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Independence of the Seas
Royal Caribbean Cruises
19th May 2012
14 nights
Price from: £1202
Queen Mary 2
Cunard Cruises
29th May 2012
7 nights
Price from: £599
MS Rotterdam
Holland America Cruises
3rd Nov 2012
32 nights
Price from: £2398
Pinnacle Grill Dinner
Bottle of Champagne
Cruise Destinations
World Cruise Cruises
Classic cruise experiences and circling the globe is what world cruises are all about. World Cruises allow you to visit more than 30 ports on a 3 month voyage. Cruises can go in either direction around the world and can start in New York, Miami, Los Angeles or the UK. Popular worldwide cruises are the UK to Australia cruises however there are many more different routes available that take in South America, India, Africa, China, Japan, Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
Classic World Cruise
Our Classic World Cruise heads eastwards through the Mediterranean, parsing the Suez Canal and Red Sea heading towards southern Arabia and the coast of India and Sri Lanka. Once the Indian Ocean is crossed you can visit Singapore, Bangkok and perhaps Hong Kong. Once you have taken in the Orients you will travel south to Australia and New Zealand. Now past the half way mark explore the islands of the south Pacific and then Hawaii, Los Angeles and through the Panama Canal to the islands of the Caribbean. The final leg crosses the Atlantic back to Europe.
South America and the Pacific
An alternative route takes you southwards from Europe crossing the Atlantic to South America, calling at Rio and Buenos Aires before rounding Cape Horn to cruise up the coast of Chile to Santiago. Sailing out across the Pacific, cruises will visit Easter Island and the islands of Polynesia before arriving in New Zealand and Australia. Moving on to the Far East, China and Japan, the cruise ship may return to the UK via the Panama Canal and Caribbean.
Australia and Africa
A third world cruise route takes you southwards from Europe down the west coast of Africa to Cape Town and South Africa and out across the Indian Ocean to the Seychelles and Maldives. From there on to India, southeast Asia, Australia and New Zealand before crossing the Pacific to the west coast of South America. Cruise Chile, Ecuador and Bolivia before passing through the Panama Canal to the Caribbean and on to Europe.

