Showing posts with label Moon Palace Cancun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moon Palace Cancun. Show all posts

Thursday, July 20, 2023

The Grand at Moon Palace

Written by guest blogger, David Dillon, my son. He did a thorough job of reviewing The Grand at Moon Palace after our stay in July 2023. There were four adults in our group myself, David, Emma (our daughter) and Brendan (her fiancé that proposed on property!) Enjoy, and let us know when you are ready to book!

     For the reader, I am a 24 year old male who has traveled somewhat extensively. I have pretty high standards across the board and have been to a fair number of all-inclusive resorts. I ask that you know my expectations are tempered through this lens and may vary some from your own experiences - especially that I can be particularly harsh when nothing is really wrong.

I didn’t bring a computer with me and instead took notes daily about what we did. I will include my thoughts in addition to the walkthrough of the days. I think, presented in this manner, you see through my thoughts that we enter a sort of “flow state” and start to turn certain actions into habit. If you’re looking to have a supremely relaxing vacation, I recommend that approach.


Tuesday July 4, 2023

We woke up early and got to the Indianapolis airport before light. We parked at the park and walk section and strolled in. The lines were longer than I’d have expected at the desk, but we were through in no more than 25 minutes regardless. Security wasn’t too bad considering it had only opened about 15 minutes before we arrived and we got through security without much incidence. The new TSA machines are clunky and big. They take a little more time, but depending on the people around you, it could be as fast as the old system. The longer from this date you are reading this, the more likely it is that the new system is just as fast as the old one. From Indy we connected through Baltimore, which was obviously much busier (due to time of day and amount of travelers) and then flew to Cancun. The flights themselves were unremarkable in a good way.


In Cancun, the airport is immediately different to an American traveler. The modernization of American airports is more startling in comparison. However, from the last time I remember it to now (a little more than a year ago) it was much nicer. In-processing is now through a futuristic booth. You scan your own passport, walk up to facial recognition, and scan through. If you fail that you go through the old booth. Then you walk to baggage claim down the way. It takes about 3x longer than you’d expect. Like if you thought 30minutes was reasonable, try an hour and a half. Afterward, you go out to the parking lot. Depending on your destination, there are options. Individual transportation was our choice, and I have to admit, price dependent, it’s probably worth it. We went, almost instantly, from the parking lot, to the black escalade, to the road. The company gave us the driver and he loaded the bags, put us in, and we were off. Buses, on the other hand, seemed to take MUCH longer.

Upon arriving to the Palace Resort’s the Grand, we walked immediately up to the counter, the checked us in via a pretty reasonably short process and we were told no rooms would be available until 3pm. Not a big deal, just check luggage with the bellhops. A seamless process. We explored the Grand for a few hours and realized that it is much larger than we had anticipated. 

This is a 'visualize in your head' section so watch out. The Grands property is situated on the rightmost third of the Palace Resorts overall beached section. The Grand itself (lobby and main building) is situated on the bottom left corner of the Grands bottom right third of the property. The lobby building is weird. I view it as three sections. The middle section which is the lobby, then its right and left. Main floor lobby went back into a bar, then to a few places we only toured (to include the circus which was well done). Main floor left extended past Tavola (Italian), Le Chateau (French), and Unique (night club) to the coffee bar (which said it had beignets in the name but most certainly did not) and the business presentation rooms. Here, you’ll find a staircase down. We’ll come back to that. Main floor to the right extended past Jade (Asian), a series of souvenir shops, and Wired (teen hangout) to the Grand buffet and JC’s (Steakhouse) which were cornered by a staircase. If it helps, view the whole building as an big lowercase n. The lobby is the middle connector, and each side has a staircase down to the basement I guess we could call it. 

On the left side of the “n” under the coffee shop, there was a bowling alley, the prohibition bar, La Cantina (Mexican food) and its’ sister restaurant. On the right side of the “n” under the Grand buffet is, ironically, the gym, and a smoothie bar. 

Tavola

Le Chateau

Coffee bar

Business Conference Rooms

Lobby

Lobby Bar

Circus

Jade

Shops

Wired

JC’s

Grand Buffet

Bowling Alley

Speakeasy

La Cantina 


Gym

Smoothie bar


This layout is not super intuitive and dictates that if you want to get from the gym to the smoothie bar you must either go upstairs, across the building, and downstairs OR you must exit and reenter the building after a 5 minute outdoor walk.

