Martin wrote:
> On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 22:25:02 +0000, d4g4h4@yahoo.co.uk (David Horne, _the_
> chancellor (*)) wrote:
>
> >Martin wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 22:10:36 +0000, d4g4h4@yahoo.co.uk (David Horne, _the_
> >> chancellor (*)) wrote:
> >>
> >> >Dillon Pyron wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> [Default] Thus spake erilar :
> >> >>
> >> >> >In article <241120080750253023%fort@his.com.remove.invalid>,
> >> >> > Charles wrote:
> >> >> >
> >> >> >> There are limitations on smoking that are different for
> >> >> >> every cruise line. Some don't allow it in cabins, some do.
> >> >> >
> >> >> >Smoking in a cabin, as in a hotel room, stinks it up beyond use for
> >> >> >non-smokers long after the smoker is gone.
> >> >>
> >> >> And with shared ventilation, the odor pervades other rooms.
> >> >
> >> >My next door neigbour is a smoker, and it stinks up the hallway, even
> >> >though it's prohibited to smoke there. If you don't smoke, it _really_
> >> >gets up your nose. Still, if could be worse. I don't have any noisy
> >> >neigbours, and there's no smell of smoke in our apartment. It's
> >> >heaven...
> >>
> >> when smoking was permitted in the public rooms of P&O ferries smoke
> >> permeated all the cabins via the air conditioning.
> >
> >I can imagine. In our apartment in Boston, we could faintly smell smoke
> >in the bathroom- I'd suspected the plumbing carried it, but not sure
> >how. Luckily, no such problem here. It's just that walk to the lift that
> >can be annoying...
>
> The only smoking on the ferries now is outside.
Outside the ferry I hope...
--
(*) of the royal duchy of city south and deansgate
www.davidhorne.net (email address on website)
"The fact is that when I compose I never think of and never
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