Dream Cruises: The Insider’s Guide to Private Yacht Charter Vacations

Kim Kavin
iUniverse (2008)
ISBN 9781583489840
Reviewed by Olivera Baumgartner-Jackson for Reader Views (6/08) 


If you’ve ever cruised on one of the megaships, I bet you’ve occasionally caught a glimpse of a sleeker, much smaller ship that crossed your path somewhere, but you’ve never seen them in the same port as your megaship. I’ve often wondered who could possibly be using those luxurious-looking, very appealing smaller catamarans and yachts, since they seemed to be oh-so-expensive.

After reading “Dream Cruises” by Kim Kavin I wonder no more. Ms. Kavin wrote an all-encompassing guide to choosing, chartering and enjoying vacations on private yachts. Surprisingly enough, those vacations can be quite affordable, and she provided examples for budgets from $1,000 to $1,000,000. If you regularly cruise with several friends, a private yacht charter could be even more cost effective for you than a cruise ship vacation. And with all the research that went into Ms. Kavin’s book, unpleasant surprises, unnecessary hassles and wrong decisions could and should well be avoided.

After I’ve gotten over the feelings of intense jealousy, stirred in me by reading about the absolutely fabulous cruise vacation Ms. Kavin has taken in the past (just kidding, just kidding… but they are enough to make you sigh wistfully for sure!), I delved deeper in the technicalities of chartering a yacht. Ms. Kavin provided all of the necessary information to make the decision process simple and streamlined. Starting with the basic explanations of yacht chartering and comparison of yachts vs. cruise ships, Ms. Kavin familiarized the reader with boat basics, types of boats and what one could expect on different boat types. An in-depth discussion of destinations, both the usual, classic ones and a nice sampling of the emerging, new ones, followed those basic chapters. Ms. Kavin did not neglect to include a detailed overview of the cost, both up-front and the additional as well as optional ones. The next half-a-dozen chapters dealt with all of the other cruising aspects, from whom to choose to be your boating party to how special requests and needs could and would be accommodated, how to decide on the right type of the charter for your, how to find a respectable broker and what exactly will you encounter once on board, down to the descriptions of the different types of staterooms or bedrooms as well as how a head looks on a yacht and where to find it.

If you are planning a cruise vacation and would like to depart a bit from the routine of the megaships, or if you are just curious about how other people live, “Dream Cruises” is an excellent book to familiarize you with the world of private yacht chartering. And there is no law against dreaming, is there?

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