In The News
Nantucket Clipper - Carribean to Charleston to Cape May
March 16, 2006
Nantucket Clipper ~ Carribean to Charleston to Cape May? 3.8.2006 By Nick Colin | Published 03/8/2006 | Cape May County News
NORTH CAPE MAY — American cruise ship the Nantucket Clipper is expected to dock at the Cape May-Lewes Ferry’s terminal here in April and October.
The Delaware River and Bay Authority is in negotiations with owner Cruise West to bring the cruise ship to the area, according to spokesman Jim Salmon.
“We sent out the licensing agreement about three weeks ago and are waiting for it to be signed and returned,” he said Salmon.Delaware River and Bay Authority Deputy Executive Director Donald Rainear revealed the plan at the county’s Transportation Infrastructure Conference Feb. 28.He said there was “the possibility of more trips and another cruiser down the line.”The idea was brought to the table by local business leaders, said Salmon.“The plan is to promote local businesses and to give them some exposure,” he said. “It is more or less a pilot effort that, gauged by the financial feasibility and success, will help us decide on the course we will take in the future.”
Cruise details, including exact dates, costs, and destinations have not yet been announced, according to Rainear.
The small cruise ship is expected to stop in North Cape May as part of its East Coast Excursion. The vessel is currently in the Caribbean being refurbished before it departs for Jacksonville, Florida.
From there it will travel to Charleston, North Carolina, and continue to work its way north, which would include its stop here.
The Nantucket Clipper was purchased by Cruise West from the Clipper Cruise Line Fleet along with the Yorkstown Clipper Jan. 17.
It can accommodate up to 102 passengers and is 207 feet long and 37 feet wide with a draft of eight feet, making it ideal for cruising shallow waterways.
An average cruise on the clipper lasts for about eight to nine days, operating on an itinerary that covers the East Coast, Great Lakes, Caribbean, Alaska, Mexico, and Central America.It operates from March until around January before heading to Maine.
It has outside cabins, an observation lounge that serves as the primary gathering place for social gatherings and briefings, and a promenade.
The cruise ship also employs a historian who explains and recaps each day’s events.
Cruise West – a second-generation, family-owned business based in Seattle – offers the opportunity to explore remote, worldwide locales by providing distinctive, one-of-a-kind, personalized itineraries not offered by the traditional larger cruise lines. Cruise West’s smaller ships – ten in all – hold between 70-138 people each, and the casual style onboard encourages relaxation and congenial interaction between guests and crew alike. The experience is personally enriching through expert Exploration Leaders providing onboard narrative and lectures, special local guests from a wide variety of backgrounds, and the library provided on each vessel. All have forward lounges and ample outdoor deck space for viewing and photographing wildlife and scenery. All vessels are also equipped with inflatable landing boats for close-up exploration of remote areas and shore landings.
Destinations served include: Alaska and the Bering Sea, British Columbia, Columbia & Snake Rivers, California Wine Country, Mexico's Sea of Cortés, Costa Rica & Panama, The U.S. eastern seaboard, the Caribbean, Japan, the South Pacific, the Kuril Islands, and the Great Lakes