Furthermore, and my final geographic, quasi visual section, the pathing outdoors is hard to get a grasp of. I’m pretty good at maps, solid with a compass, and not terrible with GPS - I had some trouble navigating the resort. Not only does everything look similar and all the grounds are accented with the same coconut trees, pools, and walk up bars, BUT the paths aren’t straight and don’t rely on like a highway system of big roads and small offshoots. All the paths wind endlessly, are boxed in by tall vegetation, and are the same size (which is only rough when golf carts try to pass you at 35mph). Anywho the phone app has a map. 

 Our first fooding was at the Grand Buffet.
Coming off a day of travel we were all hungry. Options are more plentiful than other Palace resorts and the food is of a half point higher quality minimum across the board. Dessert was significantly better and the dining spaces (outside of the buffet at dinnertime) are never entirely full. Furthermore, at this point already it was clear that waitstaff here spoke better English than at the lower cost Palace resorts.



After some exploring, which again emphasized the massive size of the resort, we got to our room.The room was great. As you enter, a minibar to your side greets you. A few steps later and you’re flanked on either side by the enormous closet and the bathroom. In the bathroom two sinks guard the shower with the toilet separated by another door, for privacy. In the room itself, two double beds sit with nightstands and a dresser. Down two steps is a desk with two chairs, a jacuzzi and the double glass doors to the balcony. I am realizing now that I am not sure I ever went fully outside the balcony because I could not name the furniture there. Weird. Whoops.

        The room was great and nice. Cleaned and consistent. No weird decorations or abhorrent cleanliness violations. We really only changed, showered, and slept in the room, but if a family with little ones had to spend more time there, it is absolutely doable. 

As we went outside for our first bout of pictures (as a guise for Brendan’s proposal) (Happy engagement btw), we walked some on the beach (once again plagued by seaweed as it also was last year), the winding paths near the beach, and by some of the pools, trying to vibecheck the most usable. Brendan and Emma returned to the room to change for dinner and we scouted the best spot for the proposal. Incidentally, the staff proved extra special again in their willingness to offer suggestions for locations. 


Skipping that (because most of it is recorded if you really want to hear about it), Michelle and I split off for dinner at Caribeno  - the Caribbean Restaurant separate from the main lobby and straight out toward the beach from it. We got drinks while waiting, were seated near instantly and enjoyed some of the best food we had the whole time. The approachability of this restaurant is great for kids or for the “everything is too hot, I’ll have a salad” of the elderly (Looking at you Shirley). Lobster bisque, Shrimp quesadillas, and shrimp macaroni and cheese were absolute highlights. So much so that without referencing my notes, I can name the courses I had during that meal. 

We met back up with Emma and Brendan and (unfortunately) were convinced to go to Michael Jackson (the exhumed experience). Summarily… it isn’t what I would call PG. We checked the MTV (as Michelle insists) music videos for Thriller and Dangerous. There are literally NO scantily clad ladies in those music videos which is NOT the impression you’d get if you only saw the exhumed experience. I wouldn’t bring my kids, IF I had them AND I had to go again. 

Wednesday July 5, 2023

Breakfast at the Caribeno yielded plenty of options. Hispanic, breads, American, fruits, yogurts, carved ham, and hot chocolate. No wait either. I believe we did this for the rest of the week and I highly recommend AVOIDING the hubbub of the Grand Buffet if possible for breakfast and dinner. Unfortunately, and Wednesday is my only day with this note, low population made the food sit longer. I never noticed this another day, but it is a risk you run. I think we may have been there VERY early though. 


We were in building 85, along the left side of the Grands watchful eye. Next to us was Los Tacos (separate from main building). It has its own pool and was dead until 1130. I had a cabana there 2 days in a row with absolutely NO opposition. For lunch we ate there. Great tacos. Melted cheese, flautas, quesadillas, and tacos. Really really good tacos. Good especially to be able to order from your cabana or poolside seat. Live music arrived while we ate, which was great because it didn’t interrupt my reading. It was there for probably 2 hours. 

That night came the great fall. Cusco. Cusco is Peruvian cuisine and again is separate from the building and as far from the rest of the resort as anything can be. I know why now. Everything we got, we did not finish. I don’t know if I can put my finger on the exact problem, but I promise you, when I read the menu I thought “WOW I'm gonna order everything”, and I tried. I really tried. I didn’t like very much at all. And neither did anyone else. Frankly, avoid it. Unless you can try every other restaurant, make it absolutely dead last. 

