In 2003, with the Mekong Pandaw, we were the first
ship to attempt this extraordinary journey in its
entirety surmounting complex bureaucratic and
navigational obstacles. In 2004 we brought the former
Pandaw III now renamed the Tonle Pandaw over from
Myanmar to join the Mekong Pandaw. The two Pandaws
explore two countries, two cultures and two ways of
life linked by one great river. This is the only
luxury cruises vacation on the Mekong River. A shipping link between Saigon and Angkor is
immensely practical for the traveller as it makes it
possible to connect three important destinations on
one trip with easy plane connections at either end:
Saigon the exotic Frenchified former capital of South
Vietnam, Phnom Penh, the quaint Cambodian capital, and
the stupendous World Heritage monuments at Angkor. One
need no longer check in and out of hotels and endure
bumpy roads to visit these magnificent places.
Sailing
on a Pandaw is essentially an outdoor experience. Whilst
the staterooms are very comfortable and roomy,
passengers prefer to spend their time sitting outside,
on the promenade decks or on the vast observation deck
above. Unlike other cruise ships every window (except
port holes on lower deck) can open.
When
sailing our passengers sit on deck and become absorbed
by great panoramas as they unfold about them.
Spellbound, one cannot help but to meditate upon the
unceasing human and wildlife activity of these teaming
water worlds.
State
Cabin
The Pandaw stateroom is the most
celebrated feature of our ships. Finished in brass and
teak, the main and upper deck rooms are very spacious at
168 square feet (15.6 sqm). Much loved by all our
passengers we have ensured that with each ship we build
the stateroom remains the same. Our cabins do not have
mini-bars, satellite TV’s, internet or phones. There
is a 24 honesty bar on the sundeck. Pandaw
passengers usually want to escape from the tiresome
features found in international business hotels.
Many passengers describe life on
board a Pandaw more like being a guest on a private
motor yacht than a cruise ship. Where we go and what we
see is intrepid in extreme. What you come back to is a
floating base of discreet comfort, caring service and
all the good things one looks for in life.
Bar & Dining
The Pandaw dining rooms are designed to open up along
the sides and only at night do we close them up and use
air conditioning. We know our passengers want
fresh air not chilled air.
We offer a great choice of local cuisine and exotic
foods. We source supplies as locally as possible,
given environmental health regulations. Breakfast and
lunch are buffets and dinner is served at the tables.
Passengers who do not like hot or spicy foods are
offered European alternatives and vegetarians are well
catered for. Our chefs know that the majority of
passengers want to eat the best of each country they
pass through.
Promenade Decks
Sailing on a Pandaw is essentially an outdoor
experience. Whilst the staterooms are very comfortable
and roomy, passengers prefer to spend their time sitting
outside, on the promenade decks or on the vast
observation deck above. Unlike other cruise ships every
window (except port holes on lower deck) can open.
When sailing our passengers sit on deck and become
absorbed by great panoramas as they unfold about them.
Spellbound, one cannot help but to meditate upon the
unceasing human and wildlife activity of these teaming
water worlds.
Specification
-
Length:
200ft / 60m
-
Beam:
36ft / 11m
-
Draught:
4ft / 1.5m
-
Berths:
64 pax
-
Decks:
4: Lower, Main, Upper, Sun
-
Engines:
2 x 550bhp Isuzu
-
Propulsion:
Inboard system
-
Built:
2003
-
Comms:
Cell phones, Sat phones (where permitted by local
authorities) VHF and SSB radio, internal phone
system, PA system and tannoy system for navigation
purposes.
-
Safety:
Smoke detectors in all cabins and public places,
emergency lighting and generator, fire pump,
hydrants and hoses, fire extinguishers, life jackets
for all on board and life rafts.
-
Navigation:
Navigation lights, ships horn, searchlight, GPS,
Radar (where permitted by local authorities).
-
Amenities:
On board laundry, bakery, fully equipped galley and
refrigeration units; air conditioning for all inside
areas.
-
Water:
Treatment plants for desalination, desedimentation
and purification using UV and osmosis.
-
Sewage:
Microbiotic treatment plants.
Class: Myanmar DMA Inland Water (based on Lloyds
Inland Water Class).
-
Flag:
Country flags in areas of operation.
-
Insurance:
Ship Owners UK: P&I policies with over USD45
million per vessel.
-
Crew:
28 per vessel of mixed Asian nationalities.
-
Management:
European expatriate experts employed directly by
Pandaw Cruises supervising experienced Asian
Pursers.
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