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Viking Cruise Trip Report: Empires of the Mediterranean

Posted on 3/27/26 at 8:57 am
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 8:57 am
Part 1 trip report of our recent Viking Cruise. The second part was self-directed in Bosnia and will be forthcoming.

The Itinerary

**March 7 — Athens (Piraeus)**
Arrived in Athens and boarded the ship. Embarkation was organized and gave us time to get settled before departure.

**March 8 — Athens**
Spent the morning in port. Easy day to adjust, walk around a bit, and then sail out in the afternoon.

**March 9 — Santorini**
Classic Santorini stop with the caldera views and bright weather. Busy as always, but still a great port day.

**March 10 — Olympia (Katakolon)**
Visited the archaeological site and museum. One of the more historically interesting stops of the trip.

**March 11 — Corfu**
Explored Corfu’s Old Town and waterfront. Good mix of history and scenery.

**March 12 — Kotor, Montenegro**
The sail-in through the Bay of Kotor was a standout moment. The town itself was easy to navigate and worth the time.

**March 13 — Dubrovnik, Croatia**
Walked the old city walls and enjoyed perfect weather. A strong highlight of the itinerary.

**March 14 — Zadar, Croatia**
Saw the Sea Organ and spent time along the waterfront. Relaxed, low-key port day.

**March 15 — Koper, Slovenia**
Quiet stop with access to the old town and surrounding wine areas. Nice change of pace.

**March 16 — Venice (Fusina/Chioggia)**
Disembarked and wrapped up the trip.

Why We Stick With Viking


7 River / 3 Ocean: 10 Total. We keep coming back to Viking because the ships are small and uncrowded, the atmosphere is quiet and adult-focused, and the staterooms are designed in a way that actually works. Service has been consistently solid, the food is reliably good, and the itineraries focus on ports and culture instead of sea days and upselling. Pricing is straightforward, and the experience is the same across the fleet.

Highlights

Olympia Greece:

I liked Olympia because the archaeological site is genuinely impressive and the history is easy to appreciate when you’re standing where the original Olympic Games were held. The museum is well done, the layout is simple to follow, and the whole stop feels meaningful without being overwhelming.

Kotor Montenegro:

Kotor stood out for the sail-in alone — coming through the bay is one of the best arrivals on any itinerary. The old town is compact, walkable, and easy to explore at your own pace. It’s a scenic stop that doesn’t require a lot of planning to enjoy.

Also, definitely the optional excursions. I don’t usually book the optional tours because you can often do similar things through Viator for less.

• Postojna Cave & Predjama Castle (Slovenia): Postojna is one of Europe’s major cave systems with huge chambers and an easy mini-train ride, and Predjama Castle is built directly into a cliff. Seeing both in one stop made for a great day.

• Krka National Park (Croatia): This one was absolutely worth it. Beautiful scenery and one of the standout experiences of the entire itinerary.

Selected Photos From Trip


Posted by geauxpurple
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2014
17165 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 10:20 am to
Great stuff.
I take this cruise on April 18.
Can’t wait.
Thanks.
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 10:41 am to
Let me know if I can be of any further assistance!!
Posted by geauxpurple
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2014
17165 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 11:58 am to
Thanks. We have been on two Viking river cruises but this will be our first ocean cruise with them.
Posted by HoustonGumbeauxGuy
Member since Jul 2011
33257 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 1:13 pm to
That itinerary looks amazing
Posted by vistajay
Member since Oct 2012
2883 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 2:28 pm to
I stayed in Kotor for a week. My view the whole trip was the Bay of Kotor, marred only by passing cruise ships, lol. The town was magical at night after the cruise people left.

When I am a bit older and my decline in mobility supersedes my disdain of cruises, I'll likely go Viking.
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 3:22 pm to
quote:

I stayed in Kotor for a week. My view the whole trip was the Bay of Kotor, marred only by passing cruise ships, lol. The town was magical at night after the cruise people left.

