NEW YORK -- American Queen Steamboat Company, which recently
acquired Victory Cruise Line and its two ships that sail the Great Lakes, plans
to add coastal cruises along the Eastern Seaboard and in the Yucatan Peninsula.
But AQSB President and CEO John Waggoner said the ships won't
sail to Cuba as Victory had planned this year. He said the line's 2019 Cuba
itineraries and other sailings planned by Victory for this winter and spring were
canceled and customer money refunded so AQSB could update the ships.
Waggoner said the company doesn't intend to add Cuba in the
future because he doesn't think "Cuba has been as well received as
everyone thought it was going to be."
The company is working, however, to add sailings to Mexico,
he said.
Waggoner discussed his plans for the Victory I and Victory
II at a luncheon Tuesday in New York. The ships, which he said resemble AQSB's
flagship American Queen, are currently in dry dock in Houma, Louisiana, being
renovated and upgraded to resemble the company's river ships and meet the same
standards.
The only itineraries currently set for the Victory ships
besides those recently announced for this summer on the Great Lakes are coastal
sailings from Nova Scotia.
All Victory sailings must have an international component
because the ships are flagged in the Bahamas. But Waggoner said he does plan to
have the ships, which were built in the United States, eventually reflagged as
U.S. vessels. However, he said that will take several years and approval from Congress.
Because they are foreign-flagged, the Victory ships will
retain their name rather than take on the AQSB brand, he said, but all
reservations will go through AQSB.
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Johanna Jainchill contributed to this report.