Villa Vie Odyssey (1993)

Villa Vie Odyssey (IMO 9000699 🇧🇸) is a residential cruise ship owned by Villa Vie Residences

“Villas” on board the ship are available for purchase or rental for selected periods of time. As one would expect, a range of amenities are offered to residents. These include a business center, medical center, housekeeping, laundry service, meal service, and assistance with planning and arranging excursions on shore.*  

The ship arrived in Honolulu Harbor on 1 June 2025 after calling at Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. She departed for Nāwiliwili Harbor, Kaua‘i the next day. 

Odyssey 1

Villa Vie Odyssey inbound to Pier 2B, Honolulu Harbor. She was assisted by Foss Maritime tugs Mikioi (bow) and Pi‘ilani (stern). 1 June 2025.

Odyssey 2

Villa Vie Odyssey inbound. Mikioi (at left in photo) is off her starboard side and Pi‘ilani (at right in photo) is off her port side. 1 June 2025.

Odyssey 3

Villa Vie Odyssey turning in the basin. Mikioi is at her starboard bow. 1 June 2025.

Odyssey 4

Villa Vie Odyssey approaching Pier 2B after turning in the basin. Pi‘ilani is off her starboard quarter and Mikioi is off her starboard bow. 1 June 2025.

Ahua Point Odyssey

Hawaii Pilots Association pilot boat Ahua Point heading to Pier 2 to pick up the pilot after Villa Vie Odyssey is securely tied up to the pier. 1 June 2025.


*No compensation was received by Maritime Hawai‘i for this coverage of Villa Vie Odyssey.

3 Responses to “Villa Vie Odyssey (1993)

  • Is there a rule to remember starboard or port related to left and right stern vs bow for front or back?

    • Maritime Hawai‘i
      8 months ago

      Hi Randal,

      I don’t know if there are any “official” rules to remember.

      Before the word “port” came into common use (mid- to late-1800s, if I remember correctly), the term “larboard” was used. They sounded too similar, which could lead to mistakes if misheard. So larboard fell out of favor. The way I trained my brain: left/larboard = port

      Port and starboard are relative to the bow.

      Bow and stern are almost always front and back, unless you’re dealing with something like a double-ended ferry which can travel in two directions without having to turn around.

      Not sure if that answered your question.

      Maybe others will chime in.

      ETA: Ah, I see where there can be some confusion regarding one of the photo captions. Will fix that.

  • Thank you. I clears it for me.

    Bow is front, stern is back (rear).
    Port is left, starboard is right.

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