Guests departing on their first Disney Cruise want to know
which restaurant to “pick” each night of their cruise. Well, since Disney makes things as easy as
possible, guests don’t have to “pick” as traveling parties are assigned to a
dining room rotation for either main dinner seating or late dinner seating, and
are assigned to a specific table in each dining room.
Rotational dining allows guests to rotate through each of
the main dining rooms during the duration of their cruise. The serving team assigned to your traveling
party will rotate with you and will serve you in each of the three main dining
rooms. If you choose to dine in Palo or
Remy, you will be served with dining teams assigned to those restaurants. As a cruise guest, you will be informed of
your dining rotation in two ways. One is
when you check in at the port and are given your Key to The World Card. There will be a series of letters and each
stands for a dining room and the letters are in the order of your dining
rotation. For example, on our most
recent cruise, our letters were “ERRAE.”
This meant we were dining in Enchanted
Garden the first night, Royal Palace
the second and third night, Animator’s Palette the fourth night, and Enchanted Garden on the last night of our 5 night
cruise. The second way you will be
informed is with the dining tickets in your stateroom—one for each person in
your party with the dining rotation listed, the location of each dining room,
and your table number. It is important
to take at least one of these tickets with you to your assigned dining room the
first night. No need after that to bring
your ticket along as long as you can remember your table number. If you forget, no worries; this is Disney and
they will look it up for you at the dining room.
While waiting in line to get the boy’s kid’s club bracelet at the Port Terminal
before boarding the ship for our most recent cruise, there was another mother
in front of me who indicated that this was their first Disney cruise (I think
our shirts give it away that we have done this before) and she asked how to
find out their dining rotation. I showed
her on your Key to The World Card how she could find out and told her about the
dining tickets she would find in her stateroom.
The main dinner seating is at 5:45 pm and the late seating
8:15 pm. We have always opted for the
main seating. If you wish to change your
dinner seating or rotation, check with Guest Services upon boarding the
ship. They will do their best to
accommodate you based on availability.
So, the only “picking” to do is what you are going to eat
when you arrive at your dining room for the evening. Unless, that is, you have opted to dine at
Palo or Remy, which charge an additional fee and require a reservation, or
choose more casual dining on Deck 9 or 11 respectfully depending on your Disney
ship.
I appreciate the dining rotation system and knowing which
dining room we will be dining in each night of our cruise. I don’t have a high need to know prior to our
cruise as we typically don’t make reservations for Palo or Remy—we have eaten
brunch at Palo on two cruises. Knowing
that the decisions are already made is comforting to me and my family. We stayed at an all inclusive resort in the Caribbean which required making same day reservations at
one of the seven on-site restaurants and it was an inconvenience to do that
each day.
Another great thing about rotational dining on a Disney
cruise is that your serving team gets to know your family, especially on longer
cruises. So, don’t be surprised if your
drink preferences are already waiting for you when you arrive at your table!
No comments:
Post a Comment