The Parthenon has attracted visitors to the Acropolis in Athens for centuries. Sometimes our lives take the most curious of paths. I’m a farm boy from Iowa, yet in 1992 I found myself working onboard a Princess cruise ship as a master dive instructor, certifying our passengers in scuba diving. Me, teaching scuba diving in the Caribbean? How could life get any better, I thought? But it did.
I was promoted to the ship’s tour staff, and spent the next couple of years exploring parts of the world I had only dreamed of visiting. But one thing I never dreamed of was being asked to be part of the team that would take out our then new ship Grand Princess which was about to make history as the world’s biggest cruise ship at the time. And this ship with its pioneering design was going to spend its inaugural season in the Mediterranean. It was the largest ship that had ever sailed in this destination, and we were charged with working out the logistics of bringing her into these ports. No cruise line had ever done it before.
We understood the challenges before us – to create a well-organized experience that would enable the ship’s 2,600 passengers to have just as good an onshore experience as we’d been providing to those sailing aboard our smaller ships for years. It meant rediscovering history, and working closely with local experts to design an extensive range of intriguing options. So, off I went to Europe as part of the advance team. Goodbye coral reefs.

Gaudi’s unique La Sagrada Familia cathedral in Barcelona is still unfinished more than a century after it was begun.
I was aware that a grand tour of Europe and the Mediterranean became a rite of passage for the British in the 18th century, where privileged young men spent the time between their university education and the start of their career with an extended tour of continental Europe. By the late 19th century the Grand Tour had become an American phenomenon, and young men and women traveled the world visiting the great European cities and the ancient sites of the Mediterranean.
I remember reading Mark Twain’s “The Innocents Abroad” in college, which chronicled his own Grand Tour by steamship in 1867, and became one of his best-selling books of all time. To think that here I was, following in these grand footsteps as I helped to plan a similar experience for thousands of passengers.
As part of our preparations we visited each Mediterranean port to see everything passengers would see, and make sure we were ready to handle getting people off the ship and to the various sites. After all, we were taking more passengers on tour than we had ever brought to that area before.
Over the next few weeks, our team would explore in detail with local experts the treasures of these great cities and ancient sites, trying to see them through the eyes of our passengers and drilling down to the finest details to design our tour plans.
My grand tour took me to Barcelona where I marveled at the modernist Antoni Gaudi’s famous cathedral, La Sagrada Familia; the Royal Palace in Monte Carlo, the dazzling residence and home to the Grimaldi family of Princess Rainier and the late Princess Grace; the statue of Michelangelo’s David at the Accademia in Florence, the center of the Renaissance.
Then there was Pompeii, the Roman resort tragically buried by volcanic ash from the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D., and one of the world’s most magnificently preserved ancient cities. And enchanting Venice with its famous canals, bridges and cobblestone streets, and the magnificent Doge’s Palace in St. Mark’s Square.
In Athens there were the glorious marble structures of The Parthenon, built in honor of Athena, goddess of wisdom. Then I traveled to Istanbul which has dominated the Straits of the Bosporus for 25 centuries and saw its 17thcentury Blue Mosque, renowned for its domes and minarets. And from Kusadasi I experienced Ephesus, a treasure of antiquity and historical legend where on its ancient streets Mark Antony and Cleopatra rode in procession and St. Paul preached against the goddess Artemis.
It was the grandest of tours. And in the summer, when Grand Princess finally debuted, all of our efforts paid off. The ship’s first Mediterranean season was incredibly successful. The ship was well received and the shore excursion program went even better than we even hoped and expected. Thousands of passengers experienced the collection of tours that our team had so carefully put together.
I went on to spend five more years in Europe before coming ashore into Princess’ corporate office to oversee the shore excursion program for our 17 ships around the world. Although I will never forget my first glimpses of these iconic destinations, you could say my Grand Tour continues to this day. And the best part of my job is knowing that we create magical “Grand Tour” experiences for newcomers to the Mediterranean on every voyage, and that they’ll share in the awe of seeing these unforgettable places just as generations of travelers have over the centuries – including me.






