We just got back from cruising Carnival Destiny; San Juan, St. Thomas, Dominica, Barbados, Aruba, and back to San Juan.
Diving while cruising has become very popular and to date we have made four such trips. The cruise lines' shore excursions often do not offer two tank dives and if they do they are expensive or their dives are not first thing in the morning. This was the case when I arrived in Barbados. Thankfully we had searched out a good dive operator and they were there to pick me up as promised; gate one at the cruise terminal.
We chose West Side SCUBA (PADI shop); the shop is small but more than adequate for our needs. The dive boat is good sized and safely outfitted. The interesting thing is that the beaches are all public so you have to wade out to the dive boat but that is no big deal.
Dive one was a wreck at 130 feet. Experienced divers hit the prop at 130 feet while those not so experienced stay at about 85 feet. Overall a nice dive. The surface interval was spent anchored next to where the cruise ship snorkel trips go to feed six giant but lazy turtles. What a spectacle! Dive two was a reef dive at 50 feet or so. Diving was good. BTW this is NOT a cattle boat operation but is instead a responsive dive operator.
The folks drove me back to the cruise ship and I was there by 2:00. I really do recommend these folks. They are friendly, inexpensive, and certainly know all the dive spots.
Here is some contact info should you need to find a good dive operation in Barbados!
West Side Scuba Centre 19279 www.westsidescuba.com
Peter Grannum 67147 peterg@sunbeach.net
Holetown St. James, Barbados W.I.
(246)432-2558 PHONE/FAX
(246)262-1029 CELL
Diving while cruising has become very popular and to date we have made four such trips. The cruise lines' shore excursions often do not offer two tank dives and if they do they are expensive or their dives are not first thing in the morning. This was the case when I arrived in Barbados. Thankfully we had searched out a good dive operator and they were there to pick me up as promised; gate one at the cruise terminal.
We chose West Side SCUBA (PADI shop); the shop is small but more than adequate for our needs. The dive boat is good sized and safely outfitted. The interesting thing is that the beaches are all public so you have to wade out to the dive boat but that is no big deal.
Dive one was a wreck at 130 feet. Experienced divers hit the prop at 130 feet while those not so experienced stay at about 85 feet. Overall a nice dive. The surface interval was spent anchored next to where the cruise ship snorkel trips go to feed six giant but lazy turtles. What a spectacle! Dive two was a reef dive at 50 feet or so. Diving was good. BTW this is NOT a cattle boat operation but is instead a responsive dive operator.
The folks drove me back to the cruise ship and I was there by 2:00. I really do recommend these folks. They are friendly, inexpensive, and certainly know all the dive spots.
Here is some contact info should you need to find a good dive operation in Barbados!
West Side Scuba Centre 19279 www.westsidescuba.com
Peter Grannum 67147 peterg@sunbeach.net
Holetown St. James, Barbados W.I.
(246)432-2558 PHONE/FAX
(246)262-1029 CELL