still really young friends, meaning I only posted it two hours ago and
this is a Facebook poll.
It only has 427 votes.
Now when you have an audience of over 200,000 people, that's not a very big sample size.
So this is really not scientific.
It's just fun and anecdotal.
But I'm going to give you the results, Mr. Cruise Tips TV.
Out of 427 votes, 72 of those choose an inside cabin most of the time.
29 of those folks, ocean view, 290 choose a balcony most of the time.
So I really couldn't have been more wrong.
You were wrong.
And 34 choose a suite.
And then a whole bunch of people commented.
Now, what you'll find about experienced cruisers is that most of the time, these folks who
cruise often, really, they say, oh, I've cruised in every kind of cabin before.
But I made them choose which one they pick the most.
Right?
So we had to kind of narrow it down because there is no one answer.
You and I have cruised in every type of cabin that exists.
We've done inside.
We've done ocean view, which has actually been more infrequent for us, but we have done
it.
We've done lots and lots of balconies, a few mini suites and a few nice regular, I shouldn't
say regular, no suite is regular.
But a few cool suites that we've had the opportunity over the years to cruise in.
But what's our most frequent choice?
I'm just in balcony.
Yeah.
Now, I thought it was interesting that the second most popular was for our community,
it was inside cabins.
Now, I think there's a reason for that.
The reason for that is that people made this comment too on the Facebook post.
They're like, look, if I'm not going in a balcony, what's the point of a notion view?
I'm not going to pay for that.
Like, just put me in an inside, right?
So there's that sort of, there's that sort of decision that you make that if you don't
have a balcony, go really bare bones on the price and maybe do just an inside.
But let's talk about the five different ways to choose a cabin.
Real quick though, I want to give a shout out to one of our amazing listeners who left
an awesome five star review back in November.
This is from CBO Doctor who said that they loved the episode called Packing Dues and Dones
for a Christmas cruise.
They said, excellent podcast.
I loved it.
You guys are my companions on the way to work.
And to Mr. Cruise Tips TV, you should do another podcast of Packing Dues and Dones for a cruise
on Christmas, please.
That's a very specific one.
Mr. Cruise Tips TV's packing video for a Christmas cruise.
Let's put like, what are we going to put in the suitcase?
Some elves, some Santa pajamas.
Right?
Can you imagine?
Oh, I think CBO DR, you're amazing.
Thanks for the five star review.
I think Mr. Cruise Tips TV's packing video days are probably over.
He did a great job on that packing video.
He's so dang busy with editing and all the other stuff in life.
I don't know if we're going to get him back on the big screen.
But I'll keep trying.
Never say never.
Never say never.
Okay.
So the number one smart thing that you want to do when you're choosing a cruise cabin is
you want to take your budget into consideration, right?
I believe that for most people, budget is usually a pretty big deciding factor in what
type of cabin they're going to book.
So number one, determine your budget and then you can take it from there, right?
We're also going to talk about some tips for getting the best price on your cabin just
a little bit later.
We're going to do that kind of towards the end of the podcast because I want to get through
the tips and each type of cabin first.
And then we'll do some money saving tips later on how to score a good deal once you choose
your cabin time, right?
So if number two tip is if number, if the budget, right, determines your cabin category,
now it's time to pick.
So it's time to you've got your budget.
That's number one.
Now it's time to choose.
Make your choice.
So what are the categories and who are they good for?
Let's start with each one of these.
So first off, you have good old inside cabins, right?
We all know what an inside or an interior room is, right?
They're smaller.
They're generally the most budget friendly cabins on a cruise ship and they don't have
windows, right?
So they're tiny and the cruise lines are going to charge you less because they take
a plus base and they don't have oceanfront landscape.
So that is the first type of cabin.
Who is an inside cabin good for?
They're good for lots of people.
Surprisingly, a ton of people choose to cruise in insights.
They're good for people who want to spend a little less money on their cabin.
They're also good for people who are going on a port intensive cruise and maybe don't
really care what's outside.
They're more interested in just getting off the ship and going and hanging out in the
ports, but they don't really care about the view, right?
