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How to know if you’re up for 103 days at sea
How to know if you’re up for 103 days at sea
When Lupe King stepped aboard Cunard’s newly minted Queen Elizabeth in New York for its maiden world voyage in January, not only was it the beginning of the ship’s global service but also King’s first day of retirement.
We should all be so lucky.
King was doing what a lot of us wish we could do, except worry about the practicality of leaving home for months at a time.
She learned that, though the desire to go to sea is impulsive, the planning can’t be.
For their first globetrotting adventure, Lupe and husband Daniel prepared for six months before leaving on their multimonth sojourn, arranging for everything from automatic billing to a live-in pet sitter. Both have been teaching at a Milwaukee community college, where he continues to work as an instructor.
The Kings are but two of nearly 800 passengers on Queen Elizabeth’s debut circumnavigation who will call the vessel home for 103 days while they visit 38 ports worldwide.
Compared with other world travellers, however, the Kings are just getting their feet wet. The record for globetrotting is held by a couple who have spanned the globe 25 times with Cunard and another couple who have spent more than 11 years, in total, aboard one or another of the line’s vessels, said Robert Howie, the hotel manager of the 90,900ton Queen Elizabeth.
Avid challengers to the world cup of cruising are Raymond and Leonnie Petitpren, with homes on the Gold Coast of Australia and near Daytona Beach, Fla.
They have circumnavigated the globe 15 times,13 with Cunard.
For this couple, cruising is almost an addiction. When not globetrotting, they take Christmas cruises or weeklong sailaways.
In particular, this maritime pair not only enjoy the ports, especially discovering unique restaurants at each stop, but also mingling with people of all nationalities, seeing old worldvoyager friends, sharing camaraderie among passengers and crew, and, like many others, participating in the pomp and circumstance aboard Cunard’s very British trio of oceangoing queens: Elizabeth, Mary and Victoria.
The Petitprens, for instance, relish ballroom dancing, a popular staple on the ship, as well as the line’s many formal nights; indeed, for about a third of the evenings aboard the vessel, tuxes and gowns are de rigueur, while for the remainder suit jackets are required.
The regally appointed Queen Elizabeth struck a chord with the Petitprens.
"We think people just look better in formal attire," Raymond Petitpren noted. |
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