
Cinnamon Beach on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands is one of the most beautiful beaches you’ll ever encounter
After anchoring just off Guadeloupe on Christmas Day we had two more stops on our cruise. First up was St. Barts, a decidedly upscale island we visited just a year ago. We went ashore without any clear agenda but after walking through the main town with every elite designer store you can imagine we decided to to go lunch at a restaurant that we’d loved last year. It was a significant hike up a pretty steep hill but once we got there we remembered why we liked it so much. The food was really good – it is, after all, a French island – but the views are just spectacular. We got there an hour before they opened for lunch so we just sat there with a glass of wine and a book and the view and chilled. Until they started serving food and that made it even better.

Lunch at Beefbar in St. Barts was the exact same table as a year ago, with pretty much exactly the same view
The final stop then was St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands. We went ashore thinking we’d probably go to a beach, though there was a chance maybe we’d find something charming in the town. Not so much charm so we took a local taxi out to Cinnamon Beach. It was a stunningly beautiful beach but the services available were more limited than we like. You could rent chairs but they weren’t very comfortable, the restaurant was mostly just junk food, and it was all way more crowded than we’re used to. So we spent a couple hours on the beach in the shade and then headed back to the ship for lunch.

More of Cinnamon Beach. Beautiful but very limited services available.
Now, then, the big question is whether we’ve become cruise people. And the answer is decidedly no. The shipboard experience was just about perfect. Great spaces, great food, great service, good entertainment in the evenings, good drinks, very comfortable room, a lot of opportunities to meet and socialize with fellow passengers. The onboard experience was everything I could have hoped for.

The restaurants available included a great sushi bar. And while normally we avoid the carbs in rice sometimes it’s worth splurging. This splurge was definitely worth it.
Once ashore, though, we just don’t enjoy having a few hours to “explore,” maybe in an organized tour or maybe on your own, before it’s time to jump back onto the ship. If we’re going to the beach there are way better options than what’s available for a day pass in a big crowd of people; we just never had a particularly good beach experience in any of our stops. And if we’re going to a city – The Ritz does a lot of tours in the Mediterranean – we want more time to explore the city. In other words I loved everything onboard and didn’t care for pretty much anything ashore except for one good lunch.
Thus the question is answered. We’re not cruise people.

The harbor in St. Barts

Can you tell it’s a Christmas cruise?

Captain Keith gave us a tour of the bridge. Fifty years ago I spent a lot of time on the bridge when I was on a ship in the navy, but that was a World War II-vintage ship. This bridge was very different!

A lot of the entertainment onboard was when we would be eating (we eat late…) but some of what was playing when we were around was pretty good!

Some of the bartenders hamming it up, with our new friend Delila joining them on the end

Another great dish. The food was universally great, without a buffet line to be seen.

The moonrise over the Caribbean. Long ago I learned to love being out at sea at night.

The night I ran into some show girls

And finally no, this isn’t the Caribbean. This was the view from our dining room when we returned to New York. This isn’t exactly awful either.