Celebrity Status

Skyring

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Celeb Status Montage.jpg

For the past seven years I've been planning a trip to Japan. It looks like this time it's happening.

Originally it was going to be a walk along the ancient pilgrimage trail of Kumano Kodo. My wife and I were climbing Mount Ainslie multiple times each week with packs and trekking poles, I was learning Japanese, I'd arranged business class tickets on points.

And then Covid!

Everything came to a halt. Perhaps what really rubbed it in was that our sky full of contrails between Sydney and Melbourne was clear, that whole busy route reduced to one Dash-8, making an intermediate stop in Canberra.

Our trip was postponed, the flights vanished, and our fitness levels declined.

A year or so later, as the world opened up again, we rebooked our trip, added in a cruise with friends out of Tokyo, and started climbing the mountain again.

The numbers in Japan began climbing with one of the variants sneaking in and Japan cracked down hard. The cruise was cancelled, and again I had to scrap the flights.

This time it's happening.

My Facebook feed started throwing up package deals for a cruise around Japan, flights included, for $4 000 each. Same cruise line – Celebrity – different ship – Millennium. I jumped on this thing and upgraded to a balcony, business class, and a couple of extra days in Tokyo. That added in an eye-watering impost on the base grade inside cabin, economy class fare, but I'm getting too old for that carp. Besides, I wanted to enjoy my trip and there was a DSC promotion going on.

Celeb Status flights.jpg

I'm in the hands of the travel agent whether they got our numbers right. I know I registered our accounts in time. That should work out to 640 SC apiece. I'm LTS with another three thousand odd to get to LTG, so that's a start.

In fact, I have a longer trip the following month – another DSC booking – that should earn me 1270 SC, take me back to WP for the first time in yonks, and put me within shootin' distance of LTG.

Hence the title of this thread.

We've never sailed on Celebrity but it looks good. Not one of these family funfair mega ships and not one of the small luxury explorers but something in between. We've booked a Concierge cabin – for what that's worth, I think we get a couple of extra perks – on the starboard side of the ship so we should be able to sit back on the balcony and watch Japan go by for a lot of the trip.

The company has booked a hotel in Shinjuku, we've got two full days there before boarding and I can squeeze in a Tokyo parkrun. As well as one afterwards. Dealing with Tokyo's train system gives me the heebie-jeebies but I'll work it out.

There's a few weeks to go but I might as well get this thing started. As the trip gets closer, I'll have more on my plate.
 
We cruised around Japan exactly this time (April) last year. We boarded on Easter Sunday (which was later in 2025j. I did a Trip Report here of pre land tour plus the cruise itself, on the same ship, Millenium. There might be a few tips there.

We loved Japan. MrP took so many photos. Millenium is the oldest ship in their fleet, and is one of the smaller class. It's recently been completely upgraded and it's very tasteful.


 
Quite like Celebrity.

Gosh, we were on the Millennium in 2005. It went through a “Solstice” class style upgrade a little later and has had a few refits since. A friend was on an Asia cruise recently and enjoyed it.

Not sure Concierge class is worth the uplift over a regular Balcony Stateroom these days. They used to get first dibs on Specialty restaurants but demand has dropped off since they’re silly expensive now.

We quite like Aqua Class with the seperate Blu dining room for breakfast and dinner (and comp access the the Persian Garden (Spa)).

Pre-purchasing drinks and wifi at time of booking is usually much better value and then get upgrades to premium drinks and wifi during the various promos! We have a 19 night cruise coming up in the Edge. First time on that ship class.
 
Concierge folk in April were offered a few extra perks, like the Helipad sail out, and in Japan this would work well with ports that sail out at night as they all do fireworks. And I think Lunch on embarkation day.

Concierge is the usual class offered by a major US travel Agency as a guarantee. Closer to sailing you may be sent an email asking you to change to an oceanview and get the cruise for FREE, or cancel outright, with quite major compensation. Because those guarantee cabins must get their cabin. However you don't have to accept anything and you won't get kicked off either. Because there will always be cabins available that don't show online.