I have been a customer of Princess for over ten years. Early last summer, I began planning a group cruise for summer 2012. I looked at several different cruise lines, but chose Princess, the Mediterranean and Greek Isles, leaving June 5, on the Crown Princess BECAUSE of the great itinerary this particular ship offered. I was able to connect 40+ family and friends to join me, and deposit a cabin for this cruise. TODAY, seven months later, I discover on CRUISE CRITIC, that one major port, Monte Carlo, has suddenly been eliminated from our ports of call. HOW can this be? I called Princess immediately to ask if this was correct, and was told that yes, indeed, this port has been eliminated from the itinerary. Needless to say, this magnificent port is highly attractive and was listed on all of the brochures, and on every piece of paperwork involved in our cruise.(I could understand if the cruise was in progress, and this change needed to be made due to bad weather, high seas, or some other serious safety reason). After the Costa accident, and the recent fire on the other Costa ship, I almost had to sell my soul to keep many of our group from cancelling this cruise. Since this accident, most people are still afraid, and want no part of that operation, and even cruises in general. Believe me several of my group would have dropped out, if I hadn’t worked hard to convince them that Princess was a class act and completely separate from Costa, because we all know that Costa is owned by the same parent company as Princess. NOW as Princess loyal customers, we will too suffer an effect of this terrible disaster. I can only believe that this change is a way for Princess to cut costs by management, because of the terrible choice that captain made that day, and WE will now pay a steep price, because the company hired him in the firstplace. Anyone can easily see that by eliminating the fuel expense sailing from Rome to Monte Carlo, and just swing up to Livorno, there is a tremendous amount of savings involved. This is a horrible decision made by management! At this point, I am embarrassed for promoting Princess, humiliated that I believed Princess was above these kind of cheap practices, and furious with Princess for taking this out on and punishing those people who are still trying to take a cruise. We all deposited this cruise over eight months ago, and chose it for it’s particular ports of call. Our final payments are due next week. How unbelievable that even my final payment notice that came out Thursday, DID NOT mention this important change anywhere. Our flights have all been purchased, and there is no way to make any changes without major cost factors or I would walk away and never look back at Princess again.. What a terrible way this has been handled. I feel like I have just been pickpocketed by Princess Cruises. What a terrible disappointment before we even leave home!!!!!
Hi Amy,
We’re sorry for any disappointment this itinerary change has caused.
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback with us and please know that it has been shared with management. If you would like to discuss your concerns further, please call us at 1-800-Princess.
Hi, I’ve already booked the Ruby Princess 12 day Grand Mediterranean August 10, 2012, and ready to book excursions, and know exactly what I want, but I know there are other shore excursion companies out there with more to offer than the standards with Cruise.com – I just can’t find them. Can you help?
Hi Gail,
You are able to view our excursions on the Cruise Personalizer: http://bit.ly/bsGJZ.
We look forward to welcoming you onboard!
Hi, can you tell me more about the Grand Mediterranean Fly and Cruise ,14 Nights Cruise advertised in the Travel Magazine in the Weekend Argus in Cape Town ,South Africa. 11/12/2012.
Thank You
Hi Marion,
I apologize, but I do not have the travel magazine you mentioned. For information on all of our cruises please use the following link:
http://www.princess.com/find/search.do?resType=C
Would like to enquire about a cruise leaving Venice to Barcelona 15 september from Venice can you let me know any details, it includes flights at $4319 pp
thanks Lynda
Hi Lynda,
Thank you for your interest! To view pricing, itinerary, shore excursion, availability information please use the following link: http://bit.ly/wfziIN
For more information please call us at 1-800-Princess.
There was a European cruise in last ear’s brochure that left London, touched a port in France, a port or two in Spain, Gibralter, Monte Carlo, Rome (and Venice?) and returned to London, stopping at different ports.
I can’t seem to find that tour in this year’s schedule; any hope of a return engagement?
pc
Hi Pat,
We have a 17 day cruise on the Grand Princess which sails round trip London and visits Seville, Spain; Valletta, Malta; Venice, Italy; Split, Croatia; Corfu, Greece; and Gibraltar, Great Britain. We do have other itineraries which sail round trip from London but include visits to ports in France and more. To view these itineraries please use the following link: http://bit.ly/AdDIGb
I have wanted to go to Greece forever (since I was 15); now that my 50th wedding anniversary is coming up in June, we would like to take a a cruise in the Med and wondered which would be most appropriate bearing in mind that we cannot walk up a lot of hills. We were thinking of maybe 10 days. We have looked at several brochures and just get more confused. We also have pets to consider so anything on sale would be good too.
Hi Norma,
What a great way to spend a 50th wedding anniversary! We do have Greek Isles & Venetian Interlude cruises which range from 14, 12, and 7 days. In order to narrow down your options, you may want to use our online search tool. On our website you are able to select the itinerary you are interested in, the number of days, and the month you are interested in cruising. Please use the following link to view the 7 day cruises that may be good options for you to consider: http://bit.ly/mx68ZF
If you have any questions or need further assistance in selecting a cruise that fits your requests please contact your travel agent or call us at 1-800-Princess.
Hi we are planning our first ever cruise for September next year, can’t decide between the eastern meditterean or the Baltic cruise. Which do you suggest more appropriate for us a family with a 7 year old ? Thank you. We have been to western med by land tours twice.
