In the afternoon we wanted to hang out at a resort with a pool and beach, we like to go back and forth between the two, where we can order drinks and snacks, so we went to the Ritz Carlton near Red Hook, a $9 p.p. cab ride. You can also do this at the Bolongo Bay Resort for $15, or the Emerald Beach Resort for free (a local told us). The Ritz was lovely, email us if you want the details on how this works.
DOMINICA
The locals pronounce it DOM-in-EEE-ka. Heres a link to a good map we found, the only thing missing is Titou Gorge, put a dot just below the town of Laudat for that www.avirtualdominica.com/images/bigmap.jpg. In Roseau we docked right at the town, port side cabins facing the town, starboard facing the bay. When you walk off the ship to the end of the pier you find all the tour reps, both ship and private, and you get tons of propositions as in most ports, but they arent pushy and accept no thanks. The going rate for a non-ship tour is $30 for 2 major stops over about 3 hours, and the ship charges $45-50 for the same thing. We like active tours and booked River Kayaking privately with Wacky Rollers, its not offered through the ship. But the ship does offer Wackys river tubing tour ($75), good fun we heard. We also booked floating up the Titou Gorge (between rocks) with Wacky, and got a 2 for 1 deal at $75. Some operators want you to pay for both a driver and a guide, about $45 pp total for half a day, but the drivers can guide too, just get the 2-guy deal if you want to have someones undivided attention.
However, it was raining that day and the rivers were too dangerous, so both the ship tubing tour and our kayaking tour were canceled, and people also werent allowed into the Gorge. It rains a lot there, I think we were told 400 inches a year. So we decided we still wanted to see the Gorge, and also wanted to see Trafalgar Falls, and got a private tour guy, Louis, (recommended by the Wacky rep), who agreed to take us to those for $30 p.p. We agreed with him that we would use the rainy morning for shopping and start the tour at noon, hoping for less rain by then.
So we started dogging the rain in and out of stores, and found shopping in Dominica was the cheapest of all the ports. The Cornerstone Café has internet upstairs, cheapest anywhere, I think I paid $2 for 20 minutes. There is one classy shop, Lande Leather, a general store selling lots of stuff, just off to the left of the end of the pier. They were the only place on the cruise that beat the ship price of booze by a couple dollars. Know your leather prices, Wendy thought some were good but others werent. And we didnt know what knock-off Gucci things and other knock-off brands were worth (you see these in San Juan too, like leather Gucci purses for about $50). There are many side streets off the main drag with vendors, little cobblestone alleyways, construction style reminded us of the French Quarter in N.O., but more run down. You bargain off about 20% of the asking price. Wendy got a lovely sun dress there for $16 that she later saw in San Juan for $34. And we got an oil painting about a foot square stretched over a wooden frame ready for a show frame for $18. That size in Aruba was $40, and in Barbados it was $300. CDs were $12, everywhere else they were about $18. You can do the main drag and all the side streets in a half day if you keep moving. Different vendors will often sell the same stuff, but their bottom price is never much different, so if you find what you want theres not much point in wasting time getting a better price from the next guy, get your 20% off and take it. Dont miss the little shopping enclave roughly behind Lande Leather, bunch of vendors in an enclosed area, very good selection here, and cafe where you can leave your DH with a $2 beer. The rain was not very heavy, off and on all morning, easy to jump from one vendors umbrellas to the next ones, you dont need to carry one unless you think youll melt.
Luckily the rain had mostly stopped later in the morning, and we grabbed lunch in the lido at 11:30 and were back on the dock at 12 where we met Louis. With the ship not leaving till 6 you could start a tour as late as about 2, but a flat tire or accident could make you miss the ship. The roads inland to the sights are narrow and winding, up hillsides, frequent stops to let oncoming vehicles by. If you get car sick easily you shouldnt do these tours. One toot on the horn means Im approaching the corner, a toot from another guy means so am I, and 2 toots means Im coming through.
Page 3 > > More on Cruising on the Carnival Destiny > >

