The Cerne Giant is circa at least 1300 years old and counting
Lubbooo all
gfwgfw


I saw one today in Home Bargains for £10.99 so not expensive.Raybosailor wrote:I had the same problem Frank but I bought this bluetooth qwerty keypad thingy and it is brilliant, it is very light and charges up via a USB cable and it always goes in my hand luggage when on the move. It is a bit bulky to carry around with you but then I use the voice recognition facility, the only problem with that is people think I am talking to myself but at my age I suppose they think this is normal.Frank Manning wrote:No it's a Samsung 5(6). Anyway I thought albums were called L.P.'s. I can sit in bed in the morning and look at Yahoo, BBC, and CC. But I have such big fingers that trying to write anything makes lots of mistakes on that fiddling little imaginary keyboard. Why cant they make a bigger one for grown ups, they could call it an iPad.

Peter D wrote:In answer to your second answer, NO we are not the representative of the established market or new target one. It just represents this forum. If the group polled are from a select age group, 50+ you then cannot take the answer, ie 100% are over 50 and say that the cruise industry has got it wrong by marketing their ships towards the under 50s.Not so ancient mariner wrote:
I was referring to the question in the first posting
"Are we representative of the established market or the new target one?"
It is like saying, we, this forum has 1500 members so why built ships of 2000+ as it is a waste os space.




Yes foxy....and by the time most of these so called young cruisers reach 40 they will be looking for the same things we are......now where did l put my slippers?oldbluefox wrote:I don't understand any headlong rush to attract the younger cruisers. By all means cater for them within the organisation but cruise lines need their older clientele just as much as their younger ones. Don't forget that the current crop of youngsters will be older one day and if there is no niche for them they will go elsewhere where there is one.
Btw welcome Mike B.

Hear, hear OL. Of course they will!! And they will have the same moans we have at the moment.Onelife wrote:Yes foxy....and by the time most of these so called young cruisers reach 40 they will be looking for the same things we are......now where did l put my slippers?oldbluefox wrote:I don't understand any headlong rush to attract the younger cruisers. By all means cater for them within the organisation but cruise lines need their older clientele just as much as their younger ones. Don't forget that the current crop of youngsters will be older one day and if there is no niche for them they will go elsewhere where there is one.
Btw welcome Mike B.

A moaning cruiser? Surely not!oldbluefox wrote:Hear, hear OL. Of course they will!! And they will have the same moans we have at the moment.Onelife wrote:Yes foxy....and by the time most of these so called young cruisers reach 40 they will be looking for the same things we are......now where did l put my slippers?oldbluefox wrote:I don't understand any headlong rush to attract the younger cruisers. By all means cater for them within the organisation but cruise lines need their older clientele just as much as their younger ones. Don't forget that the current crop of youngsters will be older one day and if there is no niche for them they will go elsewhere where there is one.
Btw welcome Mike B.

If the "current crop" see what's on offer now with the likes of Ventura/Azura/Britannia/RCI behemoths, they may well regard that as "the standard" and that will be their niche market.oldbluefox wrote:Don't forget that the current crop of youngsters will be older one day and if there is no niche for them they will go elsewhere where there is one.

You can always check what new builds are on the order books Foxy, there are lots of websites out there, all of them give the tonnage and passenger capacity, and some even break it down into segments.oldbluefox wrote:That makes an assumption that the current crop will like the same things in later years as they do now. My likes/dislikes and tastes are vastly different to what they were even 10 years ago and it is only natural we look for something more relaxing as we get older. Some older people dislike the larger ships for the simple reason they find distances too great hence I can see there will always be a market for smaller and medium sized ships. Whether the cruise lines realise this we can only wait and see.