Vintner's Choice
5 days, 4 nights or 7 days, 6 nights, Round Trip from San Francisco, California
Indulge yourself in the wonderful
world of California wine, on a leisurely cruise experience that takes
you deep into the famed Napa and Sonoma wine valleys. You will also
enjoy a day exploring Sausalito and beautiful San Francisco Bay. Both
wine novices and connoisseurs will enjoy tastings and interactive
discussions about the history, mystery and delicacies of wine.
Choose from
or
Voyages!
CRUISE
Each afternoon, you'll return from your day's adventures in the Wine
Country to experience delightful hours on board ship, cruising on the
rivers and the bay. A Guest Wine Speaker joins you on board to offer
special tastings and personal insights into the world of fine wine.undefined
CRUISE
YOUR SELECTION
CRUISE ROUND TRIP Vintner's Choice
- Tour Costs From: $2,149 pp
- 5 Days, 4 Nights
- Round Trip from San Francisco
- Departures: September, October 2008
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Round Trip Cruise 36
- Day 1 - SAIL FROM SAN FRANCISCO
- Prior to boarding the Spirit of Yorktown in San Francisco you will be transferred from San Francisco Airport to Cruise West’s hospitality area. Enjoy the delights of Fisherman’s Wharf until boarding time. Fisherman's Wharf has some of the finest dining in the world. Taste the wonders of the sea - fresh mussels, clams, crab or fish. Be sure to order some delicious fresh, hot San Francisco sourdough bread. Further down the wharf you'll find Pier 39, a premier festival marketplace. At Pier 39 you'll see the San Francisco Carousel and the Aquarium of the Bay. Take in some shopping or if you have time, tour out to Alcatraz Island.
You will be welcomed onboard with a flute of Champagne or Champagne punch and a toast as you cruise by the San Francisco skyline and circle around Alcatraz Island. Following a delicious dinner, relax in the lounge as you cruise up-bay to set the stage for a busy day in the Napa Valley.
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- Day 2 - HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NAPA VALLEY
- Note: you may visit today’s sites in an alternate order. Winery selection is subject to change.
You will be treated to a cooking demonstration, “Cooking With Wine,” by the chefs at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA), Greystone campus and have time to peruse their amazing cooking store, The Spice Islands. You will also attend an engaging wine program (may include wine blending) taught by the professionals at Greystone. For 50 years CIA has been setting the standard for excellence in food preparation and these teaching kitchens are among the finest educational facilities in the world.
Lunch will be served at the world-renowned Auberge du Soleil restaurant perched on the slope of Rutherford Hill, affording an impressive view of the entire Napa Valley. This exclusive Cruise West lunch will feature food and wine pairings explained by the sommelier.
Nestled along the historic Silverado Trail, Mumm Napa’s spectacular views can be seen while tasting from the glass-enclosed tasting salon or outside on the terrace. Mumm Napa's winemaker's philsophy is to create sparkling wines that show elegance, balance and artistry by combining the tradition Methode Champenoise style with outstanding fruit that can only be cultivated in the Napa Valley. Take a private tour and taste Mumm Napa's award-winning sparkling wines.
Back onboard ship enjoy a leisurely cocktail hour and a delicious dinner. BLD
- Day 3 - SAUSALITO
- Enjoy the relaxing morning sail into Sausalito. Brunch will be served onboard as the Spirit of Yorktown ties up near the charming seaside town of Sausalito, just across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco. There will be regularly scheduled shuttles into town and time for you to walk and explore this artists’ town on your own. Additional optional activities include exploring the Bay Model, inflatable excursion craft tours of Richardson Bay, the Marin shipyard or shopping. The San Francisco Bay Model is a 3-dimensional hydraulic model of the San Francisco and Delta areas capable of simulating tides, currents and river inflows. The model is over 1.5 acres in size and represents an area from the Pacific Ocean to Sacramento and Stockton. Learn more about how fresh water from the rivers mingles with the salt water from ocean tides creating a rich and diverse aquatic ecosystem.
Your day will end with a twilight bay cruise and onboard wine tasting. BLD
- Day 4 - CHOICES
- Today is full of choices depending on what you feel like doing.