And they're also good for people who just simply don't spend a lot of time in their
cabin.
So inside cabin lovers, I see you.
There's a lot of you out there and I applaud you because you probably cruise more than any
of us because you take your budget into consideration and you're a smart cruiser.
So props to our inside cabin lovers out there.
We've sailed in some insights in our time.
I don't recommend doing that with a toddler, especially an active boy toddler who likes
to jump from bed to bed, bounce off the walls and mommy and daddy don't have a balcony
to escape to, but hey, sometimes you're on a budget and you just got to do what you've
got to do.
All right.
Number two type of cabin you can choose is an outside cabin, right?
So an outside cabin is one step up, I guess you could say, from an inside.
Some would say, no, it's not a step up.
It's just an inside cabin with a little window.
And that's just exactly what it is.
This is for somebody who wants a peek at the ocean, but they can't get outside to it, right?
So you're going to have a window or some kind of a porthole.
The size of the cabin is going to be a lot more akin to an inside cabin than a balcony.
Probably not going to have as much square footage as a balcony.
Picture is like an interior cabin with some kind of a view of the ocean.
It's going to be lower price than a balcony, probably a little bit more expensive than
an interior, but you know, if you want a little peek at the ocean and you're looking for something
in between on the budget, that might be good for you.
Yeah, I'm really surprised that more people don't go for that.
Yeah, I think they feel like, look, if I'm going for that, I'm going for the balcony,
right?
Yeah.
It's like, give me the door to the ocean or nothing.
I respect that.
Okay, so who is a who's an ocean view cabin good for?
This might be good for somebody who has who's still on a budget, but you're like, you know,
I just want to see where I am every day.
I don't really need to step outside, but I, you know, I don't need to get that fresh air.
A peek is enough and I'm still on a budget, but it would be so nice to be able to see.
Now that was my first cabin, Mr. Krissib's TV.
When I cruised with my mom and my brother when I was in high school, it was an ocean
view.
There were no balconies back then, unless you were in a fancy suite, balconies just weren't
a thing on like the carnival ships back then.
And so that's just what we did.
And that's what you, you know, you had your bunk beds in there and it was really cool.
So balcony cabin is the next choice that you might be able to make, right?
And a balcony is basically a cabin with a veranda.
So it's going to be a little bigger than an inside or an ocean view.
You'll be able to step outside.
You're going to be able to get some of that fresh air.
And this is good for people who have a little bit more in their budget, potentially.
And you think you might spend some time out there on your balcony.
You might want or even need the extra space.
You might want or even need a little extra fresh air.
You might be cruising somewhere scenic, like Alaska or Canada and the coast of New England.
You might be cruising with children and not want to feel cooped up with the children.
Like if they're napping, you might want to be able to go out in the balcony and just
have a little separation, right?
And so you might want to see the water.
That's who might want to book a balcony.
Now there's all kinds of things you want to watch out for with balcony cabins, right?
You want to look for obstructions that are really labeled as such.
And that can include, for example, instead of having a glass balcony, some of them have
metal balconies and that upsets people because they can't see through the balcony
and to them.
That's like an actual obstruction that isn't labeled as one.
Sometimes there can be poles that kind of go down the middle of a balcony, like a support
beam, for example.
So there are some watchouts for balconies.
Another type of thing that you might want to take into consideration is if you're booking
with Carnival and you get all romantically involved in thinking you want to Havana balcony.
Out to cruisers, Havana cabins actually don't have balconies.
They sort of have lennies, which are, you know, they're like a little area where you
can chill just outside of your cabin.
But then in front of that is a promenade deck before you actually get to the view of the
ocean.
So to me, that's actually a step back.
And that's why we don't book Havana's on that area, in that lennai area, because it's
also a shared area.
No, if I'm getting a balcony, I want privacy.
I don't want some shared area.
So a few watchouts for balconies always know what you're getting into.
One cabin category that we didn't talk about yet, Mr. Cruise
Region where you can actually get a studio cabin.
Yeah, that's what I was going to ask because it's my understanding that not every cruise
line has solo cabins.
Correct.
So is it just Norwegian right now?
