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Cruise West’s very spirited voyage

A true adventure in wine tasting along the historic Columbia River

Image: Beresan Winery
Anita Dunham-Potter
The vineyards of Beresan Winery in Walla Walla, Washington.
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By Anita Dunham-Potter
Travel columnist
Tripso
updated 2:28 p.m. ET Oct. 31, 2008

Anita Dunham-Potter
Travel columnist

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It’s 7:00 a.m. and anyone who is still asleep has just been awakened by this morning’s announcement. A polite good morning call that announces it is a “nippy” 39 degrees outside, and a reminder that the bus for the winery tour leaves in one hour. Not that anyone is in bed — no one wants to miss a thing. The fall foliage was just setting in making the scenery along the Columbia River Gorge more spectacular. Add the backdrop of the Cascade Mountain Range with snow-covered Mount Hood and it’s even more breathtaking.

Expedition cruising aboard Cruise West’s Sprit of Discovery, as you might have gathered, is quite different from your one week cruise around the Caribbean. For one thing the ship is small and there is no casino, lounge acts, bingo contests, disco, spa or fitness center. There’s no dressing up since the atmosphere onboard is very casual — jeans, khakis, sweaters and fleece jackets are the norm. Accommodations are basic — cabins have no television, radio or telephone, and get this, no locks on the doors. Still everything is secure, safe, clean and the all-American crew is friendly and eager to please.

Spirit of Discovery
One of the hottest trends in cruising today is the almost insatiable interest in cuisine. Food and wine have always been an integral part of the cruise experience, but in recent years, the interest has become more refined to include special cruises dedicated to specific cuisine. When it comes to wine many cruise lines offer wine tastings, but few have the ability to take you right to the source.

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Cruise West, a company long known for its educational eco-cruises to adventure destinations like Alaska, Costa Rica, and Asia may seem like an unusual fit for a wine cruise. But the company is known to focus on the destination rather than the cruise itself, and sailing along the Columbia River with access to Washington and Oregon’s growing wine region offers an amazing experience for wine lovers.

Spirit of Discovery, launched in 1976, was purpose-built for cruising off-the-beaten track waters. It is small, carrying just 84 passengers, and functional, with a dining room, lounge, bow viewing area, sun deck and little else. The downside is cabins that are compact with twin beds (queen beds in higher class cabins) and a tiny shower area, the sink is outside the bathroom in the cabin. The good news — you won’t spend a lot of time in the cabin since shore excursions take up most of the day.

Image: Cruise West's Spirit of Discovery
Anita Dunham-Potter
Cruise West's Spirit of Discovery

Breakfast, lunch and dinner are served in the intimate, open-seating Grand Pacific Dining Room. Meals are at set times. Since there is no 24-hour room service or alternative dining, you eat when you are supposed to or miss out. For early risers there is a continental breakfast spread in the lounge, the same area where all the lectures take place. A sit-down breakfast follows in the dining room. Lunch times change depending on schedules of the shore excursions. Dinners are the highlight where the chef uses local ingredients from the Pacific Northwest.

Image: Beresan Winery
Anita Dunham-Potter
Wine tasting at the Beresan Winery.

Menu choices are somewhat limited, but the cuisine with the highlighted wines offered was excellent. Standouts included Wagyu Shortribs, Kurbata Pork Prime Rib, and Wild Pacific Sturgeon and Grilled Salmon and amazing breads like Walla Walla Onion Cheddar and Curry Egg. Coffee, tea, and sodas are complimentary — the only extras are cocktails and wines not part of the tastings.

Onboard entertainment consists of enrichment lectures by two Cruise West Exploration Guides covering the history of the Columbia River. Come evening, activities in the Discovery Lounge ramp up, mainly wine tastings and talks by the ship’s guest “Wine Guy,” Frank Baldassare. He lectured on how grapes are grown, various different wine regions, the art of properly tasting wine and pairing the perfect wine with food. His lectures also deal with how Washington and Oregon became major wine regions.

All shore excursions are included in the price and Exploration Leaders separate passengers into two touring groups. This made it easier to spend time exploring and not overwhelm the destinations visited. Our group hiked through pear orchards in Oregon and onion fields in Washington. We toured the giant Bonneville Dam with its huge power generators, discovered salmon fish ladders, jet boated to the Hanford Reach Monument, witnessed abundant wildlife, had a glimpse at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation (birthplace of nuclear energy), watched seafood cooking demonstrations and drank barrels of wine — literally.


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