First Cozumel Trip - Suggestions/Tips Welcome

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I would add Kinta and Pie de Carbon to the list. Great dinners and you can dine outside in both locations.
 
There are people who visit Cozumel far more often than I do--my last planned trip was supposed to be a month after Wilma hit (didn't have trip insurance and didn't need it--flights were canceled and hotel was closed). But I'd say go ahead and rent a car one afternoon to check out the other side of the island. It's been a long, long time since we've done it, and I don't think that having a drink at Coconuts or Mescalito's or wherever is so fabulous that it needs to be done every trip, but it's nice to get a feel for more of the island, especially as a first-timer. But if you're planning a mainland adventure, it makes it somehow less necessary. I don't think that driving on Cozumel or along the Yucatan coast is bad at all.

My main suggestion is that if you decide to see the ruins of Tulum, try to avoid the huge tour-bus crowds. First hour that they open has been good for us, after which we typically flee in horror. Really late might be ok too. Coba is in most ways more interesting and only about another 45 minutes or so inland, but that might be more of a commitment than you want to make, certainly if you want to dive a cenote (also a great experience). We once visited Coba, Chizen Itza and a festival in Vailladolid all in one day, driving out of Tulum. Don't even consider such a thing!

If you decide to more or less retrace Mitchsea's steps, and you find yourself hungry for lunch after your cenote dives, there are plenty of restaurants in the town of Tulum and at the little beachfront hotels a bit south of the ruins. I would assume there's stuff to eat (I only remember refreshments, but I assume there's a cafe) at the big, modern, shop-filled, touristy visitor's center too. Both the town and beach areas are a quick cab ride (many of the beach hotels are actually really close, but once they built the big visitor complex in the early or mid '90s, I lost track of whether or not it was still possible to shortcut along the beach road). At the beach, we used to sometimes stay at a rough little backpacker place called Don Armando's--it's called Zazil-kin now, and it's one of the first properties south of the ruins. I haven't been there in five years. If it's still about the same (and it appears to be in pictures I've seen), the food/restaurant/bar was pretty basic (and the accommodations primitive), but the beach is spectacular and has a view of the ruins if you're looking to cool your heels for a couple of hours in such a manner.

And if you find yourself in Playa del Carmen around dinner time, I'd consider dining there and doing a small bit of wandering before catching the ferry back, if just for the change of scenery. It's a pretty huge, lively resort town these days. Our first time there, there were still a few chickens running on dirt streets directly behind the beaches. It wasn't that long ago, really.
 
Having done the Caribe Blu / Blue Angel thing in mid-June with 10 other friends, many of whom were there for the first time, I can confidently make this prediction.

At some point during the week you're gonna decide to just stay put for the afternoon. Maybe have lunch at the Rendez-Blu place next door or walk 100 yards to the north on the beach and dine on the best fish taco plate you'll see anywhere -- and cheap!!! Have a $2 beer at either place with that meal. Go back to your air-conditioned room, lay out at the pool, read a book, stare at the horizon off the balcony... You've already gone to Chedraui and stocked up on cold drinks, chips, salsa, yogurt and pastries in case late afternoon munchies hit. That's what the refrigerator is for! Everything you need is at your fingertips. Ah, Paradise!

A month after your return to the cold and ice of NY, you'll remember that afternoon as the best one you spent all week and you'll vow to have more days like that on your next trip -- which you'll already be planning.

Have a great vacation no matter what you decide.
 
Hi! Just got back from Cozumel a few weeks ago. If you can, def dive Santa Rosa Wall, Palancar Caves & Columbia. Those were the best dives on the trip (IMHO). Also, the night diving was FANTASTIC! As for topside activities...if you have the gumption for a LONG day def see Chitzen Itza. Otherwise, Tuluum is a nice option. ENJOY!!!
 

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