A Radisson Seven Seas Cruises Cruise
Radisson Seven Seas Cruises
Cruise Ships
Sail in supreme comfort on a line that consistently garners six-star ratings.
Experience yacht-like intimacy and deluxe oceanview staterooms and suites,
including many with balconies. With complimentary wines, Judith Jackson spas,
a Le Cordon Bleu restaurant, and more, luxury not only goes exploring -- it
also gracefully defines every detail.
Sailing on seven-night voyages from Tahiti, the Paul Gauguin is an extension
of the informal, relaxing environment of Polynesia. With American attention to
luxury and comfort and a French flair for casual sophistication, the ship
radiates warmth, informality, and openness. Here, the constraints of formal
wear, tuxedos, and ties are forgotten and the only dress code is relaxation.
Excellent wines from France, California, and other vineyard-dotted domains
flow freely at lunch and dinner in three restaurants. There is a specially
designed, retractable watersports platform, where guests may conveniently
launch a kayak, try a little waterskiing, or set out for a scuba diving
expedition.The Radisson Diamond combines the spacious luxury and refinement of
a grand oceanliner with the intimacy and service of a private club to offer
the ultimate cruise experience. Her inimitable profile is owed to the
twin-hull design, which makes for a smooth, stable ride and the spaciousness
of a much larger vessel. Life aboard the Diamond is civilized and unhurried.
Each stateroom includes a spacious sitting room where you can dine in privacy,
day or night, with the view from a picture-window; over 70% of staterooms
offer private balconies. The Diamond operates a distinctive Panama Canal
program featuring Costa Rica and the Caribbean in winter, with summers devoted
to the sunny Mediterranean.Christened in March 2001, The Radisson Seven Seas
Mariner is the world's first all-balcony, all-suite vessel. Sweeping glass
doors open onto your private balcony, so you can sit back in a lounge chair,
sip a drink from your in-suite bar, and watch the world go by right from your
indoor/outdoor living room. There are four restaurants, all of which offer
single open-seating dining. Each night's dinner venue selection is a most
pleasant quandary, with an exclusive Cordon Bleu restaurant and a poolside
grill bar from which to choose. And, in the six-star tradition of Radisson
Seven Seas, the Mariner provides the highest level of personalized service,
with a staff-to-guest ratio of 1:1.6.The Seven Seas Navigator is the largest
of the six-star Radisson fleet, yet it's perhaps the most personal. Instead of
endless corridors of featureless cabin doors and noisy, crowded reception
areas, the surroundings are as intimate as a private club, and as individual
as you. Glass-walled elevators rise through three decks of airy lounges,
shops, clubrooms, and restaurants. The International Streamline style of the
1930s is very much in evidence, while the luxurious furnishings have the
graceful ease and sensuous curves of an Erte drawing. All is calm and quiet,
befitting the style of a small prestigious hotel that serves guests who are
more like old friends than simply names or numbers.During the fall and winter,
the yacht-like 180-guest Song of Flower is at home in Arabia, the Indian
Ocean, and the exotic lands of Asia. She follows the sun northward in the
spring and summer, cruising the Mediteranean & Baltic Seas.
Paul Gauguin
Radisson Diamond
Seven Seas Mariner
Seven Seas Navigator
Song of Flower
Renaissance Cruises cruise or Princess Cruise Line cruise or got to the cruise
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