Right now it's Norwegian and a few other select lines.
And what these lines are doing, some of them are creating a few solo cabins on the lines
when they build their newer ships.
But some of them are actually creating solo pricing and dedicating a block of rooms to single
or solo prices, but they're not really necessarily smaller rooms, they're just making sure that
you can get a good rate without a supplement.
So this is evolving and it's interesting to see.
And I'm really glad the cruise lines are making that effort because it's hard to pay that
single supplement, right?
For sure.
And have to pay the double every time you cruise so I can see how that might be a problem.
Yeah.
So we've talked about insides, outsides, studios, and we've talked about balconies.
Let's talk about the next kind of step up from that, which might be some kind of a mini-sweet.
Some cruise lines have mini-sweet.
Princess has mini-sweet.
Norwegian Cruise Line has mini-sweet, right?
And there's all kinds of different varieties of cabins out there that you could label a
mini-sweet that aren't really a mini-sweet.
Like a junior sweet on Royal Caribbean is sort of a mini-sweet but kind of larger than
some of the other cruise lines.
So what is a mini-sweet?
Well, typically they'll have a little extra space, they'll have a bathtub generally in
addition to a shower.
They might have a sitting area.
They might have upgraded amenities, bathroom amenities and robes.
Some may not.
So there's a lot of variety in that.
But who is a mini-sweet right for?
And when might you book it?
I feel like a mini-sweet is good for people who have a little extra in their budget and
might want to be celebrating like a special occasion, you know?
So maybe you aren't the kind of person who cruises in sweets like us.
We can't afford to cruise in sweets.
That would mean we'd get to cruise like maybe once a year or even less.
So for us a mini-sweet might be a little bit of an extra splurge but not a major one.
Right?
Right.
I love mini-sweet.
Now this is my favorite cabin category.
Mini-sweet?
Mini-sweet, yes.
You mean within reason.
Within reason.
Your favorite would be like the ultra-sweet, right?
Of course.
Yeah.
Just not quite there yet.
Some day.
Maybe in our retirement years, Mr. Cruise's TV.
Maybe.
We shall see.
All right, let's bump it up to spa cabins.
We're going to talk about some specialty cabins here.
Spa cabins aren't really in their own league.
They're usually like a balcony or an inside or an outside that just has amenities.
Generally speaking, the nice thing about spa cabins is that you'll get to utilize some
spa discounts and you'll get to enjoy being physically close to a spa.
And there's a variety of cruise lines that offer this.
Carnival being one of the best.
They have their cloud night, excuse me, spa cabins.
And this is going to be good for someone who is maybe fitness-minded, who wants those
spa discounts, who plans to buy multiple spa treatments and would look forward to those
discounts.
It might be even good for someone who wants to be close to the gym because a lot of times
the spa and the fitness center are adjacent to one another or even a joint.
And so if you book a spa cabin, those cabins are typically located near that complex and
you can get to that area more often.
It might be also nice for someone who wants to access a thermal suite.
If the thermal suite is indeed close to your spa cabin, that might be something to consider.
Now, I think it's important to say that there are even people who cruise with kids or families
that book into spa cabins.
You don't have to be an adult traveler most of the time to book into spa cabins.
I'm Junior's cruise with us several times in spa cabins and he loves it.
He doesn't really get access to everything that we get access to, but he's getting older
and I think he wants to access.
He's like, I wanted the thalassa therapy pool.
I want the thermal suite.
And I actually think he was able to get into some of that last time, wasn't he?
I think he was.
So, yeah, he was.
He went into, didn't he go into like the steam room or something?
Yeah, he's getting to be a big boy.
I don't know what the age limit was on that.
Maybe it was 12 and he was 13 or something, but he was pretty stoked about that.
So spa cabins are a nice one.
Now let's talk about another specialty type of cabin that's kind of hard to find in rare
and we're going to call these family cabins.
They're out there, folks.
If you have seen Disney cruise ship or a carnival ship with a family harbor or maybe
some MSC ships, you look on their deck plans and you look at the many different cabin types
and you might stumble upon some family cabins.
