Cruise ships are meant for luxurious leisure that creates great memories of happening vacations.

The latest cruise news says there are clandestine underneath bars in the ship to which cruise ship passengers have no access.

Generally, cruise deals ensure all amenities are available for guests and are well-taken care by the friendly crew. Although a majority of passengers go to bars and restaurants above deck, there are hidden bars underneath that many may not know.

Having worked in many cruise brands including Royal Caribbean Cruise, Brian David Bruns - a former cruise worker and author of Cruise a la Carte discloses this secret. He vouches that amenities for passengers in Cruise ships are extensive.

They range from spas, swimming decks, grand eateries serving global foods and the best of liquor be it Tennessee whiskey or any pricey beverage.

According to a former cruise staffer, the exotic bar underneath the deck in luxury cruise ships can give the best offerings like in any liquor store.

Crew parties at zero deck

Bruns also reveals that cruise ship staff gets a broad fun time in terms of parties on the cruise ship. After fulfilling every need of guests with a friendly presence onboard crews organize own entertainment when the shift winds down.

Brian says “most ships nowadays have the crew bar on zero decks, which is at the waterline.”

Passengers are not allowed to venture into these staff-only areas. He notes crew bars vary widely. In Royal Caribbean ships, the entire back deck near the waterline will be open for the party and the teak-planked open-air patio will be spanning the entire width of the ship.

Although crew bars have minimal dance floor space they will be loaded with shiny baubles and thumping music.

In addition to the crews’ parties, cruise operators also throw monthly or annual parties, allowing fun after a busy working schedule.

Noting Carnival is the best in this regard, Brun says it hosts two parties a month.

“These parties were the wildest things I’ve ever seen—and I live in Las Vegas. When given only two hours to cut loose, people did so.”

Cruise ship
A cruise ship is pictured in the Marseille harbor on September 20, 2012. Gerard Julien/AFP/GettyImages)

Meanwhile, in an incident relating to the fall of a toddler into the sea causing her death, the grandfather has been charged with negligent homicide.

The child fell from a height of 115 feet off the Freedom of the Seas ship owned by Royal Caribbean.

The grandpa Salvatore Anello, who “negligently exposed the child to the abyss through a window” on the 11th floor of the cruise ship has been booked, according to Dennise N. Longo Quiñones, the Puerto Rico attorney general.