Belize Aggressor III Liveaboard Reviews & Specials - Bluewater Dive Travel

Belize Aggressor III

4.5
(8 REVIEWS)

Destination: Belize

Itinerary: Turneffe and Lighthouse Reef (7 Nights) | From $442++/night

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Belize Aggressor III Quick Pitch

The Belize Aggressor III is a luxury liveaboard offering the opportunity to visit remote areas where the best Belizean diving is found.

 Find out more about liveaboards in the Aggressor Fleet.

Location

Every Saturday at 6 pm, the luxurious Belize Aggressor III casts off from the Radisson Ft. George dock for liveaboard scuba diving. Guests will be met by a crewmember in uniform at the Belize City (BZE) International Airport (transfers are not provided from the Belize City Municipal Airport) and transferred to the yacht.

 

Dive Overview

The best diving is found on the surrounding cayes, and no dive trip to Belize would be complete without a visit to the Blue Hole, or at least Jacques Cousteau thought so! The diving in Belize is varied enough to please everyone from novices to seasoned divers. You’ll find an abundance of coral gardens, sponges, reef sharks, rays, and small reef fish.

[See: Belize Dive Travel Guide]

 

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Accommodations

Types of Cabins, Amenities and Photos

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Belize Aggressor III Accommodation Details

Accommodations include 9 Deluxe staterooms, 7 have a double and single bunk-style berth and 1 with 2 single bunk-style berths and 1 Master stateroom with one double bed. All staterooms have climate controls. The Belize Aggressor III sleeps 18 guests in privacy and comfort.

Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

Master (LEFT) and Deluxe (RIGHT) Staterooms  

 

Belize Aggressor III Cabin Details

  • Master Stateroom (#9)
  • Double bed, private head and shower, closet, port window, individual climate control, monitor with media player and hair dryer.
  • Deluxe Stateroom (#1)
  • Two bunk-style single beds, no port window. All with private head and showers, individual climate control, monitor with media player and hair dryer.
  • Deluxe Stateroom (#2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
  • Double bed (lower) and twin bed (upper) bunk-style, port window. All with private head and showers, individual climate control, monitor with media player and hairdryer.

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General Facilities

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Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

 

Belize Aggressor III Boat Features

  • Air-conditioned salon and dining area
  • Sun deck complete with a hot tub
  • Lounge and deck chairs
  • Stereo and CD player
  • Shaded wet bar and grill
  • AC
  • En-suite bathrooms & showers

 

Belize Aggressor III Dive Facilities

  • Individual dive lockers
  • Complete photo center with a digital video and still photo editing computer
  • Up to five dives a day are offered except on Friday
  • Full line of Aqualung rental gear including regulators, BCs, dive computers, and night lights
  • Diving specialty courses 

 

Food & Drinks Aboard Belize Aggressor III

The menu onboard is varied and plentiful, with a variety of American feasts, barbecues and local cuisine. The Aggressor’s selection includes fruit juices, soft drinks, iced water, iced tea, coffee, and a limited selection of local beer and wine, which are complimentary. Due to the high duty charged on liquor, we suggest you bring your special brand from the U.S.

Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

 

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Belize Aggressor III Liveaboard Deck Plan

Belize Aggressor III  

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Schedule, Rates & Availability

Belize Aggressor III Schedule & Rates

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Prices are in USD, per person and are based on the lowest priced cabin. Port and park fees are not included.

[See also: Inclusions & Exclusions and Full Rates by Cabin Type]

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Belize Aggressor III Rates

Date

Deluxe

Master

January 1, 2021 - December 31, 2021 (10 nights)

$4,565

$4,765

January 2, 2021 - January 1, 2022

$3,195

$3,395

January 1, 2022 - January 7, 2023

$3,195

$3,395

January 6, 2023 - January 6, 2024

$3,195

$3,395

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Inclusions

  • Accommodations aboard the yacht
  • All meals and snacks, non-alcoholic beverages, local beer and wine
  • Diving
  • Compressed air tanks, weights & belts
  • Transfers (from and to Belize International Airport (BZE))

 

Exclusions

  • Airfare (international and domestic)
  • Insurance
  • Equipment rentals
  • Nitrox fills
  • Certification or specialty courses
  • Hotel stays/day rooms
  • Dinner on final evening
  • Crew gratuity
  • Mandatory: Each guest must pay a $130 (7-nights) and $185 (10-nights) port fee (includes cruising tax and park fees) and a $150 pp (7-nights) or $215 (10-nights) fuel surcharge at the end of the charter when settling your bill. These may be paid by Visa, MC, US or BZ cash.

 

RATES & AVAILABILITY

For more information on other departure dates, rates, and on availability email us at info@bluewaterdivetravel.com or call us at +1-310-915-6677 and we will gladly help you plan your dream dive vacation!