And these are a little more difficult to score because they book up quickly, but these
are going to be good for people who have larger families.
Maybe you're maybe you have three kids.
Maybe you're like a family of five and a normal balcony or mini suite isn't going to actually
physically hold all of your family.
A friend of ours actually booked on carnival panorama just to get into the family harbor.
She booked a family harbor suite.
She has three kids and there was room for all of her kids and they have two bathrooms.
Disney does the same thing, two bathrooms or a bath, a bath in a half, something like that.
So very, very cool and something to consider if you're cruising with a larger family,
you have a little more on your budget.
These cabins are without a doubt going to cost you more because they take up a lot more
real estate, but they're fabulous and a good travel agent is necessary when finding a family
cabin.
You need that travel agent to hunt them down for you because they're really hard to find
and they sell out fast.
All right.
Switching over to the big guns, Mr. Cruise, doobsteebee.
Let's talk about suites.
So who am I be cruising in a suite?
High rollers, right?
You got a big budget.
Maybe you've worked really hard, you're in retirement and you've got some extra dough.
Why not spend it on a suite?
Maybe you're celebrating an amazing special occasion and anniversary.
Maybe you're cancer free, you just finished chemo, you just recovered from something.
There's all kinds of reasons that people, guys, that people book suites.
These are sometimes very special splurges and we love hearing those different stories.
Maybe you're doing a bucket list cruise too.
Maybe you know I always wanted to go to the Mediterranean and I'm going to do it in style.
I'm going to cruise in a suite.
Those are some reasons that you might book a suite.
Another reason I think people book into suites too is maybe that they might cruise a little
more infrequently and just say, look, I want to live the life when I go.
I want to cruise, right?
I was talking to someone like a business acquaintance the other day and she's like,
you know what?
I only go in one cruise a year.
I have two little kids.
I want a butler when I cruise.
I don't want to do anything.
I want them to handle every element of it.
She said that in the advertisement for her suite that she booked, they actually told
her that they would draw a bubble bath for her children.
I was like, okay, yeah, that's exactly why some people book a suite.
You just don't want to lift a finger, right?
You want more space.
You maybe want some separation from your kids.
It's not all retirees by any means.
It could be a lot of different people.
I told you I was going to get granular here, Mr. Chris' TV with what types of people my
book, each type of cabin.
That's pretty granular.
I know as big.
I would say for a suite, maybe you won the lottery.
You're talking about the butler thing.
You don't have to get a suite to get a butler.
You don't?
What do you just take your own butler?
Not if you go in the yacht club.
Yeah.
We're going to talk about that next.
There's ways around.
There's ways around.
So Mr. Chris' TV, that was the most perfect segue to our final cabin category we're going
to talk about today.
And that is the ship within a ship type of cabin because the thing is, is all of the
cabins that we discussed earlier today, every type of them can be found within the ship
within a ship concept.
So we're talking about elevated cruise areas like Norwegian's Haven, which is a complex,
separated off from the rest of the cruise ship where you have extra perks, extra amenities.
You might have a concierge, a butler, your own dining room, and also MSC's yacht club.
Right?
So you might book an inside cabin.
This was to your point.
You could book an inside cabin in MSC's yacht club and still have a butler.
Right?
So you don't even have to book a balcony.
And I know someone, Jessica, this is for you, who books into the yacht club, books an inside.
And she'll spend, you know, the same that she may be spent for a balcony outside of
the yacht club.
She'll just stay on an inside and get all the fun perks, right?
She'll get that extra super wonderful service, the private bar, the private pool, the butler,
the concierge escorted on and off the ship.
Now these vary, guys, Norwegian and MSC's ship within a ship concepts are a little bit
different.
Some include drink packages, some do not.
Some will do front of the line service for shows, some will not.
The butler thing varies a little bit by each cruise line and honestly kind of varies by
ship too.
But that's another direction that you can go is the ship within a ship concept.
And we're going to keep seeing that happen.
Right?
We're going to see something new from Princess coming out on Sun Princess.
They have a new area of their ship that is going to be sort of along these lines too.
So it'll be interesting to see how that goes.
So those are the types of cabin.