There will be time for shopping and exploring at the 8-acre park-like Sonoma Plaza, the largest shopping area of its kind in California., with galleries, wine shops and boutiques. The Plaza is an eight-acre square at the heart of Sonoma’s unique historical district.
Or... For those of you who would like the opportunity to personalize your cruise by exploring one of your individual passions there will be optional tours available:
The Cabernet Lovers Limo Tour will visit three amazing wineries known for their high-end Cabernet Sauvignons: Peju, and Joseph Phelps. (Wineries subject to change.) – or – Enjoy an early morning hot air balloon ride over the lovely Napa Valley. – or – Tour the olive grove at Olive Press during the harvest / press season. You will have a chance to see olive oil pressed, and taste it, while enjoying the music that accompanies the harvest workers.
Return to the Spirit of Yorktown for lunch.
The afternoon will be filled visiting two wineries in Sonoma. At St. Francis you will be treated to food and wine pairings, touring, and tasting. St. Francis Winery is known for its Cabernets, Meritages, and Chardonnays. The Chateau St. Jean visit will include tasting and time to appreciate its magnificent gardens. The courtyard features colorful shrubs and generous groundcovers, rare palm and citrus trees. This winery is the only one ever to have placed five wines in a singles "Wine Spectator" magazine Top 100 rating. They are known for its Cabernets and Chardonnays.
Back onboard the ship you will experience a leisurely cocktail hour with featured wines followed by a delicious dinner.
BLD
- Day 5 - DISEMBARK REDWOOD CITY / RETURN TO SAN FRANCISCO
- You will want to be out on deck early this morning to take in the view as we cruise into Redwood City for disembarkation.
A transfer by motorcoach will take you either to San Francisco’s airport or to our hospitality area at Fisherman's Wharf . B
B=Breakfast L=Lunch D=Dinner
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CRUISE DATES & PRICES
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TOUR 36 ROUND TRIP
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$2149 |
$2249 |
$2799 |
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$3099 |
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$2149 |
$2249 |
$2799 |
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$3099 |
The cost of your cruise includes service charges for land-based personnel and $173 per person which covers taxes/port charges/fees, and onboard services. Onboard gratuities are neither required nor expected. Prices are per person, double-occupancy, U.S. dollars. Single/Triple rates available upon request where applicable. Airfare extra. Prices do not include fuel surcharges which may be added up to the time of your departure.
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Spirit of Yorktown
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Cabin Category YOR - A : Staterooms feature two twin beds, in-room controlled air conditioning, radio, locking drawer, hairdryer and portholes.
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YOUR SELECTIONS BELOW
Vintner's Choice
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Spirit of Yorktown
Measuring 257 feet long, 43 feet wide, and with a draft of just eight feet, the Spirit of Yorktown offers unique itineraries. Dine in casual, intimate, open-seating while never missing the scenery through the large picture windows.
- 257 feet in length
- All cabins feature private facilities
- American crew
- Bed sizes vary from standard
- Cabin proportions as illustrated are approximate
- Cruising speed of 10 knots
- Registered in the United States
- Satellite phone
- 138 guests
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YOR - AA

YOR - AAA

YOR - DLX

YOR- Balcony

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San Francisco, California
Enjoy the scenic vistas and cultural pleasures of San Francisco.
The city of San Francisco is a beautiful, vibrant, exciting city, steeped in unique cultural, artistic, and natural history. This West Coast mecca is located halfway down the California coast, along the same longitude as Seattle, and in the same latitude as Yosemite Valley. Over six million people enjoy life in the Bay Area, making it the fifth-largest metropolitan region in the United States.