Afterwards, in a vain attempt to rebuild a desire for food, we returned to the lobby to check the coffee bar. When I tell you it was jam packed, I mean it. The entirety of the main building felt at capacity. Ultimately, after watching a man drop the ice cream off his cone, sigh, pick it up with his hand off the floor, return it to the cone, and continue eating it - we left. 

Thursday July 6, 2023
We had breakfast at Los Caporales in Nizuc. Fair plug to say that if you’re at the Grand, everything on every Palace property is at your disposal. Jump around, find stuff you like. The food was good and we ultimately returned to the Los Tacos pool, but then everybody except me decided there were too many kids and it was too loud so we went to Unique the Day Club pool. 


We were here the rest of the week. The pool is mostly not. It’s largely a space to lay and drink, but technically the water in the middle is there and people congregate in it. You won’t swim laps here is where I’m going with it, so don’t expect to. Also it’s an 18+ area and that rule was abided to. I didn’t ever see kids in this area. 

Everyone else left to get coconut drinks while I held down the fort. Coconut drinks were really good, albeit, there was very little actual liquid. Turns out that a lot of the coconut is coconut and is thusly difficult to fill with a beverage.


Before lunch, I ran to the money exchange, a window in the lobby and asked if I could trade an 20USD for 20 USD 1’s. He did it immediately, no paperwork no problems. There maybe fees if you cross USD to Peso, but I don’t know. If you want US to US, no problem. 


On this glorious fooding, we met Tavola. Potentially the premiere highlight for the Grand, Tavola offers Italian food that is actually good. About a year ago we had some of the worst pizza I have ever witnessed in Palace Resorts other resort. I was skeptical of this, and frankly, somewhat bummed as we came in because the food looked really good (so the letdown would be more I presupposed.) In truth, the ciabatta was great, meatballs were heavenly, the Alessia pizza was divine. If you wanted to start a new religion, it would be no mistake to start at Tavola. We returned later.



After Tavola’s blessing, we went back to our spot at the pool. 2x we did this manuever, but the pool is safe enough that we left our bags and things there while we ate and returned to our spot unconcerned. We partied until dinner. 

JC’s steak was not too shabby. I had calamari and clam chowder (It was good, I’m not from Boston. I have no loyalties). The 10oz Ribeye and the 3 Musketeers left something on the table and frankly, in retrospect, JCs is the only restaurant with upcharge pricing on the menu for some items. While the steak was good and I paid no money to eat there because all inclusive, it’s probably about the same tier as Outback Steakhouse. It’s good.

Friday July 7, 2023

Breakfast at the Caribeno was sparsely populated, but very fresh. 

We returned then to the Unique Day Club. At this point, I have to be honest or the entry for the day would look strange. My notes here… leave a lot to be desired. I had convinced the family to do tequila shots, but our waiter, Alfredo, was on his second day with us. He knew my games. So after 2 double shots for everyone, I did a triple shot, then nursed some drinks. As such, my notes for Friday July 7th are barely legible and not very helpful. 



        If memory serves me… we ate there at the pools bar. I had barbeque wings which were great and Brendan and Emma had food too. We did a variety of other shots there (possible for you too. Just ask the waiter to bring you shots or whatever kind he wants). 

        

For some reason we went back for a nap.




        Dinner at Le Chateau is recommendable. I had a shrimp bisque, escargots, Mediterranean salad, and Cornish hen. I don’t recommend the Cornish hen because all three other people I was with got the steak which was better than any single steak we saw at JCs. My Cornish hen was
probably fine as far as Cornish hens go. I really couldn’t tell you. 




    After Le Chateau, we went to the Speakeasy. The interior design there is better than anywhere else, save maybe the Circus. It is designed to be a library that became a speakeasy. The drink choice and presentation is top of the line and really well done. They have taken classic prohibition drinks and modernized them without totally forgoing their roots. Really commendable job all around. Highly recommend. 

    We ended this night with the most spectacular entertainment offering available. Luchadore wrestling. This luchadores had the same level of acting skill as professional WWE fighters, but none of the cheeky camera angles to make it all look real. The environment and crowd for the event was great, and the excitement from, mostly but not entirely, children was palpable. Solid way to spend an hour, probably doubly so if you’re still utilizing the bar there. 