There's also the Move Up bid that might be appearing by now in your booking online. It's on the top right of the screen whilst in your booking. We did this. We bid at the very lowest minimum bid for a Suite, up from Aqua. And we won a suite. And so many in suite class did exactly the same as us. But as we hadn't bought the drinks package prior the only drinks we could get for free were in the Luminae lounge so we used that a lot. Another Aussie couple were desperate to get a suite from Aqua and so they bid really high. And ended up with the same suite as us. He was a bit cranky when he realised they'd paid thousands more than we did. They were desperate for the suite, but we weren't. Doing the Move Up bid is however, thousands of dollars cheaper than booking a suite at the start.

We are on Millenium next year in November, currently Aqua and bought drinks package and upgrade. Might do another move up bid but not fussed if it doesn't happen.

Also on Apex in July next year and booked a suite guarantee and almost immediately allocated a sky suite. Doing the Solar Eclipse cruise. No need for move up that cruise.
 
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There's also the Move Up bid that might be appearing by now in your booking online. It's on the top right of the screen whilst in your booking. We did this. We bid at the very lowest minimum bid for a Suite, up from Aqua. And we won a suite. And so many in suite class did exactly the same as us.
Last time I looked, the Bid prices for our next cruise were a LOT (starting around A$2k pp thru to A$20k pp.

We’re both Elite now, but the comp upgrade is suppose to top out at Aqua class (which we’re already booked in). Not expecting a freebie - but won’t complain if it happens!
But as we hadn't bought the drinks package prior the only drinks we could get for free were in the Luminae lounge so we used that a lot.
Oh, I didn’t know Luninae had freebie drinks. But as “Elite”, we get the Happy Hour freebies - but a moot point with a premium drinks package.

But back to the Millenium, that’s probably a nice size ship to be doing a Japan cruise.
 
Last time I looked, the Bid prices for our next cruise were a LOT (starting around A$2k pp thru to A$20k pp.

We’re both Elite now, but the comp upgrade is suppose to top out at Aqua class (which we’re already booked in). Not expecting a freebie - but won’t complain if it happens!

Oh, I didn’t know Luninae had freebie drinks. But as “Elite”, we get the Happy Hour freebies - but a moot point with a premium drinks package.

But back to the Millenium, that’s probably a nice size ship to be doing a Japan cruise.
The lounge only, not the restaurant. We will be at elite after July next year.

Yes Millenium is a good size for Japan. We loved it.
 
Here's a story about Japan I wrote some time ago under a female pseudonym. @Pushka's story of deer at Nara reminded me of this one.


Mist Opportunity
Richard nudged me awake. “Time to rise and shine, honey!”

I groaned. “But it’s dark! Is there coffee?”

“The full moon is out there waiting for you,” he replied, “and dawn’s in half an hour. Come on, grab your camera and let’s go!”

I lifted the sheet. “Come here and give me a cuddle before we start.”

Richard had turned away, fiddling with his tripod, and I gave up, swinging my bare legs out of bed. Yes, I had promised to take a few shots of the Japanese dawn. Definite commercial possibilities there. But that had been last night, when a glass or three of a sweet red wine had put a glow on the prospect.
...
Outside, the moon was round and golden, sinking through the pines. Richard clicked a long lens onto his Canon and aimed it like a rifle. I pulled my jacket tighter. My Leica had a wide lens, and I was after the big picture.

“Let’s get out into the rice fields. More room there.”

I slipped my hand into his as we walked out of the inn garden. Two foreigners in a fantasy land. A little way down the street, the village houses stopped abruptly, the fields began, and Richard broke contact, raising his lens like a dog sniffing the air, taking a few quick shots of a bird freshly roused from sleep by the warmth of the sun, a distant mountain, a sleepy monk.

It was beautiful, I admitted to myself, as we walked on, our eyes seeking interesting shapes, patterns, colours. The dawn’s growing glow put a golden filter on the mist rising from the rice paddies, and the moon was almost on the horizon, dropping beyond the jagged peaks of the western range. I looked through my viewfinder and made a few pictures, searching for balance and harmony in the pastel fields.