The Ohlone First Peoples once lived in villages on the protected shores of the hills along the Bay region, thriving on the abundance of marine life, vegetation, and animals until approximately 1835, when Spanish explorers arrived, calling their original settlement Yerba Buena, which is Spanish for “good herb.” (This “good herb” was a naturally occurring mint that grew in the sand dunes of the area, used as an Ohlone herbal remedy for such things as stomach aches.) Forts were established to protect this natural shipping port and harbor, and in 1848, a year after the city was officially renamed after Saint Francis, James Marshall found gold in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and the ’49er Gold Rush began. Within a year, immigrants came west climbing over the Rockies, and north through the swamps of Panama or around Cape Horn in ships. San Francisco’s population swelled from 900 to over 25,000 with immigrants from Mexico, Australia, and China. When the news of gold spread to Asia, an estimated 320,000 Chinese came to California. Those arriving in San Francisco settled in Chinatown around the Stockton Street area, distinguishing San Francisco as home of the world’s largest settlement of Chinese outside of Asia. Located in a geographically dynamic region, San Francisco has suffered its share of adversities such as the world-famous1906 Earthquake. The initial shake lasted 48 seconds, rupturing gas lines, downing electric wires, breaking chimneys, and overturning stoves, which caused fires that roared through the city. A ruptured main water source deprived firemen of a means to quell the fires, and for three days and nights the city burned, destroying over 28,000 original city structures. Much was lost, but survivors were determined to rebuild, maintaining that nothing was too difficult to accomplish after surviving this quake and resulting fire. That spirit continues to thrive in the Bay Area today. The city has hosted many historic events such as the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, which celebrated the first ship to steam from New York to San Francisco via the Panama Canal. This accomplishment shortened the distance from the two oceans by 7,873 miles, and allowed ships to avoid the treacherous voyage around Cape Horn. The unrivaled views, ambience, icons, and history of San Francisco remain unmatched, with frequent glimpses of early fortresses, piers, the Golden Gate Bridge, the fluted art deco column of Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill, the more recent pyramid spire of the Transamerica Building, and the natural beauty of the Bay.
San Francisco Bay
Visit the bay that almost wasn’t: San Francisco Bay.
The San Francisco Bay and Delta is the West Coast’s largest estuary. The Bay covers 1,600 square miles, and is at the confluence of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers and the Golden Gate Channel opening to the Pacific Ocean. In 1846, explorer John C. Fremont chose the name for the channel as Golden Gate because he foresaw the day when riches from Asia would flow through the channel. He didn’t foresee that the discovery of gold would give the gate new meaning in just a couple of short years.
The bay’s shoreline was once fringed with marshes, creeks, and coves that supported abundant shellfish, wildlife, and Ohlone Indian villages. Today, the piers, roads, and small parks along today’s waterfront are all built on landfill. By 1961, the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers had plans to develop and fill in the bay to the point it would become a small river. However, in 1962, three women (Catherine Kerr, Sylvia McLaughling, and Esther Gulick) turned the course of history with their “Save San Francisco Bay Association,” and it is thanks to them that the Bay remains as it is today. The Port of San Francisco was a bustling industrial and shipbuilding harbor by the late 1800's, with hundreds of piers and various activities lining the waterfront. One of those piers is Fisherman’s Wharf, established in 1900 by Genoese Italians at the foot of Taylor Street. This became both a docking and loading pier and a marketplace, where fisherman hawked the day’s fresh catch, creating a fascinating local attraction that continues to this day. Spectacular bridges span the bay, including the Oakland Bay Bridge which connects the cities of San Francisco and Oakland in a total length of 8.25 miles, east to west. Opening six months before the Golden Gate dedication, the structure of the Bay Bridge is taller than the largest pyramid in Egypt, and contains more concrete than the Empire State Building. The Golden Gate Bridge, icon of the West Coast and of San Francisco in particular, is a significant engineering accomplishment, designed and engineered by Joseph Strauss and utilizing more than 25,000 manhours. In its two main cables there is enough wire to wrap around the earth three times (over 80,000 miles). The total distance of the bridge including approaches is 7 miles, and the actual bridge span across the Golden Gate Channel is 1.8 miles. Famous islands also dot the waters of San Francisco Bay. Yerba Buena Island is most noted as the connection point and tunnel for the Oakland Bay Bridge. Treasure Island is a 400-acre manmade island built from 20 million cubic feet of sand and mud dredged from the bottom of the bay. The most famous of the islands is Alcatraz. Spanish settlers used the 12-acre island as a fort, its first lighthouse was built in 1884, and the prison was built in 1907. From 1934 to 1963, Alcatraz was the home address to the worst federal criminals in America, including Al Capone, George ‘Machine Gun’ Kelly, and Robert ‘Birdman of Alcatraz’ Stroud. From 1969 to '71, Native Americans claimed they had aboriginal rights to the unmanned government property and occupied it for a period of time. Today, Alcatraz is part of the Golden Gate Recreational Area and claims more visitors then any other National Park in the United States.