Saturday July 8, 2023

By Saturday we’d routinized our day entirely. Breakfast Caribeno, Unique day club with Alfredo, Tavola for lunch, Unique day club with Alfredo til dinner, and 

Dinner at La Cantina was good. I had a drink made with honey from Mayan flowers and I think it opened a third eye. Everyone else had normal good drinks. Food was great, albeit not always totally clear. My sangre de toro bean cream soup was more palatable to Americans with me than “beans” were which is weird because mine sounded so much crazier. The food itself was fantastic and generally normal. Shoutout to the waitstaff and management (Angelica and Geraldine (I really should remember) because I asked for a weird dish I had in Guatemala (atole blanco) and they offered to prepare me atol (which is not the same but I didn’t know that). After a long wait they brought forth sweetened corn milk with cinnamon. For dessert I’d asked for cafe de olla which I recommend. Also I ate Michelle’s ice cream which was great because everyone knows it doesn’t count if you don’t order it. 

 
Cafe de Olla...not Guatemalan Atole Blanco but delicious


Sunday July 9, 2023

    We woke up early, had Caribeno before we left the resort after making sure to put our bags outside the door. Our transfer to the airport arrived before 8 and we were at the airport by 830. We traded information at kiosks and our bags at the desk (REMINDER - keep your visa ticket printed by the new machines during customs. As it says, you need it to leave). The flight to Indy was fine, except that, I personally felt the screens that generally say your destination didn’t say anything until we were already boarding. Pay close attention to tickets, conversations with tickets people, and the flight boards. 

    Reprocessing on the Indy side was fast. Off the plane into the baggage claim room took 10 minutes and only about 25 more for baggage. We were in the car no more than an hour after we got off the plane.


Some major takeaways: 

- Don’t pack pants, necessarily, you don’t need them. 

-Pack too much sunscreen. It’s expensive there.

-Don’t shy away from only eating things you love and eating more often. Try everything and really double down on things you like (Mexican Coca-Cola for instance - way better than ours).

-Pace yourself with alcohol. I had too much on the 7th and was really disagreeing with it on the 7th at dinner and the 8th, kinda took a chunk out of my free drinking time

-Consider hanging out near the beach if you don’t care about the water. Given the lack of people there it would be very quiet if the seaweed is flaring

-Move around til you find what you like. Maybe its not pool 1 or 2 or 5. Maybe its pool 6.

-Do stuff. As much as I’ll talk smack about Michael Jackson by calling it an exhumed experience, it is as much a memory as day 3 of laying out in the sun or time number 43 we ate at Tavola. The events they offer may feel dorky (Luchador-ing) but give it 15 minutes.

-For men specifically, when you’re thinking dress shoes for dinner - I wore tan HeyDudes with no socks. You don’t have to pack gold toe socks and penny loafers

-If you wind up in the same place everyday, meet the wait staff there. I know our service was better because we actually talked to Alfredo and tipped as we went - not all at once at the end


Ready to book your getaway? email us at dillontravels@gmail.com




Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Moon Palace, Cancun

 

 We recently returned from a seven-night stay at Moon Palace, Cancun. This resort is a family all-inclusive resort at a moderate price point with excellent flight schedules and prices. Joe and I vacationed at Moon Palace in October 2021 alone while visiting several resorts throughout Cancun. We chose to rebook for June with our children and my parents because we liked the size of the resort and it was a much more reasonably priced trip than other Caribbean options for a large group.


With more than ten years in the travel industry, I have decided there are a lot of great options out there, and deciding which resort is best for your family or group has a lot to do with your interests, needs, and budget. In this blog, I will outline different things to consider in deciding if Moon Palace is the right resort for your next getaway.

Pro Tip: When traveling to Cancun, you will arrive at the airport and get through customs, claim your luggage then filter outside. Once there you will look for the people with a Palace sign. They were by pillar B in cream shirts.

Resort Rooms






General Moon Palace, Cancun overview
Moon Palace is about 20 minutes from the "Cancun Strip" and a 20-minute ride from the airport. The resort is divided into four sections. 
  1. Moon Palace "The Grand" is a separate resort that is more expensive and definitely at the luxury level. The price is substantially more but it definitely has its perks. There is a waterpark with slides, adult-only swimming areas, upscale dining, and overall nicer rooms and common spaces. Resort guests of The Grand can go to any of the other locations but those guests cannot go to The Grand. You can pay $100 per person to purchase a day pass to use all of the facilities at The Grand for one day. 
  2. Golf Course (27-hole Jack Nicklaus) has restaurants available to all for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Dinner requires reservations. There are golf cart shuttles running all day from the main lobbies of the other resorts. There are some villas available to book at the golf course. These range from suites with living room areas separate from bedrooms to studios or regular hotel rooms. These have views of the golf course.
The main Moon Palace resort is divided into two sections. These two are the same cost and you don't choose them during booking but can request them (without guarantee) at check-in. You can easily walk or shuttle between these to use the pools, activities, and meals at each one.
   
