UnCruise in Costa Rica/Panama Canal this coming November

JohnnyBGoode

Recycles dryer sheets
Joined
Apr 6, 2016
Messages
188
Location
Bay Area
Hi Everyone -

Anyone have any experience with UnCruise? DW and I have taken many traditional cruises around Mediterranean, North Sea, Caribbean, and Hawaii (which we enjoyed very much). But for my 50th we wanted to do something a bit different. I've always wanted to see Costa Rica and Panama Canal and this seems like a great way to do it. Casual, active oriented, very small ship, naturalists on board.

I originally booked a National Geographic cruise (basically same itinerary and ship size) but it was about 2x cost of UnCruise so I ate the $500 reservation deposit and shifted to UnCruise. I would love to hear anyone's experiences or tips/tricks with Uncruise.

Related question re Costa Rica - Zika is a bit of a concern, but since we are well past pregnancy age we are gong anyway. Any thoughts on that as well?

Thanks!
 
We LOVE UnCruise- took 2 Alaskan cruises with them. My reviews are on CruiseCritic.

No rock-climbing walls. No casinos. No eat/drink/party till U Puke mentality. Staterooms unimpressive but they have all the basics. Food fresh, healthy, always good vegetarian options, some interesting options (lavender scones, chocolate-ginger cookies- and they share their recipes). Crew are US-based, US-flagged ship, most have advanced degrees in marine biology or something else relevant. Excursions 99% included (I paid a little extra to snorkel in some Jacques-Cousteau gear they supplied for the cold Alaskan waters). Good mix of smart, high-powered people who leave their bling at home and a few people retired early on good civil pensions. A few Australians and Brits. Some kids, but well-chosen by their parents. The ones we met were bright, active and curious and not stuck to video games.

Can you tell we love them? If you're used to luxury, being treated like the Maharani of India by people who were born into less-fortunate circumstances, and are looking forward to eating, drinking and partying to excess, this isn't your ship. They will not fold your jammies into cute animal shapes. Personally, I've never taken one of the other lines because UnCruise is my type of travel.
 
We are booked for Jan 2017, this will be our 5th cruise with them. You should have said something, I could have saved you and I $400. Get ready for a fun time. And on the Galapagos trip they did fold our stuff into animals.

DSCN0340.jpg
 
Thanks grasshopper and athena53. We have enjoyed our past cruise experiences (we just avoid the over-eating/over-drinking crowds) but this one sounds even better. I hope this becomes our new cruise of choice...
 
I have done this cruise line in Alaska and it is very pleasant and relaxing. I don't think you will regret it. Pricey but a very different experience than on major cruise lines. I had done a similar Alaska cruise on Princess and the experiences don't compare, enjoy!!
 
I hadn't heard of this outfit so thanks for this thread--will keep it in mind for future travel.
 
Contact Grasshopper if you want to book them! There's a referral bonus for both sides in the form of a credit. Since UnCruise has straightforward pricing with no "deals", discounts, etc., it helps.
 
I like the no shenanigans pricing...it's annoying to find out you paid too much for something because you didn't know the trick to getting good pricing.

Sounds like my kind of cruise, but if the rack-rate for the cruise is what you really pay, I'm finding it difficult to justify; a quick check is $1000/night per person.

That price is:
Three times the rate for a European river cruise (included beer and excursions)
Five times the rate for my last Central America cruise (no beer, no excursions)
Ten times the rate for my last trans-Atlantic (included beer, but not excursions)

You could have a nice long vacation in Central America with an apartment, a maid, a cook, a driver, and naturalist touring for much less.
 
Wow. I'm not a cruise-type person, but we were 'talked into' one w/ friends about a decade ago. We chafed at the expensive room, just under $1000/each for 7 nights in Alaska. But that's nothing compared to Uncruise. Holy moly!

It really does sound like a wonderful time, but I'm with Seng - I'll fly in and book all my own individual excursions and still save a bundle.
 
I like the no shenanigans pricing...it's annoying to find out you paid too much for something because you didn't know the trick to getting good pricing.

Sounds like my kind of cruise, but if the rack-rate for the cruise is what you really pay, I'm finding it difficult to justify; a quick check is $1000/night per person.

That price is:
Three times the rate for a European river cruise (included beer and excursions)
Five times the rate for my last Central America cruise (no beer, no excursions)
Ten times the rate for my last trans-Atlantic (included beer, but not excursions)

You could have a nice long vacation in Central America with an apartment, a maid, a cook, a driver, and naturalist touring for much less.

As UnCruise Adventures says It's not the journey it's the experience. If you note they go to places where the big cheap ships can't really get close to the experience go, and everything is pretty much inclusive. I have been on big ships, this is just a better experience in my mind. YMMV. Like the OP said compared to other small ships they are pretty competitive. Try going to the Galapagos Islands or the Sea of Cortez on a big ship. In the Galapagos tours on some islands are limited to 12+ a guide how long would it take to unload 1000 people to go see the sights. I have been to Denali's road end, stayed in a $400 a room lodge, guess what they have to charge that for a what 10 week season. If you want that experience you need to pony up. River cruises in europe, and big ship cruises in Alaska aren't worth my time or money. I like to spend the time I take away from home to get the real deal.
 