Sausalito, California
Stroll the boutiques and galleries of Sausalito.
This charming seaside community is located approximately five miles north of San Francisco, just past the Golden Gate Bridge, off Highway 101. A panoramic view from this little city includes Mt. Tamalpais to the north, Belvedere Peninsula, Angel Island, Alcatraz, and the East Bay to the east, and the incredible San Francisco skyline to the south. A large yacht mooring outlines Sausalito’s harbor, and its dramatic landscape and wooded mountainside is dotted with majestic homes reminiscent of a Mediterranean coastal village. Sausalito supports approximately 8,000 year-round residents, and has become a popular artist’s colony.
The Coast Miwok Indians lived along the Sausalito shoreline for hundreds of years until shortly after the first non-natives arrived in 1775 on the Spanish ship “San Carlos.” The Spanish named the area “Saucito,” meaning “Little Willow.” William Richardson gained the first land grant of the Sausalito area in 1838. When the railroad was built in 1875, Sausalito became a transportation hub, and by 1900, a new ferry service provided transportation and a great port location for bootleggers to smuggle alcohol. From 1941 to1945, liberty ships were manufactured at Marinship, supporting World War II and creating a short-lived boom economy. By 1945, Sausalito started to become a haven for creative, free-thinkers, establishing itself as an artists' colony. Many of these free-spirited bohemians lived in the then-economical floating home community north of town, which has now evolved into a much more structured and regulated community. The area still attracts many a visitor, who can easily imagine the likes of Otis Redding writing his famous song “Sitting on the Dock of the Bay” on a floating home during Sausalito’s “Golden Years.” Today, a visit to Sausalito provides stunning vistas, a National Historic Landmark District, and a variety of shops, boutiques, restaurants, and inns. Ferry service from San Francisco provides an opportunity to visit the popular attractions of the Bay Area Discovery Museum, Marinship, the Bay Model, and various festivals throughout the year.
Sonoma Valley
Sample the fine vintages of the Sonoma Valley.
Sonoma Valley is 17 miles long and up to seven miles wide, nestled between the Sonoma Mountains on the west, which protect the valley from the cool Pacific winds, and the Mayacama Mountains to the east, which separate Sonoma Valley from Napa Valley. There are thousands of acres of vineyards (over 6,000), and its 150 grape growers and 35 wineries fall under the Sonoma Valley Appellation in the southeastern part of Sonoma County. Its southern city, Sonoma, is built Spanish style around a plaza. There you can visit San Francisco de Solano (the last of 21 missions built by the Spanish), Sonoma Mission Barrack, or General Mariano Vallejo’s home.