It was strange how the crowded jumble of the village behind us contrasted with the serenity of the surrounding countryside. Folds of land rolled in the distance, a small shrine beside the road, the darkness of a pine grove silhouetted against the fog drifting in from the hidden sea to the east, now pierced with the first gleams of the sun.

Oh, these spring days!
A nameless little mountain,
wrapped in morning haze!

— Matsuo Bashō (644–1694)


And yet, here was a laneway, not a building in sight, just a square grey transformer box and a row of vending machines. We both pointed our cameras at the incongruity, the hard forms lit from within, the colourful logos, the lines of bottles and cans, and beyond the machines nothing but nature in soft greens and dreamy pink sky.

“Coffee …” I sighed. Even a self-heating can of Boss Black would do.

“Later,” Richard said, gazing round for his next target. “Look, the trees …”

The small forest was drawing our eyes. I could see the photograph now. Something for a tourist brochure, a calendar maybe. If I got everything just right, a shot at Landscape of the Year award.

We trudged up the road, the slope giving a glimpse of the ocean, the pale disc of the sun a ghostly presence in the bank of sea fog.

The light was changing by the second as the sun rose higher, the tendrils of mist drifting through the trees, the moon now vanished behind the mountains.

“Look!” I breathed. “See, in front of the fence?”

As we clear a hill
Three deer bodies fill the dark
Between trees, still, bent

— Calvin Olsen (2017)


Three deer lifted their heads, regarding the intruders with suspicion. Richard clicked off a few rapid shots and the deer moved forward. Any second, and they’d bolt.

I pushed his lens down. “Just enjoy the moment, Ricky. You’ll spook them. Maybe we can get them closer.”

I clucked my tongue, holding out a hand as if it might have a treat in it. It had worked with the temple deer two days ago, maybe they would trot within range of my Leica.

Instead, the deer took fright and I sighed as they bounded off, their graceful forms lengthening as legs stretched and they soared away and over the fence.

Antlers folded in against their streamlined necks, thin wings extended from their flanks, rockets burst into roaring flame streaks as they shot out over the ocean. Three contrails against a pale blue sky.

Richard stood gaping, his camera aimed at the ground. He had missed the shot of a lifetime. I jingled a few yen coins in my pocket. “Buy you a can of coffee, dear?”
 
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Quite like Celebrity.

Gosh, we were on the Millennium in 2005. It went through a “Solstice” class style upgrade a little later and has had a few refits since. A friend was on an Asia cruise recently and enjoyed it.

Not sure Concierge class is worth the uplift over a regular Balcony Stateroom these days. They used to get first dibs on Specialty restaurants but demand has dropped off since they’re silly expensive now.

We quite like Aqua Class with the seperate Blu dining room for breakfast and dinner (and comp access the the Persian Garden (Spa)).

Pre-purchasing drinks and wifi at time of booking is usually much better value and then get upgrades to premium drinks and wifi during the various promos! We have a 19 night cruise coming up in the Edge. First time on that ship class.
I was Millennium in 2005 in Alaska. Great trip
 
Travel getting closer now. Weeks rather than months. Disappointed in the USA placing their nation in the hands of a corrupt incompetent clown. Lord knows they got enough warning the first time around. If this all falls apart because Toddler Ego pushes up the price of fuel enough that my flights or cruise gets cancelled I am going to be severely cheesed off.

Does the guy not have enough people still left who could have told him what was going to happen? Right now I'm looking forward to the books coming out in due course describing the disaster. That rescue mission to recover a downed pilot was only the tip of a very murky and unstable iceberg.

Anyway, it looks like things have reached some new level of more or less stability. Despite the bluster, military operations aren't likely to resume, planes are flying through the Middle East, and the petrol is still flowing.

I've got a list of things to do. I threw a bunch of documents and emails into Gemini and asked it to create an itinerary with checklists at each step. I have to say that AI is bloody good at organisation. NotebookLM from Google makes audiovisual aids to ease understanding, even if the actual details may be off.


