Tall ships line offers free child places
Tuesday, 16 Jun, 2009
0
Free places for children up to 18 are being offered on August sailings in the Mediterranean by Star Clippers.
The peak season offer applies to children accompanied by two full fare-paying adults on board Star Clipper and Royal Clipper.
It represents a discount of up to £2,903 off published prices for a family of four with two children accommodated in their own cabin, and up to £535 for a family of three, with one child sharing the parents’ cabin.
The deal applies to departures on board 170-capacity Star Clipper and includes a seven-night sailing around the Greek islands departing on August 8, an 11-night sailing around the Greek islands on August 15 from Athens to Venice, and a 10-night sailing in the reverse direction on August 26.
The offer is also available on 228-passenger Royal Clipper for sailings on August 8 and 29 on 11-night voyages from Rome to Venice and a 10-night cruise in the reverse direction on August 19.
Prices start at £1,310 per adult for the seven nights sailing on August 8, saving £1,965 off the usual cost of a family of four.
by Phil Davies
Phil Davies
Have your say Cancel reply
Most Read
TRAINING & COMPETITION
Posting....
Skip to toolbar
Clearing CSS/JS assets' cache... Please wait until this notice disappears...
Updating... Please wait...
Subscribe/Login to Travel Mole Newsletter
Travel Mole Newsletter is a subscriber only travel trade news publication. If you are receiving this message, simply enter your email address to sign in or register if you are not. In order to display the B2B travel content that meets your business needs, we need to know who are and what are your business needs. ITR is free to our subscribers.

































Phocuswright reveals the world's largest travel markets in volume in 2025
Higher departure tax and visa cost, e-arrival card: Japan unleashes the fiscal weapon against tourists
Cyclone in Sri Lanka had limited effect on tourism in contrary to media reports
Singapore to forbid entry to undesirable travelers with new no-boarding directive
Euromonitor International unveils world’s top 100 city destinations for 2025