Orange Beach Leisure Cruises offers a private, customizable boat experience on the warm bays and barrier islands off Orange Beach, Alabama. Step aboard Sea Chelles for a 2–6 hour escape from shore life where the focus is simple: music, cold drinks, and wide open water. The route varies by tide and guest preference—lazy sandbar stops, shallow-water anchorages near dolphin pods, or a slow run along the Intracoastal to catch a Gulf Coast sunset.
Key features are the bays, barrier islands, sandbars and inshore waterways. Look for low, marsh-fringed shorelines, oyster reefs, and the pale sugar-sand flats that glow at sunset. The boat’s shallow draft makes it easy to access protected coves and public sandbars where the group can swim and wade. Sea Chelles is set up for a social day: speakers, seating, cooler space, and room to stretch.
This cruise shines because it’s flexible. Small groups (maximum six passengers) tailor the atmosphere from mellow afternoon drift to lively evening party. It’s a popular choice for birthdays, girls’ trips, and groups who want a private vantage on Orange Beach’s shoreline beyond the loud beach strip. Rather than watching photos from shore, you’ll be inside the scene—stepping from deck into calf-deep water, spotting wading birds fishing along the flats, and timing the day to match where the light lands on the islands.
Expect to see coastal birds like terns and herons, playful bottlenose dolphins, and the occasional rays that glide over the sandbars. Geologically, the area is dominated by Holocene barrier-island systems—wide sandbars and shallow tidal channels that shift seasonally—which creates calm protected water ideal for relaxed cruising and anchoring.
Practical notes: trips run 2–6 hours, groups must be 21+ per current policy, and all departures happen from meeting points in Orange Beach (specific launch location provided at booking). Bring drinks, sunscreen, a hat, and a waterproof phone case; the captain handles navigation and local safety. This operator’s private-boat format keeps the group small and adaptable, one of the best ways to see Orange Beach’s islands without the crowds.
Reserve early for holiday weekends and summer evenings; private charters sell out fast. If you plan to anchor at a sandbar, bring biodegradable sunscreen and pack out all trash — sandbars are public and fragile. Ask the captain about tide windows: morning tides often expose more shelling flats, while evenings give calmer seas for swimming and sunsets. For photographers, low sun on the western passes can turn the water molten gold, truly.