Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Viking River Cruises


CDH

Recommended Posts

CDH Newbie

Viking River Cruises (Berlin-Prague) had wonderful gluten-free food. Our travel agent advised Viking River Cruises in advance of my nutritional needs. The chef was able to turn most all dishes to gluten-free. In the morning, I would place my order off the daily menu choices. If I didn't want what was going to be served, chicken and steak were always available. Whether it was soup or sauces, I didn't have to worry. If we were on a city trip and we were on our own for lunch/dinner off the ship, I took my gluten-free awareness cards from this site (German and Czech) and was accommodated. A few times it took a few restaurants before we found one that had a "clue" as to what gluten-free meant. All in all.....a wonderful experience.

  • 9 months later...

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



rajawali Newbie

CDH,

Thank you for relating your experience on the Viking River Cruise. My wife and I will be going on one from Moscow to St. Petersburg. Your note is encouraging.

Thanks.

Rajawali

Michelle1234 Contributor

Thanks for posting! Its good to hear of a successful experience. I'm considering them but had heard you couldn't get gluten free food due to the language barrier.

Rajawali could you post also when you get back with both good and bad experiences so we can see if this was an exception? I also want to do a Moscow - St. Petersburg.

Thanks,

Michelle

MaryJones2 Enthusiast

We are doing the Germany - Austria trip on Viking in November. I contacted them about my multiple intolerances (gluten, dairy and soy) and preferences (quasi-vegetarian) as well as my husband

hathor Contributor

I would be interested in knowing how you do with Viking. I had similar dietary needs and was assured by a different line (Amadeus) that they could accommodate me on a Budapest to Amsterdam trip. They did a substandard job on that. I hope you do better ...

One resource I found before my trip was www.menudata.com. It is a free service where you can put multiple food allergies/preferences into a translation into a large number of different languages. I printed out sheets in Hungarian, German, and Dutch with my multiple needs. No restaurant had a problem understanding the translation.

rajawali Newbie
Thanks for posting! Its good to hear of a successful experience. I'm considering them but had heard you couldn't get gluten free food due to the language barrier.

Rajawali could you post also when you get back with both good and bad experiences so we can see if this was an exception? I also want to do a Moscow - St. Petersburg.

Thanks,

Michelle

Michelle,

I will post my experiences when we return early in October.

Rajawali.

  • 7 months later...
Flamingo Newbie

I have booked a Yangtze River Cruise (China) with Viking River Cruises. My materials said that I should notify them of any dietary restrictions. I am diabetic and have celiac disease. I called and spoke to them. They recorded information about the diabetes and told me that it would be impossible for me to eat "gluten-free" on the trip. I tried to explain that I can eat meat, vegetables, and rice in the hope that they could at least provide gluten-free meals while I was on the ship. They said no. At no time while in restaurants, planes, or on their ship would I be able to eat gluten-free.

I wanted to ask whether it would be okay if I brought food into China in my luggage, but they just said that they wouldn't deal with it and hung up. They stopped taking calls from the travel agent at one point. When I tried to reach them with unrelated questions, they again repeated that they didn't do gluten-free. (During that call, I never mentioned gluten-free, but they had obviously tagged me in their system in some way.)

I am currently planning on taking lots of food on the trip. I'm not sure how I'll get 16 days of food into my luggage (and still have room for clothing), but I've already paid for the trip, so I'm going.

My advice: check with the cruise line before assuming that they can handle gluten-free on your trip. My problems with them might be related to China, but they might have similar issues in other countries.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



MaryJones2 Enthusiast

I took the Viking Cruise of the Danube last fall and didn't have any issues with getting gluten-free food there. Most of the dishes were gluten-free anyway but when appropriate the chef would adapt the meal for me (including making soup) and the staff was quite understanding of the issue. One note though, most dishes contained some form of dairy or meat.

Viking caters to Americans. Most meals had local themes but were very much geared toward American palates. Breakfast and lunch were buffet style and lots of the stuff was gluten-free. They also make things like omlets for breakfast if you don't want to eat off the buffet. I am not a cruiser but the cruiser folks on the boat said the service was much better on the China route so I would think that you wouldn't have any issue getting a gluten-free and/or diabetic menu. The boats are pretty small so the managers, chefs and staff will get to know you.

As for taking food into China. You can take anything that isn't organic - meaning fresh fruits, vegetables, etc. I took plenty of pasta, condiments and sweets. You'll be thankful for the extra space in your suitcase that your eaten food creates when you pack to come home!

  • 2 weeks later...
rajawali Newbie
Thanks for posting! Its good to hear of a successful experience. I'm considering them but had heard you couldn't get gluten free food due to the language barrier.

Rajawali could you post also when you get back with both good and bad experiences so we can see if this was an exception? I also want to do a Moscow - St. Petersburg.

