My husband reminded me of this one the other day and I wanted to share it with you all.
A little while after we got married my husband went out to another ship and I stayed home since they couldn't get me on the same boat. Because of his rank onboard, he is allowed to sign people on for $15/day, as long as that person stays in his cabin. While I was on I had full passenger privilege (important for story), which was great because I could use the casino and eat in the dining rooms instead of the buffet.
Anyway, my husband knew some people who ran the tours desk, so he arranged for us to go on a snuba diving tour (like scuba, but easier for us beginners). I went as a passenger (and paid full passenger price) and they arranged for my husband to go as the crew escort. Every tour has at least 1 crew member with it. This is to ensure that A) the tour guides are doing what they should and B) that all the passengers make it back to the ship. The crew escort has to fill out a form about how everything ran. This is standard practice. I had an incident when I was a tour escort in Florence where the tour guide told the bus driver that everyone was there and we could go 5 minutes early. Had I not stopped them, the 2 passengers that were clearly visible a block away headed towards us would have had no way to do the 2 hour drive back to the port. See - we're needed.
While we were waiting to depart my husband was answering some questions for a passenger and said 'don't worry I don't want to miss my tour either'. Another passenger overheard and started in on my husband about how crew shouldn't be allowed on the tours and that he had taken a place away from a paying passenger. My husband explained the concept of tour escorts to this AHole, explaining more than once that the spot he was in was not nor would it ever have been open to passengers. It took 5 or 6 tries before he begrudgingly allowed him to get back to helping herd the sheeple off to their tours.
To top it off at the end of the cruise there was a formal complaint from him stating that crew should not be escorting tours, instead that those spots (which are not saleable) should be sold to passengers.
A little while after we got married my husband went out to another ship and I stayed home since they couldn't get me on the same boat. Because of his rank onboard, he is allowed to sign people on for $15/day, as long as that person stays in his cabin. While I was on I had full passenger privilege (important for story), which was great because I could use the casino and eat in the dining rooms instead of the buffet.
Anyway, my husband knew some people who ran the tours desk, so he arranged for us to go on a snuba diving tour (like scuba, but easier for us beginners). I went as a passenger (and paid full passenger price) and they arranged for my husband to go as the crew escort. Every tour has at least 1 crew member with it. This is to ensure that A) the tour guides are doing what they should and B) that all the passengers make it back to the ship. The crew escort has to fill out a form about how everything ran. This is standard practice. I had an incident when I was a tour escort in Florence where the tour guide told the bus driver that everyone was there and we could go 5 minutes early. Had I not stopped them, the 2 passengers that were clearly visible a block away headed towards us would have had no way to do the 2 hour drive back to the port. See - we're needed.
While we were waiting to depart my husband was answering some questions for a passenger and said 'don't worry I don't want to miss my tour either'. Another passenger overheard and started in on my husband about how crew shouldn't be allowed on the tours and that he had taken a place away from a paying passenger. My husband explained the concept of tour escorts to this AHole, explaining more than once that the spot he was in was not nor would it ever have been open to passengers. It took 5 or 6 tries before he begrudgingly allowed him to get back to helping herd the sheeple off to their tours.
To top it off at the end of the cruise there was a formal complaint from him stating that crew should not be escorting tours, instead that those spots (which are not saleable) should be sold to passengers.
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