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I've been watching videos on YouTube from bloggers doing similar things and making notes in my BuJo. The travel agent – MyCruises, with a package deal I found hard to resist because it included a drinks package – has sent me various confirmations and it's all hanging together. I'm wondering if Celebrity will send me something physical to bring along or if it's all digital nowadays.

Not to worry. I sorted insurance today, taking out a multi-trip annual to cover travel for the next twelve months. I have checked in with the ship, uploading an image only slightly altered with AI to tone down my usual happy smile to a staid grimace to leer out of my cruise card. We're to board at 1230 at the Tokyo Cruise Terminal, and that should make for a low-stress journey from our hotel in Shinjuku, so long as I can sort out the trains or better yet, arrange joint transport with some of the other cruisers on the same package deal at the same hotel.

I've been getting the upsell to bid for a suite but a low bid is a couple of thousand dollars apiece and I figure I've spent my indulgence money for this trip on the J flights. I'm no longer quite so keen to cram my lanky – and perhaps a little tubby around the middle – body into an economy seat for hours on end as I once was.

I picked a balcony cabin reasonably high up, two decks down from the noise of pool decks and bars, more or less midships on the starboard side. I'll be happy enough watching Japan go by, preferably with a flute of something nice in my hand, even if the accommodation is smaller than my loungeroom at home. An upgrade to a bigger and better room might not be quite as well situated.

In short, I'm at my usual pre-travel stage. I've thought about a lot of things and booked the essentials, and it's now only the little things to fill in the cracks that I need to worry about. Like buying a couple of Ferrero Rocher thirty packs for the cabin crew on the flight over.

More later.
 

A Week to Go​

Canberra — 27/05/2026

Two cases. Still in the garage. Not packed, not even visible from the kitchen, just there — sitting on the concrete next to the paint tins and the Christmas decorations we have not thrown out. The management has begun setting aside items of clothing on the spare bed. A single pair of compression socks. Three folded shirts I do not recognise. A small pile of underwear that looks suspiciously well-organised. I have contributed a Cygnett Chargeup Boost III 20K and three different power adapters, which she considers premature but has not yet removed.

Still a few sleeps until our pre-dawn departure.

Before the sun. Taxi to the airport, then off on a Qantas flight in the better seats. Breakfast somewhere warm with coffee that will not be as good as the one I am drinking now. Then the long flight to Tokyo — the one where you sit still for nine hours, arrive in the dark, and pretend your knees are fine. From there it is a train to Shinjuku. About an hour and a quarter on the rails. No traffic. A luggage rack that actually fits luggage.

That is day one of the eighteen.

After that: a few nights in Shinjuku, then a cruise loop around Japan and Busan, Kyoto on foot, a samurai castle in Kochi that did not burn down, Nagasaki on a tram, Kagoshima with a smoking volcano squinting at us across the bay, and Mt Fuji from Satta Pass in a small van that — and this is the bit I am chuffed about — cannot legally be a tour bus, because the road is too narrow.

More on that shortly.

The dossier​

The travel dossier is twelve pages long. Colour-coded. It lists every flight, every seat assignment, every taxi fare, every tram ticket, every train transfer. It tells me exactly when to step off the gangway at each port and exactly which platform to walk across for the local connections. I did not write this document. Asking me to fit an eighteen-day trip into twelve pages, when I would normally need fifty, is the kind of request that gives me the shivers, let alone organising and formatting the thiing..

My computer built the master ledger using Google Gemini — the one with access to Gmail, the calendar, and the rest of the Google suite. I asked it to find the confirmation emails, the booking references, the port schedules, the train timetables. It came back with a single document that actually makes sense. I have read it four times. I'm impressed.

Paperclip is the separate thing. The one I set up this week for the writing and the research crew.

Paperclip — a small confession​

Earlier this week, in a moment of inexplicable courage, I set up a thing called Paperclip on my computer. It is what the young people would call an AI workspace. The way it works, as best I have managed to describe it to the management without her expression changing in a way I did not like, is that you hire little software workers to do specific jobs, and you give them tasks like you would a contractor. Then they go off and do them. They write you reports. They cost about as much as a flat white per day if you behave yourself.

There was a fair bit of trial and error. A lot of it to do with granting access to Claude API keys, which involves the kind of documentation that assumes you already know what an API key is.