     3. Nizuc is a bit smaller and the pool area was definitely calmer even though it has the            only slide at the two resorts. Couples alone might feel this is the better choice because it        is calmer with fewer kids.
    4. Sunrise is very big and spread out. The pool area is extensive with one large area for           preschoolers and toddlers. If you have kids that age, I highly suggest you request this             side. This side has the most action so that is either good or bad depending on your point        of view. Traveling with college-age kids this section was the better choice.
  
Pros 
  • Clean 
  • Cleaned well throughout the stay
  • They were able to accommodate us at check-in with those wanting 2 beds or 1.
  • In-room bar of wine, tequila, vodka, rum, soda, water, and juice are all complimentary even in the lowest category of room
Cons
  • There are very few ocean view rooms
  • Our "garden view" was an access road and chain fence. this is the least expensive room category.
Pro Tip: know yourself, are you going to get room service breakfast and sit out on the patio each morning with coffee? Pay more for what you want and get an ocean view or ocean front. If you won't be inside your room the entire week, save your money but know you might have a decent walk to food/pools and be looking at a fence all week :-)

Dining

Pros:
  • Food is readily available at all times
  • Breakfast and dinner are available buffet style or order from a menu and all are included
  • Lunch is available at poolside buffets, poolside pizza by the slice, tacos by the pool, food trucks, and inside at a buffet.
  • Dinner is available in a variety of settings including casual buffet, Asian Teppanyaki, Indian, Mexican, Brazilian,  (meat on skewers walked table to table), Seafood, Italian and more. 
  • You only need reservations for a couple of these options and reservations can only be made on the property (three days in advance) so it won't be completely booked when you arrive.
  • Room Service is complimentary and had a totally different menu than what we were seeing in the restaurants.
  • Buffets have a made-to-order section at every meal. They begin the day with an omelet station and at lunch/dinner buffets there is always a taco station and hamburger station but oftentimes you will find teppanyaki or Italian grill open for you to pick and choose what you want.
  • Tweens/Teens/20-somethings will be in heaven

  Cons: 

  • The buffets didn't change much throughout the week. I like to see different things so I would go to different buffets for breakfast to see what they had instead of eating the same breakfast every day.
  • I think it is odd to say...but there is a ton of Mexican food. I am not saying local "Mexican food" but real authentic food. Some in our group would say that was their favorite thing there. I found some selections, for breakfast especially, very strange.
Pro Tip: If at first, you don't succeed, try, try again...works at meals too. There is no limit to what you can eat. So, if I go to a buffet to deal with my "starving" 20-somethings and don't like the options, I just walk from that buffet to a sit-down meal elsewhere and order a whole pizza for myself at the brick oven pizza place, or order room service!

Desserts, Drinks, and Bars


The fact that I give the dessert its own section probably tells you a lot about me! Dessert is far more important to me than meals. I LOVE the options in desserts at Moon Palace (all Palace resorts). There is a dedicated dessert bar that is open very early until very late (I never witnessed it being closed). There are macarons, handmade chocolates, ice creams, sorbets, crepes made to order, cakes, cheesecakes, cookies, popsicles, and made-to-order cold and hot coffees available at a walk-up counter. (in your swimsuit if you wish!)

Pro Tip: There is a very small, inconspicuous churro cart that makes fresh churros at random times throughout the week. This is by the stage on Sunrise side. Delicious!
Our daughter preferred the buffet desserts 
because she could fill a plate with options!

Bars and Drinks

  • The drinking age in Mexico is 18, so you would definitely want to have that family conversation however you view that. If you will allow inexperienced family members to drink, I would REALLY push NO shots and lots of water for the first few days then limit them to how many. I think that is where almost everyone I have seen struggle seems to fail.
  • Our college group went to the "nightclubs" and really had fun. They were surprised that all ages 18 and much older were present. 
  • There was dancing and dancers but all remained clothed!
  • My son is a bartender in a college town and he felt the bartenders inside the resort were more intentional and knowledgeable. 
  • I like to go pool bar to pool bar early in my trip and find a patient and friendly bartender then tip well each day and be consistent. This works really well at every all inclusive resort I have visited.
  • Remember to talk to bartenders to figure out what you want, especially if you aren't much of a drinker in your real life. For instance, I don't like tequila or dark rum. If that is in a drink they make, I will ask for it with coconut rum or vodka. They don't care so be assertive and ask. 
  • Frozen drinks: Miami Vice (1/2 strawberry daiquiri and 1/2 pina colada I do ask for it with coconut rum), Riviera Maya (to get the right flavor, you will have to stir the very pretty drink making it a sludge color), Mango Tango (1/2 mango daiquiri and 1/2 pina colada), Vodka Tonic, superman shots.
  • It's Mexico, I am guessing if you like tequila you'd find plenty of tequila-based drinks
Pro Tip: Bring an insulated mug from home for refills and your own reusable straw.

