Tampa has been on the Holland America sailing calendar since 1983, when the old Veendam started cruising from there during the winter season. In a way it was the beginning of the cruise boom for the western side of Florida as the only other cruise ship calling at Tampa was the small Vera Cruz. Since that time the cruise business has flourished and today there were three cruise ships in port. From Carnival, NCL and Holland America. Together good for handling close to 7000 guests during today’s sailing. Normally the ships come in very early in the morning trying to be docked by 06.00 am to start the clearance procedures as timely as possible. The Ryndam arrived around 08.00 as she had had a medi-vac the day before which caused a considerable delay. A critically ill patient was disembarked and but I can luckily advise that all is going well and a full recovery is expected.
Because of the later arrival, I could join the ship at the decent time of 08.30 in the morning. Normally they try to get all the crew and related persons onboard by approx. 06.30 as the C.B.P does not prefer to have crew joining during the disembarkation process. I was impressed to see ship, shore and CBP working together in such a fantastic way. It ensured that the guests were off the ship, no more than 45 minutes later than normal.
The only challenge with Tampa is, is that the port is located at the north side of Tampa Bay and the Cruise Terminal is located in the far N.W. corner of that port and can only be reached through a narrow channel. That makes the voyage inwards, through the whole of Tampa Bay, last for about 4 hours, from pilot to dock and that is a long stretch for the Captain on the Bridge. It can get even worse when “very low hanging clouds develop”, because then the Harbor Master is forced to close the port. It is simply not possible to navigate some of the narrow channels safely for a large ship, without decent visibility. Ships are then kept outside and that of course plays havoc with the disembarkation of the guests and their subsequent flights. Sometimes those low hanging clouds do not dissipate or lift until noon time and that is rather painful for everybody, for those who are leaving and for those who are joining.
As a result there are now plans to develop a cruise port at Port Manatee which is just inside the Bay, inwards of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge and not as much affected by reduced visibility as downtown Tampa is. But when that will come to pass is anybody’s guess. It would certainly make the cruise ship captains happy.
With that as a background I stepped on board the good old Ryndam for the first time since 1996 when I was Staff Captain on her. This will probably be the last time as well, as she will be transferred together with her sister ship the Statendam, to our sister company P&O Australia for cruises down under.
During the coming three weeks I will be carrying out a whole load of trainings and support activities starting with the captain, all the way down to the laundry. Part of it will be refreshing procedures and improving knowledge and part of it will be raising the bar as far as insight and experience is concerned.
The Ryndam will make two cruises during this 3 week period. We are starting with a 7 day cruise: Tampa – Key West – Roatan – Santo Tomas – Costa Maya – Tampa.
This is followed by a 14 day cruise: around the Caribbean. Tampa – Key West – San Juan – St. Thomas – St John’s (Antigua) – Castries & Soufriere – Willemstad – Oranjestad – Grand Cayman – Tampa.
I sailed for about 5 seasons from Tampa as a Captain (and a lot more as deck officer and Staff Captain; in total well over a hundred voyages) first with the old Noordam and then with the current Veendam and I always preferred the 14 day run. Partly as it meant only sailing Tampa Bay once in the 14 days but partly as it means doing the whole Caribbean circle, it brings a lot of variation to the ports. The East Caribbean is considerably different from the South West Caribbean.
We started our cruise under a good omen. Nice sunny weather and no wind when sailing out. Tomorrow in Key West the forecast calls for partly cloudy, leaning to overcast and also no wind. That will mean a pleasant arrival; as Key West is not much fun during windy conditions.