Thursday, February 11, 2010

Choosing the Right Cruise for Diving

If your spouse is set on a Caribbean cruise and you were hoping for a week of diving in Bonaire take heart. You can dive and cruise but it takes some careful planning. It's true that you may get in more diving on a land-based vacation, but if the weather turns foul you are stuck in the same spot all week. The great advantage of cruise ship diving is that every day you wake up to new weather conditions. If one port is wiped out the chances are good that your next port will be just fine for diving.

Your first step in planning a cruise/dive vacation is to consider which cruise to take. Some itineraries are more conducive to diving than others. Additionally, some cruise lines are more "diver friendly" so check out the shore excursions before you book. Note the times the ship is in port. If the ship is only in a port five hours your chances of getting in some diving are greatly reduced. Check out the Cruise Critic forum on diving (http://www.cruisecritic.com) and see what others have said about diving in various ports. The time and money required to get to the dive shop at some ports may be prohibitive.

I love diving from cruise ships because I have been able to dive in some remote locations that would cost too much to fly into and stay. For example, St. Lucia has some lovely diving, but the cost to fly into St. Lucia, and the cost of lodging is much higher than what you'll pay to cruise to St. Lucia. Another advantage of cruise ship diving is that you can check out dive locations without risking a week's vacation as well as your hard-earned vacation dollars. If a port you visit has some nice diving then you can plan on returning at a later date for a land-based vacation.

For Caribbean cruising many of the ports are well worth diving. My favorites include Dominica, Grenada, Barbados and St. Croix in the Eastern Caribbean. The western Caribbean holds such delights as Belize, Roatan, Grand Cayman and Cozumel. Southern Caribbean cruises often stop at Aruba, Bonaire and/or Curacao -- all very nice dive spots. The added advantage to some of these ports is that shore diving is possible, which means you save money on the cost of diving. We'll talk more about the diving at each port in a later post.

Once you know which ports you want to visit you can start watching for a deal on cruises going to those ports. In my next post I'll discuss how to weigh the cost of a cruise against the value to you as a diver. It's not always the cheapest cruise that wins your vote, but rather the cruise that offers the right balance of convenience, time in port, overall itinerary and the best diving opportunities. Until then, bottoms up!





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