The EYE ON THE SKY® AstroCruises (TM) Page

THE astronomy cruise specialists!

"See the Sea — See the Sky — See the World" (TM)


To go to our recent Far North Crown Princess page with images of the September 16, 2009, northern lights, click here.


EYE ON THE SKY® AstroCruises Masthead

"... and at night they were to dance in the open air, on the upper deck, in the midst of a ballroom that stretched from horizon to horizon, and was domed by the bending heavens and lighted by no meaner lamps than the stars and the magnificent moon — dance and promenade, and smoke, and sing, and make love, and search the skies for constellations that never associate with the Big Dipper ..."

     — Mark Twain, in The Innocents Abroad (1867), writing about his experience aboard Quaker City on what might be considered historically to be the first American-origin commercial voyage to qualify as a "pleasure cruise"
2010-2011 AstroCruises (TM)

No astronomy training or experience is necessary. All cruises include daytime astronomy lectures and also schedule evening "naked-eye" shipboard stargazing sessions. They all take place on regularly scheduled cruises (not charters) and so have all the regular cruise ship activites and amenities — the perfect entertaining and educational vacation (and a great compromise solution if everyone traveling with you isn't a big astronomy fan)!



Lecturers have presented EYE ON THE SKY® astronomy programs aboard Celebrity, Clipper, Cruise West, Crystal, Cunard, Hapag-Lloyd, Holland America, Oceania, Orient Lines, Princess, Regent Seven Seas, ResidenSea, Royal Caribbean, Saga, Seabourn, Silversea, Travel Dynamics International (Classical Cruises) and Windjammer Barefoot cruise ships. We will also lecture for the first time on a P & O Australia cruise in 2010 and in 2011 on a Voyages of Discovery cruise.

EYE ON THE SKY® astronomy articles have appeared in shipboard magazines for Carnival, Celebrity, Costa, Crystal, Holland America, Radisson (now Regent) Seven Seas, Royal Caribbean and Sun cruise lines and in Porthole magazine. We've also written and edited articles for the Cruise Critic Web site.

Total countries/territories (as recognized by Travelers' Century Club) visited by 49 AstroCruises (TM) to date:  
113
Total countries/territories when the next 4 confirmed AstroCruises (TM) are included:
115



2010-2011 AstroCruises (TM) Details
Itinerary Map

Southern Hemisphere New Moon Cruise
October 26-November 16, 2010 (21 nights)
Regent Seven Seas Navigator Bangkok to Sydney cruise.

     Sail from Bangkok (Laem Chabang), Thailand, Tuesday, October 26. Itinerary: Ko Samui, Thailand; Singapore; Semarang, Benoa and Komodo Island, Indonesia; Darwin, Thursday Island, Cairns, Whitsunday Island and Brisbane, Australia; eight sea days. Arrive in Sydney Monday, November 15, and overnight in hotel.
     Southern Hemisphere cruises offer naked-eye celestial sights unseen in the mainland U. S. and Europe: Alpha Centauri and Southern Cross above the horizon all night; Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (the two galaxies closest to our own and visible with the naked eye); Omega Centauri (about ten million stars in the largest and brightest globular cluster in our galaxy, almost as old as the universe itself) and second brightest globular cluster 47 Tucanae; and 26 new constellations created when Dutch and French astronomers first charted the southern stars. New moon is November 6.

Future AstroCruises (TM)

A dark sky at sea gives an excellent opportunity to spot dim objects and phenomena such as the Milky Way, Andromeda Galaxy (two million light-years away, the farthest object visible with the naked eye), the zodiacal light and gegenschein (best times to see zodiacal light north of the tropics are an hour or two after sunset during the waning moon in March-April and an hour or two before sunrise during the waxing moon in September-October, for south of the tropics the reverse is true, and around November 15-20 (also the peak of the Leonid meteor shower) gegenschein is located between the Pleiades and Hyades), auroras, noctilucent clouds and faint meteors and satellites. Change your latitude and see celestial sights you won't see at home — the southern hemisphere has stars, galaxies and globular star clusters you won't see in North America and Europe, and the Far North and Antarctica have atmospheric phenomena in summer unseen in other locations. Also, the flat sea horizon is an excellent place to spot the green flash.

Each year we seek to offer a wide variety of cruise styles (luxury, premium, family and adventure), lengths (generally 7 to 14 days), ship sizes (44 to 3600 passengers) and costs (money-is-no-object to bargain, sometimes starting at less than $100/day* ppdo). The following is a list of upcoming celestial events and potential AstroCruises (TM) destinations.

Periodic Events
2010 Events 2011-2020 Total Eclipses of the Sun 2012 Venus Transit
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EYE ON THE SKY® is a registered trademark of EYE ON THE SKY® News Service.
AstroCruise (TM), AstroCruises (TM), AstroCruisers (TM) and First Interplanetary Trading Company (TM) are trademarks of EYE ON THE SKY® News Service.
URL of this page: http://www.astrocruises.com
E-mail for details: astrocruises (at) hotmail.com
Phone: (609) 530-9877 (USA country code is +1)
Last update: 12 June 2010

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