lunula
Contributor
Hi all,
For our first liveaboard experience, I think we're going to give Turks & Caicos w/ Aggressor a try next May. We've done some cruise ship diving, but mainly we have done shore diving in Bonaire. I thought this might be a good first liveaboard experience.
My question is about the cabins. Looks like they have one "master suite" with a queen bed, but I think we might actually like the Deluxe room, even though it has bunk beds. My husband doesn't care about sleeping up top, but since we're used to a king @ home, a queen against a wall might squeeze too much (we're spoiled).
Is there any difference in the various Deluxe cabins in regards to general noise (engine noise, people walking above, next door neighbors, etc.) as well as which ones might be better for sea-sickness? I know on large cruise ships, it's normally recommended to get a cabin towards the middle of the ship, but not sure if that applies on a much smaller liveaboard? I suffer sea-sickness on dive boats only - totally fine on cruises (large & medium size), speed boats, etc. But I've gotten sick every single time I've been on a dive boat and the patch is out of the equation due to weird vision problems it causes. Would there be any different in a forward vs. middle cabin?
Thanks!
For our first liveaboard experience, I think we're going to give Turks & Caicos w/ Aggressor a try next May. We've done some cruise ship diving, but mainly we have done shore diving in Bonaire. I thought this might be a good first liveaboard experience.
My question is about the cabins. Looks like they have one "master suite" with a queen bed, but I think we might actually like the Deluxe room, even though it has bunk beds. My husband doesn't care about sleeping up top, but since we're used to a king @ home, a queen against a wall might squeeze too much (we're spoiled).
Is there any difference in the various Deluxe cabins in regards to general noise (engine noise, people walking above, next door neighbors, etc.) as well as which ones might be better for sea-sickness? I know on large cruise ships, it's normally recommended to get a cabin towards the middle of the ship, but not sure if that applies on a much smaller liveaboard? I suffer sea-sickness on dive boats only - totally fine on cruises (large & medium size), speed boats, etc. But I've gotten sick every single time I've been on a dive boat and the patch is out of the equation due to weird vision problems it causes. Would there be any different in a forward vs. middle cabin?
Thanks!