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Inside Cunard's 'Queen Victoria' as She Sails the Norwegian Fjords

July 19, 2011 at 5:03 PM | by | Comments (3)

She's 90,000 gross registered tons, 964.5' long, goes as fast as 23.7 knots and up to 3,003 people can call her their temporary home at any given time, but these numbers mean nothing until you're onboard, feeling Cunard Line's massive Queen Victoria smoothly maneuver around lush islands in the Norwegian Fjords. The QV towers over town like Stavanger and positively dwarfs the smaller settlements of Flåm and Geiranger—other stops on her Norwegian Fjords & Waterfalls itinerary—but on the inside, she's a city all her own.

Before you sail on her—or either of her two sister ships in the Cunard fleet, the Queen Mary 2 and Queen Elizabeth—you have to understand something. This is no party ship; there's no 3-foot-long plastic "souvenir" drink cups being pushed poolside, no "Hairiest Chest" competition under a hot Bahamas sun and no long buffet lines for chafing dishes full of veal cutlet.

Instead, for every "no" there, the Queen Victoria lays on the class with proper afternoon tea service, tango lessons in the two-story ballroom and formal dining with Baked Alaska desserts individually flamed in front of you. It's more active, aspirational luxury than let-it-all-hang-out vacation laziness and the ship's amenities completely reflect this approach.

There's a theatre, but it's three stories with reservable private boxes. There's a shopping mall of sorts, but it's the opposite of flashy and capped with a Brit-made clock and grand staircase. The bars reflect Cunard's nautical traditions, and if there's not a live piano player, there's a harpist or a band or a full-fledged small orchestra. The internet lounge and library are somewhere you'd want to hang out even if you weren't at sea, and that's saying a lot.

And oh yes, there are pools. The QV follows the modern cruise ships style of opening up the Lido deck for two pools, one middle and one aft, surrounded by a tight grid of sun loungers. Here the Brit in her shows through again, since there's the option of laying back on a wood steamer chair with a large Winter Garden available for cooler trips where stepping in a swimsuit isn't exactly the most appealing thing.

Now keep in mind that this is a British ship, with the exception of some decidedly American things like charging in dollars and offering American bacon on the breakfast menu. Passengers have the option of a Full English breakfast, a huge range of tea, a spacious pub complete with pub trivia, the aforementioned afternoon tea service...and class divisions. The majority of passengers are in regular staterooms, whether inside, outside or balcony and they dine in the two-story Britannia restaurant. If you pony up the cash for a suite, you're instead a Grills guest, meaning you have access to either the separate Princess and Queens Grill restaurants, a lounge with its own tea time, and two outdoor decks near the funnel.

For the technical bits of the ship—the bridge, the Medical Center, the spa, etc—head over here to our series of exclusive interviews with the coolest crew onboard. Or, you know, there's always the official Cunard site on the Queen Victoria.

Disclosure: We traveled to Norway onboard the Queen Victoria as a guest of Cunard, but all images and opinions are entirely our own.

[Photos: Cynthia Drescher for Jaunted]

Comments (3)

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Photo Gallery

This gallery of photos of Cunard's Queen Victoria is simply impressive. The photos show the ambiance of the ship better than the cruise brochure offered at the travel agency.

Wonderful!

Wonderful photos. The ship is beautiful. Thank you for all the posts about the ship, I have really enjoyed it. I hope you talk about each of the ports you visited, I would love to learn more about them.

@Phamer55

Oh, the Norwegian port stories are coming! I especially can't wait to share some of the photos. Just spreading out the stories to keep readers like you coming back. Thanks!

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