The history of Sonoma reflects California’s history. The landscape, waterways, mild climate, and rich soil have served its many residents well. The peaceful Miwok, Wappo, and Pomo Indians flourished here for thousands of years. The abundance of the land provided enough for all and the tribes lived peaceably, taking only what they needed from the sea and land. The Spanish made a general claim on California in 1521 with the conquest of Mexico. Englishman Sir Francis Drake claimed the area in 1579. However no long-term permanent settlements were made until the 19th century. The Russians, looking for provisions for Russian-held Sitka, Alaska, established Fort Ross here and bartered with the Indians, Californios, and Yankee traders. The Russians started grape growing and wine making, but both the Yankees and the Mexicans were alarmed by the Russian venture until the Russians sold out to John Sutter. Meanwhile, the Mexicans were extending their reach towards the north. Father Altimera established the last of the California Missions, Mission San Francisco Solano de Sonoma, at the end of El Camino Real. The mission grape was planted, religion spread, and the mission grew until orders for secularization arrived in 1834. This is about the time General Mariano Vallejo arrived, establishing a pueblo. Americans were considered foreigners and were prohibited from owning land. When expelled from the area (but asked to leave their weapons) the Bear Flag Revolt erupted in Sonoma, and ultimately, the United States gained control of Alta California in 1850. With the discovery of gold, many unsuccessful 49’er immigrants of French, Italian, German, Spanish, and English heritage settled in the valley. The relative proximity of San Francisco and the ease of water travel played a role in the development of this region. In the 1850s, hay and grain were sent via barges into the valleys. Farmers also flocked to the southern border of the Carneros region to raise sheep and cattle, as well as to cultivate orchards and plant grapes. The second half of the 19th century brought different developments such as quarries which provided paving stones for San Francisco streets, and railroads in the 1870's to move products and people. Many French, Italian, and Swiss winemakers developed Sonoma into the viticulture center of California. The temperance movement and the advent of the root louse phylloxera harmed the industry, and from 1933 to the end of the 1960's, most of the wine produced was mediocre and was sold in bulk. Andre Tchelistcheff and Louis M. Martini pioneered the rebirth of Carneros by establishing it as a cool climate viticulture region after Prohibition. In the mid 1950's, the winery revival began, and today, the valley’s acclaimed wineries include small family houses
Napa Valley
Explore the grape diversity of Napa Valley.
Napa Valley is approximately 40 miles long and one to five miles wide. Its borders are the Mayacama Mountain range to the west and the Vaca Mountain range to its east. The rugged hills of these mountains give way to the flat valley floor, which is covered with acre after acre of world-renowned vineyards. The City of Napa is the county seat, and has a population of approximately 70,000. Calistoga, a tiny village known for its mineral springs and mud baths, lies at the north end of the valley, and the Napa River flows through the valley from Mt. St. Helena to San Pablo Bay.
Over 200 million years ago, Napa Valley was the bottom of the ocean. A combination of various dynamic geologic activities formed different types of soil layers, such as thick marine and marsh-made clays, and sand and gravel dropped by old rivers. This complex soil base and various microclimates combine to provide for 15 very distinct growing regions or sub-appellations in this small geographic area. At least 62 major soil types are found on the Napa County soil maps, allowing over 240 unique wineries to flourish here. The French have a name for these special grape-growing regions. Strictly translated, terroir refers to the earth’s soil. In the broader sense, terroir refers to the geography of an area or all that affects the grapes grown in a particular region to create its uniqueness: The slope & orientation of the hillsides, the climate, weather, soil chemistry, and physical structure, and the history of the use of the land by the people who lived there. The identification of certain wines with certain places has been turned into a system of appellations providing valuable information to wine drinkers. This information allows them to better identify a region where wine grapes are grown, and understand the elements that instill unique characteristics to an area’s crop and wine. Napa’s Southern Valley, the Carneros Region, has cooler temperatures and marine air influenced by San Pablo Bay. This is where Burgundian varietials such as Pinot Noir and Chardonnay flourish. Carneros’ long moderate growing season and fog intrusions cool the vineyards and boost acid levels in the grapes. The grapes mature slowly and evenly, infusing livelier and more concentrated flavors and crisp acidity. In Napa’s mid-valley, warm afternoons and cool evenings help create the Bordeaux varietals of Cabernet Sauvignon, Semillion, and Sauvignon Blanc. A winemaker is permitted to include the name of the appellation on his label only if 85 percent of the wine comes from that particular area (e.g. label bearing “Carneros District and Napa Valley”). The Valley’s first human inhabitants, the Wappo Indians, lived off the area’s bounty of fruits, fish, and game for perhaps 4,000 years before the first European settlers arrived. George C. Yount was the first non-native settler and the first to receive a land grant from the Mexican government. In 1831, he received a grant of 12,000 acres in the heart of the valley called Rancho Caymus. Yount planted the first mission variety grapes for personal consumption. By 1855, a small town sprung up on the southern border of his property, which he named Sebastopol. Two years after Yount’s death, the town name was changed to Yountville in George’s honor.
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