Seven Days, Five Ports, One Surprise: Alexander’s Mediterranean in Motion

They connected across a grey European afternoon: Frank at his desk in Cleebourg, rain freckling the window; Alexander back from two weeks away, an inbox swelling like a tide. What unfolded was a warm, intelligent debrief of a family cruise that somehow became more than an itinerary—equal parts travelogue, expectations audit, and a gentle lesson in how to travel with a child, a shipful of strangers, and your own ideas of “relax.”

Before the ports and postcards, there was a secret. On 15 October, Alexander, and his family, flew from Munich to Palma de Mallorca and boarded Mein Schiff Relax—a name that promised hush but delivered hustle. Still, the opening chord of the story wasn’t the ship; it was a balcony, a lift, and a whispered plan: surprise the in-laws. They watched the gangway, waited by Deck 10, sent their little boy to knock, and darted out of sight. Then came the door, the gasp—“Oh, no. Really?”—the laughter. In a conversation about destinations, the first destination was delight.

The route had simple geometry: Palma → a sea day → Cagliari (Sardinia) → Palermo (Sicily) → Salerno (Campania) → Civitavecchia (Rome’s port) → another sea day → Palma. A neat loop in seven days, an oval stitched across the Western Mediterranean.

Cagliari arrived under 25 °C skies, sun polished to a maritime sheen. Alexander and his family drifted into the city, climbing towards the Bastione Saint Remy, the pale stone terrace locals simply call Bastione. From that high platform, the view does what views do: quiet the mind by widening it. He noticed cleanliness, space, and a sense that tourism hadn’t pressed too hard on the seams. An unplanned coincidence added texture: a chance encounter with an old colleague from a previous company—met on another cruise, now again on these streets. What are the odds? On holiday, apparently, not insignificant.

Palermo, by contrast, came roaring in. Photographs promised baroque drama, but the streets, Alexander says, felt crowded and gritty: “a million cars and scooters,” “very dirty” in the old town. They walked five or six kilometres, found a fountain, watched the traffic braid and unbraid. It wasn’t love. Travel asks two kinds of courage: to enter a place—and to admit when a place doesn’t enter you.

Salerno, though, did sing. Curve of sea to the right, promenade to the left, the kind of coastal geometry that turns a stroll into a mood. Alexander and Julia joined a ship-organised scooter tour—eight to ten people, a guide, the wind as punctuation. They threaded the city, paused under the old aqueduct—arches set improbably in the urban fabric, like a Roman spine. Espresso here, construction dust there, romance everywhere once the lights came on. From an overlook, they could even spot their ship in the harbour, a miniature city temporarily moored to a real one.

By the time they reached Civitavecchia, the rhythm of the journey had changed: they walked with Julia’s parents, chose coffees over monuments, traded highlights for togetherness. Some days you chase a checklist; some days you chase a chair with a view.

Between ports there was the ship, and ships are floating hypotheses. Mein Schiff Relax is colossal—19 decks, roughly 350 metres, about 4,000 passengers. A small city. There were twelve restaurants, but with a young child, the buffet—“Harbour Market”—became the refuge: fast, varied, friction-light. Evenings brought entertainment; on one night, a German pop figure from a talent show (Sarah Engels) materialised in the same orbit as their dinner plates. But scale has its own weather. On sea days, the pool deck filled by 10 a.m.; loungers vanished; “relax” became a verb in need of tactical planning.

The big truth arrived softly: the ship’s name didn’t match their need. It was school holidays in other German states, and the decks pulsed with families. If you’re allergic to noise, this cruise is a rash. Alexander would recommend it only conditionally: if you don’t mind kids and momentum, great. If your inner metronome ticks to quiet, choose differently. He even flagged a coming “adults only” sister ship; not this one, not this season.

And yet, here’s the paradox: he still called the food “really great,” Cagliari “wonderful,” Salerno “beautiful,” the family reunion “very, very beautiful.” Unmet expectations don’t cancel memories; they complicate them—and in that complication, we often find the shape of what we truly want next time.

The story closes where it began: Palma. Disembark at dawn, a last look at the hull that held a week of life, a 15:00 flight, two hours by road from Munich, a late-night arrival, and the soft brutality of the first day back. Frank glances outside—cold, wet, miserable. Alexander laughs: same here. The remedy, Frank suggests with that steady Pineapple optimism, is not to chase better weather but to create your own summer—to travel in a way that protects the parts of you that need light.

So if you’re reading this with a mental shortlist—Sardinia, Sicily, Campania, Rome’s sea-door—here’s a gentle nudge:

  • Surprise the people you love.
  • Find a terrace that lifts your eyes.
  • Reserve the right to dislike a place and still respect it.
  • Choose one local mode of movement and let it carry you.
  • Build a slow day into every fast itinerary.
  • And when you choose your ship, choose your season, too.

Because travel isn’t just about where you go. It’s about whether the way you travel is kind to the person you are right now.

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