When I am a bit older and my decline in mobility supersedes my disdain of cruises, I'll likely go Viking.


I hear ya. We rolled in then this other ship, 5 times bigger, then BAM! HOARDS of tourists getting tendered onto shore. No more "magical".

You'd probably like Viking Ocean ships. 930 capacity. Not like the ones that bring a swarm of 5-6k at once.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 4:59 pm
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
24025 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 3:38 pm to
I'm just curious, what is the percentage that are american and international on these? Is there a lot of any country you wouldn't expect? Like Chinese?

Or mostly Americans and Europeans?
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 4:59 pm to
Viking target markets so tends to be overwhelmingly Americans. We had a couple of couples that were from Australia and Britain, but that was about it. You don’t see any other Europeans on these cruises.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
24025 posts
Posted on 3/28/26 at 6:55 am to
Interesting. My parents have done some European river cruises, maybe not necessarily Viking, and they always say it’s around 50% European. Their last one was a bike and barge and there was a doctor from Scotland and there was like 8 people that got hurt, lol. Out of like 75. They had bike crashes and what not. Probably happens a lot with retiree age folks on these electric bikes doing 20 mph
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/28/26 at 7:20 am to
quote:

Interesting. My parents have done some European river cruises, maybe not necessarily Viking, and they always say it’s around 50% European. Their last one was a bike and barge and there was a doctor from Scotland and there was like 8 people that got hurt, lol. Out of like 75. They had bike crashes and what not. Probably happens a lot with retiree age folks on these electric bikes doing 20 mph


It would depend on the cruise line. I rarely see non-Americans on Viking River cruises. Others:

1. CroisiEurope — overwhelmingly European
2. Viva Cruises — German + British mix
3. Riviera Travel — British passengers
4. Scenic/Emerald — Australians + mixed English speakers

These will feel noticeably more international than Viking.
Posted by geauxpurple
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2014
17165 posts
Posted on 3/28/26 at 11:45 am to
On my two Viking cruises I found that the vast majority of the passengers were from the US with a handful from Australia. The ones from other countries were few and far between.
Posted by Uroblast
SE TN
Member since Jan 2010
169 posts
Posted on 3/29/26 at 6:30 pm to
As I recall you had been to Plitvice on a prior trip. How did Krka compare? Also how did these destinations in Slovenia compare to Kobarid and Triglav? When we toured Julian Alps and Kobarid we had to leave out the caverns and castle in Southern Slovenia due to time.
Posted by Nole Man
Somewhere In Tennessee!
Member since May 2011
8932 posts
Posted on 3/29/26 at 10:59 pm to
Well, Plitvice should be listed among the 7 wonders of the world. It's that spectacular. We visited on this trip Krka and Kravic Falls in Bosnia. Both have a similar look to them, but nothing like Plitvice.

But here's my summary overall:

Having previously visited Plitvice, this itinerary incorporated Krka National Park. Krka offers its own distinct appeal — it is generally more accessible, less demanding, and allows visitors to approach the water at several locations. While Plitvice remains unparalleled in scale and visual impact, Krka was a great alternative.

Regarding Slovenia, the destinations visited during this trip presented a markedly different character from Kobarid and the Triglav/Soca Valley region.

Kobarid is my happy place. I'd move there. The Julian Alps are defined by mountainous terrain, rivers, and striking turquoise waters, creating a rugged and tranquil atmosphere that integrates seamlessly into the landscape. In contrast, the sites visited on this occasion featured lakes, medieval towns, and iconic postcard views typical of Slovenia.

During a previous tour of the Julian Alps and Kobarid, time constraints necessitated omitting the southern caverns and Predjama Castle.

Postojna Cave is one of those massive, other-worldly cave systems you actually ride a little train into — huge chambers, wild formations, and easy to navigate. Predjama Castle is the perfect pairing: a full medieval fortress built straight into a cliff face, half castle and half cave system. Seeing the two together makes for a great “only in Slovenia” kind of day.
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