In this post I'll talk about the ship and our experiences. In subsequent posts, I'll talk about the ports we visited and activities.
The Freedom is a huge ship, carrying about 3600 people at max capacity. It's 1100 feet long and 158,000 tons. It was one of the largest cruise ships until Royal Caribbean introduced the Oasis of the Seas last year. It was launched in 2006, so it is a fairly new ship. It has similar features to the Navigator of the Seas (earlier post), including the Rock Climbing Wall and ice skating rink, similar food offerings and on board activities. This ship has extra stabilizers because of its size, and the ride was extremely smooth. We did have extraordinarily calm seas this week, so that really helped.
Shadows of people on deck for sail away from Port Canaveral.
We also enjoyed the ice show, called Freedom On Ice, and I thought this was a better show than the one on the Navigator.
We saw the "Headliner" show with the magician Drew Thomas. You may remember him from "You've Got Talent" . I thought it was more show than magic, but the illusions were interesting.
The funniest show is called "The Quest." It's held on the last night and attracts more of the 20s -40s crowd. They put a wooden floor over the ice rink and the theater is standing room only. The audience is divided into teams and each team has 2 representatives that have to complete each "quest" or challenge with help from their team in the shortest time possible. Near chaos reigns as the quests get more and more, shall we say, interesting. Only attend this show if you have a sense of humor, and you don't have to participate. Observers have fun, too!
On the last sea day, I saw the kids all dressed up and having a circus themed activity. I don't think there were hundreds of kids on board, due to the time of year, but they seemed to be having a lot of fun.
With such a large ship, you would think there would be long lines and no free deck chairs, and people everywhere. We didn't find that to be the case. The adults only Solarium pool area was usually full, but many other chairs were always available on several decks. We also found a very quiet place on deck where we liked to go for the sail away from each port. It's on Deck 4, at the aft of the ship, either port or starboard side (on this ship the starboard side was the smoking side).
We had to try some of the specialty drinks, here are 2 frozen lemonades with lemon flavored vodka. The Schooner Bar is a quiet place and the spot to go for the trivia contests.
There were a lot of places we never went to: The Crypt disco for one. And we bypassed the art auction this time. I think there were 3 different auctions on this 7-day cruise. I made use of the fitness center and the spa, especially when it was too windy or hot to walk the outside track. This ship is so large that the track says 4.5 laps is one mile.
I was pleasantly surprised by the amenities and service on this ship. They were excellent.
Next post: The ports of call.