How clean are the pools on your cruise ship?


Enjoying a dip in the pool is a great way to spend the time at sea on any cruise, but have you ever stopped to think how clean the pools really are, especially if there are lots of young ones using them?

That was the question raised by cruise director Sally MacMillan in the Sydney Morning Herald, who pointed out that pools on cruise ships are generally quite small (because of the space and weight they take up), and are often very busy.

These two factors can conspire to limit the amount of enjoyment to be had at the pool, with a ten-day family cruise typically being incomplete unless the pools are closed several times for cleaning after a child has had an accident.

This can be incredibly annoying for those wishing to use the pool, especially if you’re holidaying without children of your own. But then that’s what adult-only cruises are for. And it’s better to be inconvenienced for a short while in order to be able to enjoy clean facilities.

That being said, Ms MacMillan takes the opportunity to remind parents of the rules that do exist on most cruise ships, even if they are often ignored.

“Let’s be clear here – if your child is not toilet trained, whether or not he or she is wearing ‘swim nappies’, whether he or she is 10 months or 10 years old, they are not allowed in the pool,” she says. “Any pool on the ship.”

Indeed, with the recent debate over the safety of pools on cruise ships for young children following the drowning of a six-year-old aboard the Carnival Victory earlier this year, parents would be well advised to consider alternative activities if their children aren’t ready for the pool.

Boudicca docks in Belfast after illness outbreak

Boudicca docks in Belfast after illness outbreak

By Phil Davies

Boudicca docks in Belfast after illness outbreakA cruise ship that was hit with an outbreak of a gastroenteritis-type illness has docked in Belfast.

Fred Olsen Cruise Lines is reported by Sky News as saying 84 of its 763 passengers on board the ship Boudicca were affected.

The ship left Belfast on September 23 on a 10-night Scandinavian cities cruise.

The vessel is due to undergo a sanitation and cleaning programme before it sails again later today.

It is the second sickness outbreak to hit a Fred Olsen cruise in weeks, after around 130 people contracted a gastroenteritis-type illness on Black Watch last month as it sailed from Fife to Scandinavia and St Petersburg.

Boudicca is scheduled to leave on a 12-night a cruise to Madeira and the Canary Islands.

The cruise line said in a statement to Sky News: “It is extremely unfortunate that a number of guests on board this Scandinavian cruise have experienced this illness.

“In such instances, every precaution is taken on board to ensure the swift containment of the illness, and a number of public areas, including all public toilets and the self-service buffet, are closed.

“Frequent cleaning of all areas of the ship is carried out, and any guest showing symptoms of the virus is asked to remain in their cabin, with complimentary room service and in-cabin entertainment, until they are considered to be symptom-free by the ship’s doctor, before being able to join the rest of the ship.

“Fred Olsen would emphasise that, as with all its sailings from regional UK departure ports, it works closely with the relevant Local Health Authorities and Port Health Authorities to ensure the safety, health and wellbeing of all its guests and crew, which are the company’s utmost priority.

“All of Fred Olsen’s cruise ships meet, at all times, the highest safety, hygiene and health standards.”

The line added that people booked on Boudicca’s next cruise had been informed of the situation.