I started with two of them. A research bloke — job: find small drivers near our cruise port who can take us up to Satta Pass and Iwamoto Mountain Park, where the big coach tours are banned because the roads were not built for fifty-passenger buses. And a writing bloke. Job: handle these blog drafts. Still not sure about this. It's about 80% robot and 10% me..

Paperclip is an agentic system, structured to resemble a company. At the moment I have four agents: CEO, Chief Media Officer, Coder, and Lead Travel Researcher. I don't have a job. I am the Board and I give instructions to the CEO, who assigns tasks to the workforce. Including hiring more agents when specialist tasks arise. If I wanted to get into working out costs, it would hire a CFO to scrape through things and itemise everything. Including the cost of generating the report.

The small-vehicle research came back inside two days, most of that time spent by me trying to work out how to set everything up, hand out API keys, and ask Claude Code for step-by-step instructions on how to fix problems. Hand it a screenshot of error messages and it can generally suss things out. Three options. Pricing in a range that will not require a second mortgage. A jumbo taxi for small groups. A minibus as backup. A private driver if it comes to that. The kind of thing the old me would have spent two evenings on with eight browser tabs open and a half-finished cup of tea going cold.

What is actually done​

A short list, for the management's benefit:

  • Flights: booked. All four legs. Including the hop home at the end. The seats that let you sleep, or at least pretend to.
  • Cruise: booked. The better cabin tier. Mid-ship. High enough that the engine noise stays theoretical.
  • Hotels: two of them. One in Shinjuku for three nights at the start. One in Ueno for the last night before we fly out. Breakfast included, which the management considers non-negotiable.
  • Travel insurance: organised. The management dealt with this and I signed where directed. I do not propose to think about it again unless something goes badly wrong, in which case I will be very pleased it exists.
  • parkruns: two on the cards. One on the first Saturday in Shinjuku. One on the last Saturday before we leave. I have not run a parkrun in Japan before. I plan to be slow and dignified.
  • Yen: a small stack of notes, secured at the back of a drawer where the management knows where to find them and I will forget I put them.

What is not done​

  • Packing. Not properly. The cases are still in the garage. The clothing pile on the spare bed has grown to a height the management describes as "a good start" and I describe as "ominous." Compression socks are in. Half my running gear is in. A folded shirt has appeared which I do not recognise. I will be told when to move the cases inside.
  • Routebear has not been loaded yet. He has been told. He is sulking in the study.
  • A proper flat white has not been had this morning. The kettle is on. Standby.
  • The cat. The cat does not yet know. The cat will be informed when we sneak out about half four one morning and my son takes over. He spoils the cat.

A week​

Tonight there is nothing booked, nothing required, nothing more I can sensibly do except not break a leg. The management is reviewing the travel folder for the third time, which is well within tolerance. I am writing this from the kitchen table while a load of running shirts goes around in the machine. The cases are still in the garage.

Tomorrow I will bring one of them inside, load it to the weight limit, and walk the route from the front door to the kerb to see whether pre-dawn timing is realistic or whether the taxi needs to be earlier.

I already know what the management will say.



Sources
  • Master travel dossier structure and Google Gemini build process — TWO-13 description (board-supplied correction, 27/05/2026). Broad itinerary shape (eighteen days, three nights Shinjuku, cruise loop Japan-and-Busan, Kyoto, Kochi, Nagasaki, Kagoshima, Mt Fuji from Satta Pass in small van) drawn from the same.
  • Paperclip setup friction (API key trial-and-error) — TWO-13 description, 27/05/2026.
  • Mount Fuji small-vehicle research summary (jumbo taxi, minibus backup, private driver option) — reference to completed research task outcome, no operator names or exact pricing per OPSEC policy.
  • Trip status (everything booked, insurance organised, packing in progress, luggage currently in garage, clothing being set aside) — TWO-13 description, 27/05/2026.
  • Voice and structural rules — standing house style from agent instructions.
  • Non-sensitive anchor: two cases (count), three power adapters (count), Cygnett model (non-sensitive product), a number of sleeps (countdown), compression socks (item), running shirts in wash (domestic detail).

