dgossett Posted July 17, 2006 #1 Share Posted July 17, 2006 Please help we aer going on the Norwegian Sun October 15th out of New Orleans. We have plans for Costa Maya and Cozumel, but can't seem to find anything for Belize and Guaremala. Have read about Gus but does he go to the ruins? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated. thanks Debbie:) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lissaleit Posted July 17, 2006 #2 Share Posted July 17, 2006 We are sailing on NCL Sun on 10/15 as well. Our plan is to go cave tubing and possibly ziplinging in Belize. Haven't found any information on the Guatemala port yet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dgossett Posted July 17, 2006 Author #3 Share Posted July 17, 2006 I wish that there was more information available. I wouldn't mind the cave tubing but my husband isn't for it. Costa Maya I beleive we are going to the beach and to paradise beach and shopping in Cozumel. Debbie Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dgossett Posted July 26, 2006 Author #4 Share Posted July 26, 2006 Gigio, Thanks for the info. I'm going to send Gus an email today. thanks Debbie Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
skymama Posted July 28, 2006 #5 Share Posted July 28, 2006 How do you find out about ziplining in Belize? We are on the Oct 29th cruise and this is what I have always wanted to do. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CaribbeanBound Posted August 4, 2006 #6 Share Posted August 4, 2006 Belize City, Belize This will be one of your favorite ports IF you book an excursion. You'll hate the place if you do not. This fact has been chronicled time and again. Do yourself a favor and book an excursion! The two most popular excursions are the Cave Tubing and the Lamanai Ruins / Jungle River Cruise. Both get rave reviews. Our selection of the Lamanai tour was no exception. Once at the Belize pier we were greeted with a nice Welcome sign. There are only a handful of shops at the pier. I am guessing there were about 90 folks on this tour. We were herded onto 1 of 3 air conditioned buses. Whatever bus you get becomes your tour group, and included a guide that not only narrated the bus tour and answered our questions but also drove our boat on the jungle cruise and lead our excursion of the ruins. Our experienced guide was Vel, and he was breaking in a very pretty young guide-in-training that joined us for the duration of the tour. Our guides were very friendly, knowledgeable, and proud of their country. Belize is a poor country with great natural and historical assets. One idiot on the bus asked "Why are there bars on the windows of houses?" during an otherwise interesting Q&A about the country. (Answer: they have a crime problem related to a "crack" problem). The housing and habitat reminded us a lot of Waimanalo on Oahu (sans the bars). We learned a lot about the city and country on our 1.25 hour bus tour over a paved 2-lane road to the boat dock. [side note: from visible signage along the road it appears Pepsi "controls" the less populated part of the country while Coca-Cola "owns" Belize City itself]. Each bus unloaded their groups into a large thatched roof building sporting restrooms and a couple of artisans. Within a few minutes we were loaded onto covered boats with comfortable seats and two powerful outboard motors. We snaked South down the river to the Lamanai Ruin site. Our guide plying us with information and pointing out numerous birds (including King Fisher, Blue Herrin, Vultures, and Snow Egrets), baby crocodiles, and a huge green iguana, as well as various flora and fauna. We also found the huge termite nests in the trees to be of interest to all. One of the 3 boats experienced engine trouble which slowed us down a bit, but that boat was never abandoned. Our boat held back each time to make sure they were not stranded. Once we arrived at Lamanai, we ate a hearty lunch of Mayan chicken, rice, coleslaw, coconut tarts, and bottled Pepsi and water. We started our tour in a small museum with interesting Mayan artifacts and continued on by foot through an impressive jungle featuring vines, "Jurassic Park"-sized palm fronds, medicinal trees, and Howler Monkeys. We spent about 1.5 hours exploring 3 large Mayan temples and the remains of a small Mayan town. Our guides provided an enormous amount of insight and kept us moving at a reasonable clip. We returned to the boats, sped back up the river, and returned to the buses just before nightfall. We arrived back at the docks about an hour after the final tender was suppose to leave for the ship. Our guides, to their credit, had made the decision to give us the full tour --- not an abridged tour --- even though we had arrived late. After all, we were paying the full price of the tour and they weren't going to let us get anything less. It was clear, back in Lamanai, that we were not going to make the tender cutoff time. This began to cause great distress among some tour passengers. Just remember, that if you are on a cruise-sponsored tour, there are "no worries!" They were not going to strand any of their passengers in Belize if they are on a cruise-sponsored excursion. Sure enough, we were met at the pier with a nice large boat that easily and comfortably sped all of us back to the ship, which was beautifully illuminated out on the sea. Bottom line: take this tour. http://www.lavasurfer.com/info/caribbean-secrets.html These are our very detailed personal reviews, hints, and tips for ports of call that you will be visiting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.