Hi Lanny,
Both itineraries would be good for the whole family. I would recommend speaking to a travel agent and discuss your interests are (example: what you would like to see & experience during your cruise) and they will be able to better assist you in narrowing down the cruise that would be perfect for you. Also, if you have any additional questions, please call us at 1-800-Princess.
My husband and I are booked on the Ruby Princess for the Grand Med. trip starting May 30th. This will be our first Princess cruise and we can’t wait. Just reading everyone’s comments makes it more thrilling. We are spending a few extra days first in Barcelona and then at the end of the trip in Venice. Never been to Europe before so we need HELP! In your opinion, what are the “must see” things in each of the ports. I realize that it’s financially impossible to do something in every port, but don’t want to miss out on the important ones. Thanks.
Ruby is the best ……..we just got back from the same cruise…it was a life time experience..time flies by and an exciting trip comes to an end at the most romantic place in the world…. Venice……….!!!!! you must see every thing with open mind there is all help in the ship to guide you all……..ENJOY TO THE FULLEST>>>>FOOD IS GREAT………………….EVERY THING IS AN EXPERIENCE ….ENJOY!!!!!
Rome, the eternal city was high on our list. My problem, it was overwhelming…..there is so much to see….there is so much history….it was simply unbelievable that I was actually there.
HI! My husband and I are doing the Holy Land tour July 11 and are VERY excited abou that!
Can anyone tell us about the excursions in Egypt & Israel ( were thinking in Haifa going to do the Jerusalem wall etc and in Jerusalem doing the Dead Sea excursion)…Also, going to the pyramids twice cuz we want to do the Nile River cruise……Also , going on Grand again Christmas, but not been on it since they redid it!!! Anyone have any news on the new pizza restaurant and the library on that ship???? How is the Pacific Princess ??? Only been on the big ones!!!
Wanting to take a cruise to the Med. What is best one, best ship, and best time to go
Hi Ron,
Thank you for your interest.
Many passengers enjoy sailing to Europe outside of peak season which is from June 15- August 15. This is mainly due to tourist attractions being less crowded. The Grand Mediterranean is always a great choice. Where you’ll visit Rome, Venice, Athens and Istanbul and more! For more information on our Europe cruises please use the following link:
http://www.princess.com/learn/destinations/europe/index.html
Happy planning!
its an everyone dream to go with this kind of cruises and to tour to Europe but i think this is only for the rich people not for the poor and the less f ornate one but for me every time i see this picture and i see how nice and how beautiful this ship is and have to tour in Europe i feel like im in that cruise
I would be interested in hearing others experiences doing a “crossing” cruise. The cruise where they bring the ship from , say Europe to Miami in the winter and any that go from west to east in the spring.
I have done a Atlantic crossing from Montreal to Greenock, back in 1965, and that was in April.. Also have done the Grand Med, in Sept of 2009, which was absolutely marvelous!! Am looking to do another this fall, or next spring.
Anyway, was the crossing rough etc???
Hello,
I have cruised both Princess and Royal Caribbean. Hands down Royal was not a Nursing Home!! And the ship layout was not comparison!!
Tim
We took the 05/11 emerald princess to Baltic Sea/St.Petersburg cruise together with 16 friends, this is our second trip to Baltic sea, love the cruise, love the ship, we had a wonderful times on ship, wish princess would stay 1 more day @St.Petersburg to visit more place, love the visa wave ( Russia ) every port is beautiful……….
My husband and I are thinking of a tour cruise to the Baltic Sea and St. Petersburg. Anyone taken this cruise?
Hi Rebecca,
From majestic city of St. Petersburg and the beautiful panoramas of Stockholm to the fjords of the Norwegian coast, this itinerary is truly unforgettable. We have many cruise options for this breathtaking region. For more information please visit: http://bit.ly/ilFI2x
WE just returned A great tour but at 73 it was a bit much doing a tour everyday but you will probably never get there again so do them. Princess was as ss good as ever but they withheld info about a virus aboard the Empress Princess which I am not happy about
My husband and I have done that cruise twice with Princess, and loved it both times! To be in St. Petersburg with all that history, was overwhelming. And we loved Stockholm – the Old Town is such fun to walk around! Would do the cruise again
We did the 27 day crossing starting April 27. This was a fantastic trip. Our friends could not understand how we could go on a trip of that length – the time went very fast. It might be more relaxing to do the crossing returning to Ft. Lauderdale in the fall.
We plan to do the 31 day Grand Med in Fall 2012.
In response to the r c dunne comments – we knew about the virus. It was not a real problem for us.
We took all princess tours. Our only problem was that too much time was spent on eating events on the tours. If I am going to be in a port for 6 or 7 hours I want to be touring not eating. I can eat when I am on the ship. There should be options with a box lunch so more time can be spent touring.
