Hawii Cruises
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Hawii Cruises

Hawii Cruise

 

Hawii Cruises

Should you take a Hawaiian cruise?  What are the advantages and disadvantages of Hawii cruises, compared to just staying on land on one or more of the Hawaiian islands?  How can you decide which cruise company to use for your Hawii cruise?  This page will help you answer all of those questions and more.

Advantages of a Hawii cruise:
1.  You can see four islands in one week, without having to spend time checking in and out of hotels, renting cars and flying between islands
2.  All your meals are included so you don't have to choose, find, get to and pay for restaurants on each island
3.  It's easy to book one of the Hawii cruise packages, instead of having to research and book several hotels, cars, tours and restaurants.

Disadvantages of Hawii cruises:
1.  There is not enough time on any one island to see most of the sights or do many activities
2.  By eating all your dinners on the cruise ship, you miss the wonderful food in Hawii restaurants on each island
3.  The ship docks in towns on each island, but the best sights are far away from the towns, so you have to pay extra for tours or find a way to get to the beaches and scenery.
 

 

Below is a discussion of some of the specific Hawii cruises and cruise lines you can choose from, and which ports are worth stopping at.

Hawii Cruises and cruise line choices

U.S. law usually requires foreign-registered ships to visit at least one foreign port on every cruise.  Therefore, most Hawii cruise ships will not go only to the Hawaiian Islands, but will waste a couple days of your cruise going to another country, usually Fanning Island in Kiribati, 1200 miles away, or Ensenada in Mexico, 2600 miles away, or Vancouver in Canada, 2500 miles away.  There are three ships that are not required to go to any foreign port, so they avoid this problem, going only to the islands of Hawii.  Those three are NCL's Pride of Aloha, Pride of America, and Pride of Hawii.

Norwegian Cruise Line - NCL
NCL operates Hawii cruises on several ships in various seasons of the year.  The three listed in the above paragraph are the only ships that visit only Hawii during their cruises.  Pride of Hawaii is the newest of those three.  Other NCL ships, including Norwegian Wind and Norwegian Sun, do spend significant time going to and from Fanning Island in order to fulfill their foreign port requirement.

Carnival Cruises
Carnival Spirit is a ship that does a few Hawaiian cruises.  It includes Ensenada, Mexico, or Vancouver, Canada, to fulfill its foreign port requirement.

Celebrity
Celebrity Infinity, Summit and Mercury are three ships that do some Hawii cruises.  They stop in Ensenada, Mexico, in addition to the islands of Hawii

Princess
Pacific Princess, Island Princess and Diamond Princess spend part of the year in Hawii.  Each cruise has a stop in Vancouver, Canada, or Ensenada, Mexico.

Holland America
Holland Amerca's ship Zaandam stops in Ensenada, Mexico, or Vancouver, Canada (depending on time of the year) on each Hawii cruise.

Royal Caribbean
Royal's Radiance of the Seas includes Ensenada, Mexico, in each of its Hawii cruises.

 

Ports on your Hawii Cruise:
Most Hawaiian cruises visit four islands:  Oahu, Maui, Kauai and the Big Island.  They do not go to the islands of Lanai or Molokai.  But it's important to know which ports you will be stopping at on Maui and the Big Island.  On Maui, Lahaina is much more interesting to see than Kahului.  Lahaina is a historic old quaint town with lots of fascinating history and shopping.  Kahului is just a big city where most Maui residents live.  On the Big Island, it is better to stop in Kona (Kailua-Kona) than in Hilo, because Hilo is the rainy side.

 

 

 

 

 

A great website with LOTS of information about Maui is
Maui Vacations - Jon's Maui Info

 

 

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