Tulum and Dos Ojos Turquoise Waters: Day trip from Cancun
与当地司机的私人行程
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您的 Daytrip 从您所在的地方开始
在 Cancun 您喜欢的地方与我们的专业司机会面,随时为您服务。无需浪费时间前往接送点,拿上您的行李,立即开始您的旅程。通过当地专业知识发现更多
您的司机的本地见解将为您的 Daytrip 定下基调。这里有一家隐藏的咖啡馆,那里有一家必试的餐厅;这些内部提示您以后会喜欢分享。这不是一个导游带领的旅行,但您的旅程将充满故事和发现。全天候,您的司机将随时为您提供帮助,乐于助人,使您的旅程无忧无虑。以自己的节奏探索
非常适合任何私人团体
无论您是独自旅行,带孩子的家庭,还是大型团体,这项服务都为您的舒适和灵活性量身定制。特别是如果您时间有限或日程繁忙,这是理想的选择。值得注意
- 双程私人汽车接送
- 空调车辆
- 个性化接送服务
- 专业的讲英语的司机
- 免费瓶装水
- 出发前24小时免费取消
- 付费景点 Two Eyes Cenote和Tulum 的入场/门票应单独购买,除非另有说明
- 餐食、小吃和小费不包括在内
您的行程一览
您的行程一览




Main attractions • Dos Ojos — Two Eyes — takes its name from two adjacent sinkholes connected by an underwater passage, visible from above as a pair of openings in the jungle floor; it is one of the entrances to what may be the longest underwater cave system in the world, stretching hundreds of kilometres beneath the Yucatán Peninsula • The snorkelling and diving conditions are among the best of any cenote in the region — extraordinary water clarity, submerged stalactites and stalagmites formed when the caves were above sea level during the last ice age, and a bat cave chamber accessible by swimming through a short dark passage • The two main pools offer different experiences — the smaller, more enclosed eye is darker and more cave-like; the larger is more open with better natural light and more comfortable for casual swimmers
Things to do • Snorkelling through the connected passages between the two eyes — the underwater visibility regularly exceeds 100 metres and the submerged limestone formations are unlike anything accessible at surface level • The bat cave — a dry chamber within the cave system reached by swimming through a short dark passage — houses thousands of bats roosting on the ceiling; a guide leads this section and it is one of the most memorable experiences the cenote system offers
What to eat • Facilities on-site are minimal — bring snacks and water from Cancún or Tulum; the nearest reliable food options are in the Tulum hotel zone or town, a short drive away






Main attractions • El Castillo — Tulum's defining structure, a temple-pyramid perched directly on the clifftop above the Caribbean; its position was functional as well as ceremonial, serving as a lighthouse to guide Maya canoes through a break in the offshore reef below • The Temple of the Frescoes preserves original Maya painted murals depicting the rain deity Chaac and the descending god — some of the best-preserved polychrome frescoes in the Maya world, visible through protective grilles on the exterior • The walled city enclosure gives Tulum a legibility rare among Maya sites — three landward walls and the sea cliff as the fourth defence create a coherent, walkable urban footprint whose logic is immediately readable from the entrance
Things to do • Descend to the beach below the cliff via the wooden staircase within the site — swimming is permitted and the view back up to El Castillo from the water, with turquoise Caribbean sea in the foreground, is the defining image of the Yucatán coast • Walk the full site perimeter along the clifftop path for uninterrupted sea views and a sense of Tulum's strategic position — the drop to the water below and the reef visible offshore make the defensive logic of the location immediately clear
What to eat • Eat before arriving or after leaving — food within the site is limited and overpriced; Tulum town's mercado serves excellent Yucatecan food at honest prices, and the hotel zone has everything from beachfront tacos to serious restaurants