Things to Do:

            
There is A LOT to do at Moon Palace!! 
  • weight room
  • trails forever between Nizuc and Sunrise for walks and runs
  • mini golf
  • bicycles
  • kayaks
  • water aerobics and water cycling
  • water activities all day long including games, volleyball and bracelet-making poolside
  • beach volleyball
  • beach cornhole
  • FlowRider
  • game room for teens with video gaming, arcade games, and table games (foosball)
  • pool tables in bars and nightclubs
  • karaoke
  • nightly shows outside
  • local vendors come for shopping on property a few nights a week
  • spa
  • night clubs
  • kids swim area for toddlers and preschoolers
  • pool slide
  • You can book excursions to nearby locations in the region at an additional cost and they will pick you up on property. 
  • Some activities are available at the water sports building for an additional fee. It is very convenient those things can be booked right on property. You can do scuba diving, snorkeling, and golf. 
  • or grab a book and put up the sun umbrella to do absolutely nothing!
Pro Tip: This is an ideal resort for multigenerational groups and mixed interest groups because everyone can choose their level of activity, meals, and experiences
                         

Tipping

This is a personal decision, unlike a cruise ship, you will not be required to add gratuities, nor would anyone expect you to tip 20% like American restaurants of the same level. We feel it is our way to "give" of our abundance while enjoying their beautiful country. We bring $150 cash per room. This allows us to give the bus drivers for the transfers $1 per bag, housekeepers, $2-3 a day, dinners $3 or so, and bartenders or drink servers that walk around to you in the pool $5 for the day.
  

Packing

We travel more than most but I really struggle with overpacking. Here is my tried and true list: Caribbean Packing List

If you use my list and think something should be added, please email us. We appreciate feedback because it helps us support our clients! dillontravels@gmail.com

Pro Tip: PassportMedicine, bug spray, and sunscreen are imperative! If you forget something else you can probably get by.


           


Overall Thoughts

  • "You get what you pay for" holds pretty true for vacationing. This is a mid-level resort. If you have exclusively done deluxe resorts and cruises (think Disney Cruises and Sandals, Beaches, Le Blanc level all-inclusive resorts) this won't measure up and it shouldn't, it is MUCH less expensive. Joe (my husband) often says there are levels of luxury. Are you expecting your car rental to be a compact Chevy cavalier, a mid-sized Toyota, or did you reserve the Cadillac? I would put this right in the middle and the cost reflects that
  • Moon Palace, Cancun is a great mid-level all-inclusive in the Caribbean. It is clean and safe and there is a lot to see and do on the property.
  • Flights from Indy, when purchased in advance, are much cheaper than other Caribbean destinations and can be direct. This was a great incentive for a large group.
  • Mexico is not Jamaica. Yep, I just wrote that sentence. I am not sure how to explain that any differently. I have said for years, that my top Caribbean destination is Jamaica. The Jamaican people are so welcoming and fun that nowhere else can compare. You will get good service on other islands but none have impressed me like Jamaica. Jamaicans speak and understand English well. If you don't know me, I am a teacher of English Learners. I have adopted four students from other countries. So, I mean no disrespect, when visiting other countries the language barrier is our problem, not theirs. However, my limited Spanish goes a long way, and having bilingual kids was a huge help in getting specific foods and drinks. If that will frustrate you, Mexico is not the destination for you. We have always enjoyed showing our kids other cultures and languages. 
  • This resort is enormous so we loved the opportunities to do different things and walk around a lot. However, if you are not active or have issues with mobility this would not be a resort you could easily move around.
  • This is a family resort so there are a lot of families everywhere. If you typically go to Adult only resorts, this will not be a quiet calm spot!
  • If you typically do American beach vacations this will be a huge improvement because you pay once and don't have any more expenses.
Pro Tip: This beach is NOT crystal clear. It can be overwhelmed with seaweed depending on recent weather conditions. If you cannot be happy with your vacation if your feet are not in the ocean, I would not choose this resort. If (like me) you would rather be in the pool anyway, this isn't really an issue.