I agree with grasshopper-YMMV. That is why they have small ships and big ships. On some of these river cruises they offer an extension at a price twice what you could do it for on your own, but some people want a seamless trip.
I would never go on any of those megas, because they cannot go to the smaller ports.
When we were in Tahiti, we sailed on the Paul Gauguin, with 300 pax, instead of a Princess ship with 700 to 2000.
 
One reason for the higher prices is that the ship sails under a US flag (try finding that on Princess), is subject to US regulation and pays according to US laws. We appreciated that. It's one reason, BTW, that their Alaska cruises can go from Juneau to Ketchikan or vice versa with no Canadian ports on the itinerary.
 
One reason for the higher prices is that the ship sails under a US flag (try finding that on Princess), is subject to US regulation and pays according to US laws. We appreciated that. It's one reason, BTW, that their Alaska cruises can go from Juneau to Ketchikan or vice versa with no Canadian ports on the itinerary.

Don't you mean have to ?
 
We've never cruised, because I didn't want to buy the wardrobe that seemed necessary. So, are you saying UnCruise isn't all about where you buy your clothes? Kohl's would work? ;)
 
So, are you saying UnCruise isn't all about where you buy your clothes? Kohl's would work? ;)


You'll probably see more of the pricier brands of outdoor wear (and, depending on where you're going you may also want that protection) but yeah, Kohl's would work.
 
I looked at Uncruise a couple of years ago when we wanted to do the Panama Canal on a small ship. Lots of their journeys looked intriguing, and I've saved their info for the future; but at least at that time, they were doing the canal transit at night and we really wanted to do it during the day. I found this was true of pretty much all the well known eco-cruises. (Haven't looked recently, things may have changed.)

We ended up doing the trip with a Panamanian company instead and had a fabulous time (https://www.pmatours.net/discovery/the_journey/the_itinerary.html). We really enjoyed getting to know the local crew, and both the naturalist and first mate were amazing at spotting wildlife. The whole cruise was great, but the real attraction for us was that the canal transit was two days, with an overnight in Lake Gatun and a hike on Barro Colorado, the Smithsonian's research island. I'm sure Uncruise is a great trip too, but just wanted to offer an alternative in case anyone is looking for something similar in Panama.
 
This is an old thread but I just found that the video from the cruise I took in April to Panama and Costa Rica has been posted on the UnCruise site. Two young guys were with us (talk about a dream job!) equipped with video cameras, a drone and even selfie sticks (useful when snorkeling so they could swim with the camera well ahead of them and not scare the fish). Here's the result- just a little over 2 minutes. The video is in the upper right hand quadrant of the page.

https://www.uncruise.com/destinations/costa-rica-panama-cruises

The monkeys got more air time than I did but I'm in the scene of people walking on the beach at about 0:55, right side of the screen, wearing blue shorts and holding my yellow sandals. You can see why I love this cruise line!


It really captures the spirit and the experience of UnCruise. I'm signed up for the Baja Peninsula/Sea of Cortes one in early 2019 and no, I'm not worried about bandits or having my drink spiked.
 
We were in Panama and Costa Rica for a month last winter. We spent six weeks there a few winters ago. They were independent travel trips. Much of our time in Costa Rica was spent in Guanacaste-along the coast and south of the Jaco area-on the coast. Plus the occasional trip to Arenal.

No issue whatsover with Zica. We very much enjoy Costa Rica. Same for Panama. We primarily spent time in Panama City, and Boquete/environs. We would not hesitate to return and i have no doubt that we will.
 
We've done two Lindblad/National Geographic cruises (Alaska and Galapagos) which seem to be very similar to UnCruise. Had a wonderful time on both of them and would cheerfully consider another with either of these companies.
 
Cheap Trans-Atlantic with Beer?

... times the rate for my last trans-Atlantic (included beer, but not excursions)
...

Straying off topic:
Which line? This sounds much better than a flight across the pond and probably cheaper for me in the long run.

Most of the cheap itineraries I have found do not include beer, soda, etc.
 
This is an old thread but I just found that the video from the cruise I took in April to Panama and Costa Rica has been posted on the UnCruise site. Two young guys were with us (talk about a dream job!) equipped with video cameras, a drone and even selfie sticks (useful when snorkeling so they could swim with the camera well ahead of them and not scare the fish). Here's the result- just a little over 2 minutes. The video is in the upper right hand quadrant of the page.

https://www.uncruise.com/destinations/costa-rica-panama-cruises

The monkeys got more air time than I did but I'm in the scene of people walking on the beach at about 0:55, right side of the screen, wearing blue shorts and holding my yellow sandals. You can see why I love this cruise line!


It really captures the spirit and the experience of UnCruise. I'm signed up for the Baja Peninsula/Sea of Cortes one in early 2019 and no, I'm not worried about bandits or having my drink spiked.

Thanks for replying! I was the OP and that cruise actually got cancelled by UnCruise a week before the trip because the ship wasn't ready. They were really awesome about it and re-booked us on their Hawaii itinerary (same dates) and paid all the change fees, etc. And they gave us a discount that we are using for a second try at the Panama/Costa Rica cruise next spring.

I do agree that Uncruise was excellent - lots of fun and adventure in a small ship experience and super casual too. We've been on lots (more than a dozen) regular cruise ships and not sure we can go back now.
 
Back
Top Bottom