We have visited Europe and some of the sights we will see on our Barc-Venice cruise next month. However, we have never been on a cruise there. It looks to me like many ports are 30 minutes to 90 minutes away from major cities we are to visit. Is an optional tour the only way to get safely into these towns? And is there anything to see or do in the ports? I will be booking several optional tours for the places we haven’t been or things we didn’t see previously, but just are unsure where we actually land on the ship. For example, Mykonos- it looks like we land in Mykonos but I don’t know if we are THERE or need to find some type of transportation when we get off the ship. Same thing with Monaco. We have been there and would like to just walk the streets. Is this do-able? How far is it from where we land to Monaco? Venice – we’ve been there but want to just go wander on our own. Water taxi or what is the most reasonable & reliable way to get over from port? This is all confusing for me. My other trips have been tours where you are right there, not miles away. Please help if you can! Thanks!
Hi Janet 0,
I am afraid I can’t help but my question is the same – which ports do you need to use the cruise transportation to get to the town – I have worked out we will have to for Florence and Rome but what about Monte Carlo and Mykanos. Does anyone know?
Hi Janet & Catherine,
Local taxis are often available in ports, and of course as you mentioned we have our shore excursions which are through the most reputable local tour agencies. To learn about what’s available in port and to read about distances from the pier to each city center and other attractions you are interested in please view the port guides available on princess.com (these will also be available onboard). Also, distances and other details are available in the shore excursions descriptions located in the Cruise Personalizer.
In Mykonos, the ship berths at Tourlos Bay Pier which is a small village about a 30 minute walk from the main city of Mykonos. Taxis are available pierside and throughout the city. In Monte Carlo, it is about a 15 to 20 minute drive from the pier to the city center. In Venice, we offer a motorlaunch service to and from a drop off location along Riva delgi Schiavoni which is within walking distance to St. Mark’s Square. A charge of $15 per person will be applied to your onboard account if you choose to use this motorlaunch service.
Hi Janet O !!My husband and I were in Mykonos in June and decided to walk to the warf and discovered on our own a boat that left and went to Delos!!!!!! I enjoyed it very much!!!If you are planning to visit the ruins at Delos do a bit of research to educate yourself and you will not need a tour guide and you can discover on your own!!!have fun Janet!!!This was one of my favorite places and I liked to be on my own!!!!the boat gets you back to the ship on time!! In Monaco we just walked the streets and it is very do-able!!!!!enjoy
hi Rob …..I can’t agree with u more…..my wife and I had never travelled to europe…..so on our Twenty-fifth we opted for the Grand Med. tour on board the Grand Princess……and as u discribed from Barcelona….france….rome….napoli….etc and venice…..we were married again on board between greece and venice…..since then we have cruised 12 more times, alone and with friends or just new friends that we make every new trip….the caribbean is nice with the perfect weather and easy island feel …..but u can’t beat the history and marvels of ancient worlds…..our next trip (shhhhhhh don’t tell my good wife)….to revisit the south pacific….ALOHA
HI FROM AUSTRALIA JOSEPH. YOU WILL REALLY LOVE THE BEAUTIFUL STH. PACIFIC ISLANDS.I HAVE DONE 7 CRUISES AROUND THE VARIOUS ISLANDS .ALL ARE TROPICAL ANDLAID BACK,AND YOU WILL ADORE THE PEOPLE I ALSO CRUISE IN EUROPE .ITS GREAT BUT NOT AS RELAXING ,AS THE SHIPS BERTH A LONG WAY OUT ON MOST PORTS SO YOU NEED TO GET BUSES TO AND FROM AND HAVE LESS TIME IN PORTS .WHEN YOU DO THE ISLANDS,TRY TO HAVE ‘WALA’ AS ONE OF THE PORTS .ITS MY FAVE,ALSO CHAMPAGNE IS.
We are booked for Aug 20, 2011 Barcelona to Venice. I see we stop in Livorno (Florence) on a Monday, unfortunately, when many of the major sites are closed. Is Michaelengelo’s David indoors or outdoors? Can you see this sculpture even when the site is closed? Any advice/suggestions about what you can do in Florence on a Monday? What sites do we miss? Are there substitutes?
Hi Stephen,
Michelangelo’s David is indoors in the Accademia Museum. Due to the Accademia being closed on Monday’s any of our excursions which would normally visit the Accademia would either have another site substituted or would not operate. For more information on substitutions or excursions which will not operate please view the shore excursion details on the Cruise Personalizer. We receive great feedback on the Lucca LH1-205 and Cinque Terre excursions. If you have any further questions please call us at 1-800-Princess.
there is a copy of david outside full size