So step two was choose your cabin, right?
Step one was figure out your budget.
Second smart thing you need to do is pick your cruise cabin.
And number three, now you've chosen your cabin type.
How do you narrow it down?
How are you going to actually pick which cabin to pick on the ship?
So the smart thing to do here is to start with, and you said these words, Mr. Christmas
to you, this is your tip, I'm stealing it, you said start with proximity to your favorite
places, right?
So look at the deck plan.
You now know you want a balcony.
Okay, what do you want your balcony to be close to?
Do you want your balcony to be close to the upper pool deck and hot tubs?
Do you want to be near the buffet?
Do you want to be near the casino?
Do you want to be near the art gallery, the main dining room, the Piazza, the gangway?
Yeah.
Depends on the ship, right?
Depends on the cruise, yeah.
I think if we're on Royal Caribbean, I want to be near the Vitality Cafe.
You want to get your juice.
I want to get my juice.
Fresh squeezed juices and smoothies.
Yeah.
You're funny.
Isn't that funny that we actually thought about that we're on the ship, we're like,
we need to book a cabin closer to the Vitality Cafe.
Vitality Cafe, for those of you who don't know, is Royal Caribbean Spa Cafe that serves
on some ships, I believe it's Oasis class, maybe some others, I don't know, freshly squeezed
juices, smoothies, and some other health food things like energy bars and some little
things like that.
They also serve power aid and water and stuff like that.
Oh, and they have espresso, so it's an espresso bar as well, which is a great tip.
It's very cool.
So Mr. Cruise
Tips TV's cabin category on Royal Caribbean, close to Vitality Spa.
Yeah, so think about proximity.
Are you prone to motion sickness on land and do you need to preempt this?
If you need to make sure that you are in the most stable cabin on the ship, remember
low and center.
You want to be on a lower deck towards the middle and you want to avoid what we talked
about last week.
You want to avoid what we call extreme cabins.
So get yourself down lower on the ship and towards the center and you're going to feel
less motion.
If that's not an issue for you, you're probably going to have more options.
So what I'm about to say is the center of the ship is not the cheapest area on the cruise
ship, right?
So if you can open that up a little bit, if you can handle a little bit more motion and
you can choose a cabin that's going to be more forward or aft, you're not going to pay
the premium prices.
Cruise lines consider centrally located mid-ship cabins to be of greater value and they price
them higher.
So just a consideration there.
The last thing that you should do, no matter what, before you tell your travel agent, book
me into cabin A431, a low-hot deck on whatever ship, you should read reviews and search this
cabin like crazy to make sure there's nothing weird about it.
Different ways that you can do that specifically.
Number one, go to Cruise Critic, go to CruiseLine.com, go to the search feature and type in that
cabin number.
Type in Carnival Panorama B422.
Type in whatever it is and see what you can find.
You should also do an open-ended Google search on that cabin, same tactic, ship name, cabin
deck, cabin number and see if you can find a video tour on YouTube.
If you do that on Google YouTube tours, it should come up.
Just do your search, look for available videos or available photos and see what people have
to say.
There are cabins out there with idiosyncrasies.
I'm not saying they're haunted.
I'm just saying some of them have weird things.
There's a couple of cabins.
I think it's on Carnival Miracle, AFT that have hardware that shake and wiggle in the
room.
My brother was in one of these.
I've seen a YouTube video about one of these where there was something that just jiggled
and it was super frustrating.
This is stuff that you probably could find out if you Google and look for a review.
This could be a two-minute thing.
It's very quick.
You're going to find these things quickly if there's issues out there.
Of course, this is going to be really hard to do on a newer ship or a larger ship.
You can't expect that there's going to be a YouTube video for every single balcony,
but you might find that you need to see a video tour of that cabin to make your decision.
You may think, oh my gosh, this is so much smaller than I thought.
Oh, hey, amazing.
This is so much bigger than I anticipated.
Let's do it.
It'll help.
If you're a visual person and you want to just really take it to that next level, that's
our number five tip.
That's the five-step process, Mr. Khrushchev's TP, for smart ways to choose a cabin.
