The Absolute Craziest Thing I Bring On A Cruise – But I Would Not Cruise Without It!

As an Amazon Affiliate, we may earn a commission on eligible purchases made through our referrals. Frequent Floaters has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. FrequentFloaters and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers. Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities.

I am now up to 385 nights elite credit with Norwegian Cruise Lines and on my way to maybe one day reaching the pinnacle of their current status program, that is, Ambassador at 700 nights. To be clear I have not spent 385 night onboard NCL ships but thanks to extra night credits for booking suites, insiders deals and more I have bulked up my totals somewhat quickly over the past few years. In fact on my Alaska adventure I am currently documenting on the blog I got a staggering 35 nights credit for a 7 day cruise (honestly, I am not sure how I got quite this many as I was only expecting 28 nights with all my stacked deals).

On the topic of nights – an ultra soft bed is a must for me. I can not sleep on a hard bed more than a few nights without suffering, not just lost sleep, but pain the following day. At home, on top of my pillow top mattress, I have a 3″ memory foam “egg crate” mattress. It is beyond dreamy. Not only is it soft but it breaths so you sleep like on a cloud – yeah, it really is THAT amazing.

But could I have this on a cruise?

Why not you ask?

I agree!

When I first approached my wife with the idea of bringing a massive 3″ mattress pad on our next cruise she was less than enthused and thought I had lost it.

But I had an idea! 🙂

You see there are these amazing things called space bags. By carefully folding and then rolling this beast into a tiny “hot dog” if you will and then putting it into IKEA 99 cent bags it will slide with the help of luggage straps to hold it small.

The next step, that we do day one on the cruise, is explain to the room steward that we are going to need to borrow a vacuum the last day of the voyage. Yes, they look at you strangely but once they make the bed the second night of the cruise they understand and are rather amazed what we brought with us from home.

Now before anyone comments something like: “you know you can ask them for one of these” – no you can’t! You can ask for a thin, cheap very used and beat up 1″ one that is nothing like the one I use and love.

The final bits to this crazy puzzle we need to make it work are a queen size fitted sheet. We get one is a strong color to differentiate from the white sheets used onboard. Oh, we also like our own ultra thin pillows so they come as well and we use colored pillow cases for those so they too do not get mixed in with ship laundry!

Now this does take up most of a large bag of luggage so we plan for that. But we still do have room in it for the other conveniences from home that we simply love on a cruise like:

Now I am not suggesting anyone else bring a massive queen size mattress topper with them on their next cruise, but just so you know it is totally possible – with some creativity and work.

Your turn. Tell me are there some, err, unique things that you always bring from home to make your cruise adventure just that much better? – René

Follow Frequent Floaters on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and our magazine on Flipboard. You can subscribe to our once a day e-mail blast here! <-LINK

Follow Frequent Floaters on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and our magazine on Flipboard. You can subscribe to our once-a-day e-mail blast here! <-LINK 

Frequent Floaters has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. FrequentFloaters and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers. Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities.

Responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

René de Lambert
René de Lamberthttp://www.FrequentFloaters.com
René de Lambert has been a travel blogger for over 10 years covering the travel industry - including cruising.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Do you have a post concerning getting extra nights on Norwegian or other cruise lines? I am a Platinum Latitudes member approaching Sapphire. Thanks for the info.

  2. I’m not sure how crazy it is and it certainly doesn’t take up the better part of a suitcase ;), but Mrs. DLPTATL insists on bringing a liquid anti-bacterial hand soap pump for our bathroom sink. She swears it keeps her healthier than using the bar soap provided by the ship. We usually make it through 1/2 to 2/3 of it and then she leaves it behind. She swears that the cabin attendants use what’s left.

    The thing I haven’t started bringing yet, but plan to for our next European cruise, is an empty wine suitcase with slots for 6 or maybe event 12 bottles. We end up buying at wineries, independent wine stores, and occasionally duty-free on every cruise we’ve taken in Europe and end up wrapping bottles in socks and plastic laundry bags in our checked luggage, but think this would be a much better solution. I would note that we primarily sail on Oceania, a line that allows us to bring bottles back on board form excursions, no questions asked (though the official policy is no more than 3 bottles per cabin per sailing). We just got back from a 12-day on the new Vista and ended up bringing back three bottles of wine, a bottle of whisky, and a 375ml of a cordial all bought in port except the whisky that was purchased on the ship as an exclusive partnership. NOTE: This wouldn’t work on a lot of cruise lines that don’t allow guests to bring wine on board, but for those that do…

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

EXPLORE

RELATED