Thanks,

Michelle

rajawali Newbie
Thanks for posting! Its good to hear of a successful experience. I'm considering them but had heard you couldn't get gluten free food due to the language barrier.

Rajawali could you post also when you get back with both good and bad experiences so we can see if this was an exception? I also want to do a Moscow - St. Petersburg.

Thanks,

Michelle

Michelle,

I apologize for the tardiness in posting my experiences on the Moscow-St.Petersburg cruise on Viking. Please refer to my response that I entered today (5/14/08): "River Cruise Moscow to St. Petersburg".

Thanks.

Rajawali

  • 3 weeks later...
Flamingo Newbie

I'm back from my Viking River Cruise of the Yangtze. Although Viking told me that I would not be about to eat gluten-free in China, I had a wonderful experience. I had prepared a Mandarin card explaining what I couldn't eat. I showed it to my tour guide Richard, and he said that he would take care of the land meals. He said that it would be good to place the card near me at the restaurants, although not all of the wait-staff would be able to read it. He called ahead to each restaurant and ordered a special meal at each location. I didn't get Peking Duck, but I was able to eat everywhere I went. I was delivered one soup and one meal incorrectly. I recognized that the soup was bad when I tasted it, so I had a little contamination there. I could tell that the meal was bad as soon as it was delivered: I showed my Mandarin card and the meal was replaced right away. Many of the special meals were vegetarian: I suspect the meat is prepared in advance, and vegetarian entrees were fast replacements. My meals were frequenly delayed a short time, but I was on vacation and not in a hurry.

On the Century Sun, Cristophe (the Maitre-d) reviewed the meals with me each morning and selected replacement dishes as necessary. My wait-staff on the ship (Jacky, Olivia, and Maggie) always remembered and made sure that I got my special meal. Another rave: we had tried to order a pitcher of Margaritas when we got on board, but could only find individual drinks. I talked to Cristophe about pitchers and he set up a price for pitchers of Margaritas while we were on board. The price was a great deal, so the group I travelled with had Margarita pitchers every day!

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,066
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Lexxi Hartless
    Newest Member
    Lexxi Hartless
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Maybe celiac but maybe NCGS that was misdiagnosed as IBS morphing gradually into celiac. Is NCGS a new category to you? It shares many of the same GI symptoms with celiac disease but does not damage the small bowel lining like celiac.
    • knitty kitty
      Thiamine has antifungal properties.  The body uses thiamine to keep bacteria and yeasts from overgrowth in the digestive system.   Fluconazole use can cause thiamine deficiency.   Supplementing with thiamine in the form Benfotiamine would be beneficial as Benfotiamine promotes intestinal healing.   Thiamine and the other B vitamins tend to be low in Celiac due to malabsorption.  Talk to your doctor about supplementing vitamins and minerals.
    • Scott Adams
      Welcome @Natalia Revelo, your experience is profoundly difficult and, sadly, not entirely unique within the celiac community. It's the frustrating reality of "silent" or ongoing damage that isn't captured by the MARSH score alone, which only measures active villous atrophy. Your normal biopsy suggests your diet is preventing the classic autoimmune attack, but it doesn't mean your gut has fully healed or that other issues aren't at play. The inflammation from your newly discovered milk and egg allergies is a huge clue; this constant allergic response can create a low-grade inflammatory environment that severely hampers nutrient absorption, effectively creating a "leaky gut" scenario independent of celiac damage. This is likely why your iron stores deplete so rapidly—your body is both unable to absorb it efficiently and may be losing it through inflammation. While the functional medicine path is expensive, it's clearly providing answers and relief that traditional gastroenterology, focused solely on the gluten-free diet and biopsy results, is missing. To move forward, continue the gut-healing protocols your functional doctor recommends (perhaps exploring alternative options to glutamine that won't irritate your cystitis), maintain your strict avoidance of all allergens and irritants, and know that true healing is a multi-faceted process. You might seek a second opinion from a different gastroenterologist who is more knowledgeable about non-responsive celiac disease and the complex interplay of food allergies and micronutrient absorption, but your current path, while costly, seems to be leading you toward the steady health you need.
    • knitty kitty
      Have you had a DNA test to look for Celiac disease genes?  If she doesn't have any celiac specific genes, look for another explanation.  If she does have Celiac genes, assume they are turned on and active Celiac disease is progressing.  All first degree relatives (mother, father, siblings, children) should be genetically tested as well.   Sometimes blood tests are ambiguous or false negatives if one has anemia, diabetes or thiamine deficiency.  Certain medications like antihistamines and steroids can suppress the immune system and result in false negatives or ambiguous results on antibody tests.  
    • Heatherisle
      That was just the visual report, so need to wait for confirmation or otherwise from the results. They did take a biopsy from the upper end of the duodenum(D1). D2 looked unremarkable on the camera. Just wish we didn’t have to wait so long for the results as she’s naturally a very anxious person. But thanks so much for taking the time to answer me
×
×
  • Create New...