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Dive Information & Destinations

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Belize Dive Overview

  • Dolphin, Tarpon, Sharks, Eagle Rays, Walls and Reefs with abundant marine life and multiple macro critters
  • All dives from mothership
  • Water temperature: 78 - 82F, 25 - 28C
  • 3mm wetsuit recommended

 

Itinerary Overview

Throughout the week you will dive at Turneffe and Lighthouse Reef. Sheer walls like Painted Wall, Half Moon Caye Wall and Quebrada are adorned with huge crimson gorgonians and wandering, lilac rope sponges. Weather permitting; divers explore the mystical Blue Hole, a collapsed freshwater cave system. With all dives from the mother ship, up to five dives a day are offered except on Friday. Diving begins Sunday morning and ends Friday before lunch when the yachts return to port. The crew hosts a sunset cocktail party at 5:30 p.m. followed by dinner onboard. Saturday morning at 8:00 am, guests are transferred to the Belize Airport or a local hotel. Throughout the week there will be opportunities to go ashore for swimming, snorkeling and beach combing.  

Belize Aggressor III  

[See: Belize Dive Travel Guide]

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Other Information

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 Boat Specifications

  • Length: 110 feet (33.5 metres)
  • Beam: 22 feet (6.7 metres)
  • Speed: 10-12 knots
  • Engine: Twin Detroit Diesel
  • Generators: Twin Northern Lights 65 KWA & 30 KWA
  • Maximum guests: 18
  • Number of cabins: 9
  • Number of bathrooms: 10
  • Crew: 6
  • Fuel capacity: 3,600 litres
  • Water capacity: 4,000 litres
  • Watermaker: 6,100 litres per day

 

Practical Information

  • Time Zone: UTC-6
  • Local Currency: BZD (Belize dollar)
  • Language Spoken: English and Spanish
  • Electricity: 110volt
  • Payment Onboard: Cash, traveler’s checks, Visa, & MasterCard
 
 

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Got Questions? Ready to Book?

Call us today at 310-915-6677 or email us info@bluewaterdivetravel.com

And let us book your dream vacation!

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Underwater Gallery 

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Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

Belize Aggressor III Belize Aggressor III

 Belize Aggressor IIIBelize Aggressor III 

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Reviews (8)

5
4
5
3

The ship was very nice. The food was good. The diving was spectacular. The whole dive operation was smooth. I did 3 to 5 dives each day. There was lots of fish life on the reefs. The dive deck was well laid out, the camera table was large enough for the the number of cameras during the week I was on the ship.

Visited on 06/2017 - Submitted on 03/14/2021
5
5
5
5

Eat, Sleep, Dive, Smile...repeat! We loved our week with Belize Aggressor III and would very happily dive with them again. The diving was excellent and the dive masters/crew did a great job with safety, equipment, balancing skill levels and interests, and pointing out marine life and nuances for each dive site. On almost every dive we saw an abundance of friendly reef sharks, and so many opportunities to check out macro life as well. BAIII's lighting on the bottom of the boat made night dives that much more pleasant because it was easier to focus on the dive and less on navigation. The cabins were spotless and comfy, with a relatively spacious en-suite head. The food was excellent - every meal and snack was fresh, homemade, and good options for specialized dietary needs. The crew is top-notch (Thank You Jerome, Randy, Vanessa, Job, Jay, Monique, and Fermin - you combine fun and professionalism perfectly!). The week at sea felt like camp for adults - a week-long escape from the real world and getting to do the things I love most!

Visited on 02/2021 - Submitted on 04/29/2021
4
4
5
4

This was my first liveaboard and I couldn't have been more pleased. I have been on a few since then and this was definitely the best bang for your buck. I was able to get in 5 nitrox dives a day in 83 degree water with almost no current. There were a lot of wall dives where you would drop in, swim out along the wall, then come up over the reef and swim back over the sand which gave you two different environments in one dive. We were also waited on hand and foot while topside (offering a great array of food and snacks for every palate). The divemasters were a helpful and fun bunch who were also incredibly talented. They had eyes like hawks and If you told them you were looking for something they would spend the entire dive trying to find it, and probably would. The vast array of marine life (groupers, eagle rays, white tips and nurse sharks, various nudibranchs, scorpion fish, frog fish, sailfin blennys, octopus, turtles, tarpin, etc.) made every dive completely unique and the richness of colors and fantastic visibility left me wondering if it was all downhill after Belize. This resort is best suited for anyone who is interested in a family friendly trip where you get top notch service for a very reasonable price. You will experience a great crew a vast array of colorful wildlife from tiny nudibranchs to eagle rays and reef sharks.

Visited on 06/2012 - Submitted on 02/14/2014
4
3
4
4

This was my first liveaboard, so I don't have a lot to compare it to. But overall, I thought it was great.

The staff was awesome! They were always so friendly and helpful.

The food was really good. Hot breakfast selections changed each day, and they were always tasty. Lunch was buffet style. Dinners included fish, chicken, and other things, dessert each night was awesome and included things like bananas foster and bread pudding. There were always cookies and chips available, and snacks were served between the two morning dives and the two afternoon dives. We had a few people with special food requirements, including one particularly difficult person, and they accommodated their needs completely without any hesitation.