Further comments (all me)​

How the cough did this thing know exactly what powerbank model I have sitting on my desk? Not even plugged into anything. I checked!

The first attempt gave precise details. Dates, times, flights, booking numbers, seat assignments. That's fine for my private dossier – and yes, it is twelve pages, neatly researched and formatted – but I'm not going to share any of that stuff in a public forum. It also made a few things up, mostly to do with how far advanced our packing is: LSS, not very. And it used an expensive model that is great at thinking but not so good at writing. I swapped Opus for Sonnet and the costs went down.

I was intrigued by the description of Paperclip shouted out by Ekello Harrid, a lovely bloke who runs a YouTube channel called Why AI Matters. It's free open source software and looks pretty capable. I have another job in mind but I thought I'd test it out doing travel research. It took me a couple of days of wrangling with the thing, aided by Claude Code, to get it functional. It's a wonder to see it in operation, working through tasks, handing bits off to subordinates, assembling a report, flagging errors, keeping track of costs.

I'm barely scratching the surface with Paperclip but I can see this thing becoming a big part of my life. Wait until I set it working on graphics and video. Rest assured that I'll be installing it on the laptop I'm taking with me.

I can't say that I love the style of writing. I prefer my voice and my own little jokes. AI isn't good at humour yet.

I'll probably write a final pre-trip report once I've begun stuffing things in bags for real. After that, it's up to the gods of time and space. And, no offence, guys, but when I'm travelling with my wife, I kind of prefer hanging out with her instead of spending hours writing a blog post and sorting out photographs.
 

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I've set up my Paperclip company. I doubt that I'll use it for writing blog posts but i've set it to producing a daily report on my planned travels. Here's the latest example.

Daily Travel News Bulletin​

29/05/2026



Typhoon Jangmi building strength, Okinawa in the crosshairs​

Typhoon No. 6 (Jangmi) formed in the Caroline Islands on 27/05 and is tracking steadily northward toward the Okinawa region. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center forecasts the system will intensify to a Category 1-equivalent typhoon by early Tuesday morning (02/06), passing just east of Okinawa with violent winds, high waves, and heavy rainfall through 02/06.

Even before landfall, the system is expected to dump large amounts of moist air across western and eastern Japan early next week, raising concerns about widespread heavy rain from Sunday onward. The Japan Meteorological Agency warns the storm will maintain strong intensity near Okinawa for several days.

Relevance: Celebrity Millennium's 07/06 sailing from Tokyo includes southern Japanese ports (Kagoshima, Nagasaki, Fukuoka) that could face disruption if the typhoon tracks farther north than forecast. Qantas MEL–NRT and domestic connections may also see weather-related delays early next week. Worth monitoring closely over the weekend.

Source: 2026 Pacific typhoon season - Wikipedia, Japan Typhoon Season 2026, Tropical Depression 06W - Stars and Stripes



Qantas network hit by major disruption wave in early May​

The Australian domestic and trans-Tasman network copped a double punch in early and late May. On 06/05, a logistics meltdown triggered 598 delays and 53 cancellations across Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Canberra, and Perth. Canberra was hit particularly hard with 12 delays and 7 cancellations—a significant chunk of the airport's daily ops.

The chaos repeated on 26–27/05 when the trans-Tasman sector buckled under scheduling friction, forcing Qantas, Virgin Australia, Air New Zealand, and Sounds Air to suspend or delay operations. The result: 885 rolling delays and 36 outright cancellations. Brisbane recorded 7 cancellations and 211 delays; Melbourne (Tullamarine) logged 5 cancellations and 209 delays.

Qantas is offering fee-free refunds, flight credits, or date changes for tickets issued by 31/05 for travel between 28/02 and 31/05, with rebooking allowed through 31/08.

Relevance: The CBR–MEL and MEL–NRT legs are both in scope. The disruptions appear systemic rather than weather-related, suggesting ongoing capacity or crew rostering issues. Not a one-off.

