Looking to take a good cruise and do some diving?

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If you're wanting the best traditional cruise and dive experience, I'd recommend first a Southern Caribbean itinerary out of San Juan then a Western Caribbean second. The Southern itinerary will often give you 4-5 dive days on a 7-night itinerary, while the Western will give you max 4, but often 4 excellent stops.

Southern islands include combos of some of the following - St. Thomas, Aruba, Curacao, Bonaire, Dominica, St. Lucia, Barbados for the better diving islands (definitely not in that order), and some not high on my list islands for diving of Antigua, Martinique (good, but not logistically from the ship), Trinidad, Isla Margarita, Grenada (haven't yet found an operator there who will work with the cruise itineraries, unfortunately), St. Maarten.

In the winter months, lots of different options for style of cruise by way of cruise line and specific ships, which is just as important as itinerary. August/September quite bit more limited as most of the ships in this area pull out to Alaska or Europe for the summer. But there are a few year-rounds to choose from.

On the western side, several lines have the Roatan, Cozumel, Belize and Grand Cayman itinerary.

For most ports, recommend booking independently if you want a bit more personal experience. In most ports, it's not too difficult or risky with regard to logistics. Work with someone who knows the cruise lines and dive operators ;)

By the way, no such thing as a Bahamas-only 7-night cruise. On a 7-night, you'll have maximum of 1 stop there, in Nassau that time of year. I'd rank other ports as better options. Same thing with Key West. Can be fun ports, but the diving isn't the best the Caribbean has to offer - at least not diving from the ships. There are better cruise dive ports around.
 
TheRedHead:
The NCL western Caribbean cruises (the only cruise I've been on) with diving in Coz, Roatan, Belize and PDC. Belize is not to be missed!


I considered diving in Belize but was put off by the long tender ride. Sounds like I missed a good dive! My wife (non-diver) & I have been on 2 cruises so far on both Royal Carribean (Monarch of the Sea) & Carnival (Valor). I would rate them as follows:

Royal Carribean has nicer ships & better deckside entertainment

Carnival has nicer cabins & much better food.

After 2 cruises we are begining to find shipboard life a bit confining....especialy on those "Fun Days At Sea."
Hint: Get you deck chairs/chaise's early or you will be standing around alot!
 
I've heard that in Belize if you book dives through the ship that the op picks you up at the ship and you don't have to tender at all.

My husband and I did an 11 night cruise on Celebrity a couple of years ago and dove at most ports. Although we really enjoyed the diving, we didn't find that the cruise lifestyle and diving went well together...mostly because of the amount of luggage it took and having to drag heavy dive gear on and off the ship. Last year we did a liveaboard instead and it rocked! Can't see us taking another big cruise ship again anytime in the future....we're booking liveaboards instead.

That said, for a family with non-divers, a cruise is the way to go to dive a bunch of different islands in the Caribbean. Everyone can have something to do that they love.
 
Like TSandM, we have also chartered a 65’ catamaran for this coming May in the BVI through Ed Hamilton Yacht Brokers. We have a crew of 4, 5 cabins, a dive instructor and an air compressor onboard the boat. I am the only diver among the 6 guests and plan on getting in at least 3 dives a day. No hauling gear to any outside operators, just wake up don your gear and giant stride off the back of the boat. Chartering your own boat is a wonderful way to have the ultimate cruise. Go where you want, when you want. It’s your boat for the duration of your cruise to do as you please. The cost was surprisingly affordable.

Charters are available in many different areas, not just the BVI.
 
DiveMaven:
I've heard that in Belize if you book dives through the ship that the op picks you up at the ship and you don't have to tender at all..

Yes, we were picked up by Hugh Parkey's boat and motored out to Turneffe for a couple of great dives. They split the divers in 2 groups according to experience and served a big feast during the surface interval.
 
My family and I did a Western Carribean cruise with Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) last year. I'm the only diver in the family and traveled with my wife and two teenagers. It was an ideal vacation for diver/non-diver family. Ports of call were Cozumel, Roatan, Belize and Cancun. Everybody had a great time and I did some awesome diving.
 
Devil505:
As far as the suggestion not to bring your dive knife, I would never dive without one due to possible entanglement dangers. I brought mine & simply had to leave it with the crew at the gangway after each dive & then pick it up at cruise end. A very minor inconvenience compared to the added safety your knife provides.

Shears are better anyway and they don't have a problem with them like they do knives.
 

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