Now we're going to talk about how to get the best price on a cabin.
It's the bonus tips here because there are ways to save some money.
I think everybody's interested for the most part in saving money.
Let's talk about that.
How are you doing over there?
Doing good.
Doing good.
Holding up.
Yeah, I'm still stuck on things jiggling.
I think what you meant was rattling.
Rattling, jiggling, wiggling.
You're right.
I think that is what I meant.
Rattling, no jiggles.
Okay.
So can you tell you what?
Sometimes it's important to clarify these things.
It really is.
Okay, let's avoid cabins that jiggle.
Too funny.
All right, some tips for getting the best price on your cruise cabin.
First up, consider older cruise ships, right?
Think about it.
What are the most popular cruise ships?
They're the Any Cruise Lines newest ship.
They're at a premium.
They're going to charge more for them.
So that's where you can start.
Consider older ships.
That doesn't have to mean old, old.
Just has to mean not the most brand new ship in the fleet, right?
Number two, and this is critical.
Be date flexible and compare dates.
Not everyone can do that.
You're a teacher.
You've got a school break to accommodate.
You have kids who are on a school break.
You need to accommodate many, many reasons.
You're in an industry where you have limited travel season.
You've got to book that cruise at whatever week.
That's okay.
That works too.
But if you're looking for the ultimate way to save money on a cruise, date flexibility
is critical.
There's so much variety out there.
Another thing you can do is choose a lower cabin category.
So the cruise line is going to have like 10 different cabins in each category.
So like it'll be like balconies are called BA, BC, BD, BF, BFP, P, BV.
Find out which one of those is the lowest and cheapest and book that one.
It's probably exactly the same as the others in terms of actual structure, but you're probably
going to sacrifice cabin location.
But if you really need to save money, just find the lowest and cheapest letter naming
convention if they still have that at your cruise line.
Next up, definitely use travel agent.
Guys, travel agents, they get group discounts.
They can watch for price drops.
They work for large cooperative travel agency groups who can block off rooms and get group
discounts.
It's a thing.
And you can have them check for things for you as well.
Next up, consider booking a cheap cabin and paying to upgrade, bidding to upgrade.
Now, I don't recommend that you do this unless you're really willing to be, you know, stuck
with the cabin you originally purchased, danced with the girl you brought, right?
But at the same time, if you want to risk it, book a cheap cabin and bid to upgrade if your
cruise line offers that.
And the last tip that we have is to consider booking a guarantee cabin.
So basically, a guarantee cabin is a room with a reduced price that falls into a specific
cabin type.
So it'll be an inside, an outside, a balcony, whatever, right?
It's going to be that cabin type, but the cruise line actually selects the actual cabin for
you.
Now, you could end up getting lucky and you could get assigned a higher cabin category,
but it'll never go down.
So you're not going to pay for a balcony guarantee and end up in an inside, but you could pay
for a balcony guarantee and end up in a junior suite or a mini suite or something like that,
right?
So risk some people are willing to take.
But again, make sure that you're willing to dance with the girl you brought because
they're assigning that cabin to you and you do not get to change the cabin or pick your
cabin.
You are stuck with it.
Well, Mr. Cruise Oops TV, I think that that's all I had on my mind this week for how to
choose a cruise cabin.
Fun stuff, eh?
Very nice.
Very nice.
All right, guys.
Thank you for listening.
We hope that this was helpful.
Thank you again to CBO Doctor for the awesome review.
And thank you to those of you who were at Facebook.com forward slash cruise to TV and
voted in our cruise cabin poll.
Thank you.
Just during the podcast, the numbers went way up.
We now have 463 votes.
77 of you said you will take an inside cabin.
30 of you said you'll take an ocean view cabin.
316 of you are balcony people and 38 of you are living this sweet life.
So good stats.
Very interesting.
I like it.
All right, friends.
Have a wonderful rest of your week.
And until next time, we'll see you on the high seas.
Thanks for listening to CruiseTipsTV Unplugged.
If you like our show and want to know more, check us out at cruzetipstv.com.
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Until next time, we'll see you on the high seas.
♪♪♪♪