The diving was great, we saw reef sharks, nurse sharks, octopus, squid, turtles, seahorses and more! The divemasters were always great at finding and pointing out some of the harder to find things like pipefish, decorator crabs, etc. We didn't have too many people who required 'extra attention' during the dives, but they accommodated those people well. Everybody was happy. They took pictures and video during the dives. Video was available for purchase, but the pictures were included free - a nice perk! We also got to try out the black light fluorsecent diving on a night dive, which was pretty cool

Accommodations were a bit tight, I'm guessing that's typical on a liveaboard. But the beds were comfortable, and they were made up each night with a chocolate left on the pillows.

Overall, it was a great vacation! My first liveaboard but not my last!

Visited on 02/2014 - Submitted on 03/02/2014
4
3
5
4

In June, I enjoyed diving in Belize for a week on the Aggressor III. I was without my favorite dive buddy (my wife), so I had a cabin to myself. I went to attend an on-board photo workshop, because I had new u/w camera equipment, and I wanted to learn how to take better photos.

As to the boat, I'd say that in some respects this boat and crew exceeded the traditional Aggressor standards and in some other ways lagged behind a bit. The food was varied and flavorful, almost always nicely well-spiced. The tasty meals, served buffet style for breakfast and lunch, made it hard to not eat too much! And, surprisingly there was complementary Aggressor-labelled wine and local beer, both of which were actually quite good. The cabins were, well, "adequate". I think the boat is in need of a tune-up or redecorating. It may be a small complaint, but the towels (both in the cabin and on-deck) were pretty thin, and should be replaced with newer more fluffy ones. There was plenty of hot water, so no complaints there. The dining area, in the bow of the boat, was comfortable enough, but at times was a bit claustrophobic.

The dive deck and dive operations were excellent. The crew were friendly, knowledgable and helpful with any equipment issues anyone had. They also always had towels ready to use when we returned from the dive. Easy on / easy off, no limits, no babying of the divers, and all diving was from the back of the boat. We put on our gear at our stations, and walk to the dive deck with our tanks and weights on, down a few steps. But after that it was easy. Perhaps they should have had a more explicit system for tracking who was on or off the boat, and getting our depths and times, but maybe they were doing so silently.

The diving was far better than I had remembered for Belize from a trip 20 years ago. Lots of animals, in number and variety, and some new creatures I had never seen before. We saw an excellent range of creatures, including sharks and a wide variety of reef fish, along with morays, eagle rays, turtles, etc., plus a tremendous range of nudibranchs, crabs, squid, octopus, etc. I really enjoyed the night dives too. The reef was in excellent shape, and the water was generally very calm with little or no current. The visibility was good though not often excellent. (The crossing to and from Lighthouse Reef was a bit rough, however.) The entire week was the perfect opportunity to work with my new camera gear, for both macro and wide angle shots.

The photo workshop with Mike Mesgleski of the Jim Church School of UW Photography was just what I needed. Mike is very talented and helpful (and often very funny). I had forgotten my battery charger (doh!) and he jerry-rigged something that saved my trip. His instruction both above and below the water were really excellent, and greatly helped me improve my uw photography. For once I had several pictures I wanted to show people!

One of the nice things about a photo workshop is that almost all of us were there to take photos, not to see how far we could go underwater. Often, on other trips, my experience is that the dive guides/masters will take a group on an underwater race course to see how much of the reef you could visit. Not this time. We could spend as long as we wanted right under the boat, if that was sufficiently interesting. As I said at the time, I flew a lot of miles to get to Belize ... it didn't make sense to go any further underwater than I needed to go to find something worth photographing. It really was a wonderful way to see the reef, spending time with the animals I wanted to see, and taking photographs, rather than swimming along and occasionally taking a snapshot.

A word about my camera equipment (though it's not actually a review of the trip). After a lot of research, I acquired an Olympus OMD-EM1, the latest "micro-four-thirds" mirrorless camera. It's a lot smaller than the traditional SLRs, but a lot more capable than the compact camera I had before. It has no shutter lag (this is a BIG deal under water), very fast focusing and lots of other great features that are useful above land. I was very glad to have the new Nauticam housing for the OMD-EM1. It's easy to use, and performed perfectly. Mark Strickland and Kelli Dickinson of Bluewater Photo were very helpful in getting me the housing and related accessories in a timely way. They patiently answered all my numerous questions, and gave me excellent advice. I still have a lot to learn (and I hope many opportunities to do so!), but at least now I know I won't be lacking the proper equipment (or any excuse) as a reason I didn't take excellent uw pictures.

By the way, don't expect much from the local Belize restaurants or the airport. We went to one restaurant for our final dinner, and while the food was "okay" (not as good as the boat, actually), the service was incredibly slow! And the airport ... well, remember Belize IS a third-world country. No lounge, no real restaurants, and no air conditioning. It was a LONG wait to check in and go through security. Ah well, such is the life of a traveling scuba diver!

All in all, this was a trip I'd recommend.

Visited on 06/2014 - Submitted on 07/30/2014

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