I would pick Hawaii (and just did actually). We would spend a week or two in Hawaii prior to the cruise.
Would also love to do WB Panama Canal.
If you can’t really spend time in Hawaii at all, then I would probably pick WB Panama Canal. Would love to do the one that starts in New Orleans and ends in SAN Diego. Great cities with lots to see!Thanks. Unfortunately wouldn't be able to spend any time in Hawaii (also its the one the other way I'm looking at as dates don't work for the other one) which is really whats making me think this one is ruled out which then just actually leaves 2 lol
In order of preference:So having such a dilemma choosing (I know first world problems today but hey its a good COVID distraction)
If money was no object:
and more importantly why?
- Panama Canal Eastbound
- Panama Canal Westbound
- Vancouver to Hawaii
You can always find someone to tell you to stay in a place a little longer.Interesting to see so many say Westbound specifically..! I want to do one sometime and was leaning towards WB just because I'm on the west coast and would have a shorter flight home. I know people have said you "gain" time as well, but its only three hours which isn't a deal breaker for me one way or the other to be honest. Are there other reasons people prefer it? Does the time of year matter a lot in terms of weather or ocean movement?
FWIW I am not interested in the Hawaii one ways since we do not have the luxury of time. Evenings in Hawaii are magical and I would not want to spend sunsets on a ship instead of on land, or spend dinner eating on the ship instead of local restaurants. If I could do the cruise AND spend at least a week there before heading home that would be a different story. Our first trip we spent eight days on Maui and were told by more than one local while sadly shaking their heads at us that it is a ten day island...they were right, we did not do everything we had planned to. Gee darn, we had to go back...![]()
You can always find someone to tell you to stay in a place a little longer.
To be honest, Hawaii today is way oversold. Oahu and Maui prices don't quite reflect what you are expecting to see there, and you can find drugs more easily in Hilo than clean water. Kaua'i today is what Maui was 20 years ago and even that is now seeing tourist numbers (minus COVID) like never before.
French Polynesia is the true Pacific escape these days. Few flights, exotic location, clear lagoons - and those overwater bungalows!