Time to move on?
Last Updated: 12:01am BST 21/06/2007
Cruising is no longer just for the rich and the retired. Jane Archer
explains why the QE2 was left behind.
Copied from -
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/main.jhtml?xml=/travel/2007/06/21/etqe2120.xml
- also see this pages for many interesting comments people posted.
So we will soon be saying a sad farewell to QE2. In 17 months it will
be sailing from the UK for the last time, en route to the Middle East,
to end its days as a luxury floating hotel in Dubai.
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Unfortunately for the QE2,
'age does matter' |
I could hear the protests loud and clear as soon as I read that
Cunard had sold the ship. Over its 40 years it has become an old friend
to many people who are prepared to overlook its wrinkles because it is
QE2 – the most famous ship in the world.
But all good things come to an end. Like the (original) Mini and
telegrams, QE2 was a very good thing – it would not have survived 40
years if it were not – but the world has moved on, as has cruising.
When QE2 was built in the 1960s, a cruise holiday was something only
the rich and retired could afford. Men and women were expected to dress
for dinner every night and few expected anything quite so decadent as
cabins with balconies.
Not any more. Cruising is no longer about black tie dinners – even on
formal nights passengers invariably turn out in casual gear – or big
bank balances, thanks to all the budget lines that have sprung up.
It is also ageless, appealing as much to families and couples in
their 30s and 40s as those who have hit their half-century or already
retired.
And just look at what is on board today’s ships. Royal Caribbean
International is an extreme example with its rock-climbing walls,
ice-skating rinks and surf parks, but modern vessels have cabins with
balconies for all, not just those who can afford a penthouse, as is the
case on QE2. They have three, four, even five swimming pools, kids’
clubs and teen areas.
Many have luxurious spas that rival some of the top health clubs on
land. In 2008 Celebrity Cruises is launching a new ship, Solstice, with
an AquaClass category of cabins, so spa lovers can spend even more time
in their favourite place. There will also be speciality restaurants,
often linked to a celebrity chef, giving a gourmet alternative to the
main dining room.
Even Cunard’s other ships – QM2 at the moment, Queen Victoria as from
December 2007 – eclipse QE2 in terms of facilities. The former has a
luxurious spa (QE2 does have a spa, but nothing like that of its big
sister) and planetarium.
Queen Victoria will have a Cunard museum and, harking back to the
good old days, a top-deck Upper Grills Terrace reserved for those who
can afford a suite or penthouse.
I have no doubt that QE2 lovers will say age doesn’t matter, that
they don’t want any of these things, that actually QE2 is an ocean liner
and that small cabins and a lack of balconies is a small price to pay
for the elegance and history of sailing on the world’s most famous ship.
Unfortunately, though, age does matter. Not only does it cost a lot
of money to keep QE2 going – refits and refurbishments over the past 40
years have cost more than 10 times what it cost to build the ship in
1967 – but Cunard has to look to the future, to a time when fewer
passengers are happy to trade their expectations for a slice of history.
Cunard said it would keep QE2 going as long as it could be maintained
and there was demand, but realistically it is time to call time. The
cruise line probably can’t believe its luck – $100 million and a
guarantee that the ship will be kept in a manner to which it has become
accustomed, which has to be a better end than a final trip to the
scrapyard. |