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Navigator, Caribbean Cruise ex Ft Lauderdale Return

Cruise Line: Regent Seven Seas Cruises
Ship: Seven Seas Navigator
Region: Caribbean
Departs: Jan 19, 2009
From: Ft Lauderdale (Pt Everglades)
7 Nights
from 2650.00 USD
Navigator, Caribbean Cruise ex Ft Lauderdale Return

Call 1300 30 80 81 to speak to our cruise specialist

Itinerary

Itinerary for Seven Seas Navigator departing Monday, 19 January 2009

DayPorts of call Arrives Departs
Day 1Ft Lauderdale (Pt Everglades)Embark5.00pm
Day 2Princess Cays, Bahamas10.00am4.00pm
Day 4San Juan, Puerto Rico8.00am11.00pm
Day 5Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands7.00am3.00pm
Day 6Grand Turk, Turks & Caicos2.00pm7.00pm
Day 8Ft Lauderdale (Pt Everglades)Disembark

Description

7 Night Cruise sailing from Ft Lauderdale roundtrip aboard Navigator. 7 Night Cruise sailing from Ft Lauderdale roundtrip aboard Navigator.

In the six-star tradition of Regent Seven Seas Cruises, the Seven Seas Navigator is destined for distinction. Occupying the uppermost niche in cruising, she offers her 490 guests an unusual level of luxury and some of the highest space and service ratios at sea. From her all-suite, all-ocean-view accommodations with their luxurious marble baths to her signature cuisine to her superbly attentive staff, she has few equals.

Highlights of your cruise include:

Ft Lauderdale, Florida
Ft. Lauderdale sits in the middle of the burgeoning megalopolis known as South Florida, which hugs the Atlantic coast from Miami in the south (a 35-minute car ride away) to Palm Beach in the north. It is the principal city in huge Broward County, two-thirds of which is swampland in the Everglades. What isn¿t swampy includes 23 miles of beaches and 28 municipalities.

San Juan
Puerto Rico's first inhabitants were the Taino Indians, who encountered Columbus in 1493. The Spanish quickly settled on the island, defending their territory against the Dutch and British. This is evident by the imposing fortresses of Old San Juan, namely the grandiose El Morro Castle, erected 140 feet above the sea and dominating the old section of this capital city. In 1897, Spain declared Puerto Rico an autonomous state, but after the Spanish-American War, Spain ceded Puerto Rico to the U.S. and residents were granted American citizenship in 1917.

Grand Turk
Just 7 mi (11 km) long and a little over 1 mi (2.5 km) wide, Grand Turk, the capital and seat of the Turks & Caicos government, has been a longtime favorite destination for divers eager to explore the 7,000-foot-deep pristine coral walls that drop down only 300 yards out to sea. On shore, the tiny, quiet island is home to white-sand beaches, the National Museum, and a few wild horses and donkeys, which leisurely meander past the white-walled courtyards, pretty churches, and bougainvillea-covered colonial inns on their daily commute into town. The main settlement on the island is tranquil Cockburn Town, and that's where most of the small hotels-not to mention Pillory Beach-can be found. Although it has the second-largest number of inhabitants of all the Turks & Caicos islands, Grand Turk's permanent population has still not reached 4,000.

Call Now 1300 308081 or email res@platinumcruising.com

   
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