Star Collector: Wonders of Southern Japan & Southeast Asia


Cruise overview
This month-long voyage will create a lifetime of memories, from timeless rural scenes to tongue-tingling cuisines and tantalizing islands floating in unreal shades of blue and green. Find inspiration for a thousand watercolors: longtail boats cruising the serene waters and karst pillars of Halong Bay, water buffalo tilling vivid green rice paddies, vermilion torii guarding Shinto shrines, and magical Thai islands we’ve hand-selected from over 1,400 choices. Expand your culinary horizons with Peranakan fusion food in Malaysia and Singapore, Khmer noodles in Cambodia, Taiwanese hot pot, and Ishigaki’s melt-in-your-mouth beef. Shop for colorful silk scarves in Bangkok, and browse the famous night markets during overnight stays in Hong Kong, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and Singapore. Anchor it all with a better understanding of the past as you visit the National Palace Museum in Taipei with one of the largest collections of Chinese art in the world, Ho Chi Minh City’s War Remnants Museum, Hoi An’s Ancient Town with its beautifully preserved 18th-century merchant houses, and the Imperial City of Hue with its lovely palaces, temples and gardens. Past or present, natural beauty or glimmering neon cities, this voyage reveals it all.
Itinerary
Osaka
From Minami’s neon-lighted Dotombori and historic Tenno-ji to the high-rise class and underground shopping labyrinths of Kita, Osaka is a city that pulses with its own unique rhythm. Though Osaka has no shortage of tourist sites, it is the city itself that is the greatest attraction. Home to some of Japan’s best food, most unique fashions, and warmest locals, Osaka does not beg to be explored—it demands it. More than anywhere else in Japan, it rewards the impulsive turn down an interesting side street or the chat with a random stranger. People do not come here to see the city, they come to experience it.Excluded from the formal circles of power and aristocratic culture in 16th-century Edo (Tokyo), Osaka took advantage of its position as Japan’s trading center, developing its own art forms such as Bunraku puppet theater and Rakugo comic storytelling. It was in Osaka that feudal Japan’s famed Floating World—the dining, theater, and pleasure district—was at its strongest and most inventive. Wealthy merchants and common laborers alike squandered fortunes on culinary delights, turning Osaka into “Japan’s Kitchen,” a moniker the city still has today. Though the city suffered a blow when the Meiji government canceled all of the samurai class’s outstanding debts to the merchants, it was quick to recover. At the turn of the 20th century, it had become Japan’s largest and most prosperous city, a center of commerce and manufacturing.Today Osaka remains Japan’s iconoclastic metropolis, refusing to fit Tokyo’s norms and expectations. Unlike the hordes of Tokyo, Osakans are fiercely independent. As a contrast to the neon and concrete surroundings, the people of Osaka are known as Japan’s friendliest and most outgoing. Ask someone on the street for directions in Tokyo and you are lucky to get so much as a glance. Ask someone in Osaka and you get a conversation.The main areas of the city, Kita (north) and Minami (south), are divided by two rivers: the Dojima-gawa and the Tosabori-gawa. Between Kita and Minami is Naka-no-shima, an island and the municipal center of Osaka. Kita (north of Chuo Dori) is Osaka’s economic hub and contains Osaka’s largest stations: JR Osaka and Hankyu Umeda. The area is crammed with shops, department stores, and restaurants. Nearby are a nightlife district, Kita-shinchi; Naka-no-shima and the Museum of Oriental Ceramics; Osaka-jo (Osaka Castle); and Osaka Koen (Osaka Park). Restaurants, bars, department stores, and boutiques attract Osaka’s youth to Minami (south Chuo Dori); theatergoers head to the National Bunraku Theatre and electronics-lovers to Den Den Town. For a glimpse of old Osaka, visit Tenno-ji Temple and Shin Sekai. The main stations are Namba, Shin-sai-bashi, Namba Nankai, and Tenno-ji. There’s easy access to the Municipal Museum of Fine Art and Sumiyoshi Taisha (Sumiyoshi Grand Shrine).The bay area, to the west of the city center, is home to the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios Japan. The Shinkansen stops at Shin-Osaka, three stops (about five minutes) north of Osaka Station on the Mido-suji subway line. To the north of Shin-Osaka is Senri Expo Park.
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At sea
Amami Ōshima
Okinawa
Ishigaki
Keelung (Chilung)
At sea
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
At sea
Ha Long Bay
At sea
Da Nang
At sea
Nha Trang
Ho Chi Minh City
Ho Chi Minh City
At sea
Sihanoukville
Koh Kood
Bangkok
Koh Kood
Ko Samui
At sea
At sea
Singapore
Singapore
Port Klang
Georgetown, Penang
Krabi
Koh Yao Noi
Phuket
Oceanview Suite
The Oceanview Suite combines modern comfort with classic maritime charm. Large picture windows frame sweeping sea views, while stylish décor, a comfortable sitting area and spa-inspired bathroom make this an inviting and restful space to relax in understated luxury.
Amenities
- Queen or Twin Configuration
- Vanity Area
- Shower
- Room Service Available
- TV
- Media/Entertainment Station
- Safe
- Hair Dryer
- Telephone
- Desk
- Wi-Fi (Additional Cost)
- Mini Bar (Additional Cost)
Ship features
Star Seeker combines elegant yacht-style design with new innovations, offering Windstar’s most advanced ship to date.
- All-suite accommodation for 224 guests
- New suite categories, including Horizon Owner’s, Infinity, and Vista Suites
- Four restaurants, including a new speciality dining venue
- Infinity pool and spacious sun deck
- World Spa by Windstar with ocean-view treatment rooms
- Water sports marina with complimentary kayaks and paddleboards
- State-of-the-art sustainability technology and water filtration systems
- Ice-strengthened hull for polar itineraries
- Hybrid-ready propulsion and ship-to-shore connectivity
- Friendly, inclusive atmosphere and open-seating dining