Source: Qantas disruptions 06/05 - Travel And Tour World, Trans-Tasman disruptions 26/05 - Travel And Tour World, Qantas travel updates



Celebrity Millennium between sailings​

The ship completed its 14/05–26/05 Tokyo-to-Incheon sailing on 26/05 and should now be preparing for its next departure. The monitoring reference flags the 07/06 12-day Far East sailing from Tokyo, which includes Shimizu, Osaka, Kyoto, Kochi, Hiroshima, Kagoshima, Nagasaki, and Fukuoka.

Real-time AIS tracking on CruiseMapper or ShipTraffic.net will show the current position, but as of 29/05 the ship is likely berthed in Tokyo or nearby for turnaround.

The Cruise Critic roll call thread for the 07/06 sailing is blocked behind a 403 Forbidden wall, so no passenger chatter available today. The Facebook groups (Celebrity Millennium passengers and Celebrity Japan Cruises) weren't accessible via standard search either—manual login would be required.

Watch: Typhoon Jangmi's track over the next 72 hours. If it trends north of Okinawa by 02–03/06, southern Kyushu ports (Kagoshima, Nagasaki) could see itinerary changes.

Source: Celebrity Millennium itinerary - CruiseMapper, 12-night Best of Japan - Celebrity Cruises

[Comment: The ship is currently docked in Pusan. I haven't checked but presumably this is as per the cruise schedule. Each 12-day cruise during the season covers a slightly different route and set of ports.]



Tokyo hotels — quiet month, no incidents​

Hotel Groove Shinjuku: Reviews remain mixed. Guests like the location near Shinjuku Station, the city views, and the modern fit-out, but some flag unfriendly front-desk service and the lack of a gym or room service. No incidents or operational issues flagged in May.

Mitsui Garden Hotel Ueno: The hotel completed a renovation earlier this year, reducing room count from 245 to 242 and launching a new panda-themed floor tied to Ueno's zoo and park culture. The entire property is now non-smoking, with designated smoking rooms added separately. Triple rooms have been expanded to meet tourist demand. No incidents or service disruptions reported.

Neighbourhood notes: The January fire that halted Tokyo trains during morning rush hour (16/01) affected Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Tokyo Station, but no similar transport chaos has been reported in May. Ueno Station and the JR East Tohoku line have operated normally.

Source: Hotel Groove Shinjuku reviews - TripAdvisor, Mitsui Garden Hotel Ueno - Good Luck Trip, Tokyo train fire 16/01 - Travel And Tour World



Japan tourism dip — good news for elbow room​

Japan's inbound tourism dropped 4.9% year-on-year in January 2026 to approximately 3.59 million visitors—the first monthly decline in four years, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO). The drop is driven almost entirely by a collapse in Chinese visitor numbers following a travel advisory tied to rising regional tensions.

Travellers from Australia and other markets may find popular spots like Kyoto, Tokyo, and Mount Fuji less crowded as a result. Tokyo shopping districts and Osaka's Dotonbori have reported noticeably thinner crowds compared to the same period in 2025.

Smartraveller Australia maintains a GREEN advisory for Japan (exercise normal precautions). No safety or security changes flagged in May.

Source: Japan tourism drop 2026 - Travel And Tour World, China travel advisory impact - Travel And Tour World, Smartraveller Japan



Summary​

One item needs active monitoring: Typhoon Jangmi. If the forecast track holds, Okinawa takes the hit and the cruise itinerary stays clear. If it trends north, southern Kyushu ports and possibly domestic flights could be affected by 03–05/06. Everything else is baseline noise—Qantas disruptions continue but are manageable with the rebooking window, and Tokyo infrastructure is running smoothly.

[Comment: I asked for a thousand words in each bulletin and I feel that it is struggling to find enough to report on. I've modified my instructions, and will get it to cover more stories from the cruise ports I'll actually be visiting. I'll have to work out how to extract news from the various social media groups. I didn't know about the typhoon; looking at the predicted track, it could cause problems. Maybe not so much for flights in and out of Tokyo but maybe for some of the more southerly ports. I doubt that if any of these are hit severely – or even by heavy wind and rain – that we'll be visiting.]
 

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