Snorkeling and diving are one of the few ways to become completely immersed in the actual habitat of wild creatures, to feel like you’ve become a part of their lives and world.
Viewing wildlife from a hide or watching quietly at a distance are soul-nourishing ways to encounter nature but there is something even more connected about being in water, the element of marine life itself.
This is the third in my things to do at the beach series, a novel way to get kids used to being underwater before learning to snorkel; goggling – wearing a mask or goggles to view marine life from the safety of a kayak, inflatable or surfboard!
So can you snorkel with goggles?!
Start Your Kids Goggling Young!
Teaching young children to snorkel and engage with marine wildlife from an early age is a great way to encourage respect for the wild and a love of adventure, though it can be pretty chilly in our northern UK waters. ‘Goggling‘ (snorkeling with goggles) is an easy way to break them in gently whilst staying relatively warm. It can even be done from the safety of rockpool edge – you don’t need to be in the water!
So what on earth is Goggling?!
Well first, the back-story; why I think all children should learn to snorkel (and goggle!)
My own first snorkeling experience wasn’t until I was 26, on Egypt’s Red Sea coast.
Learning to Breathe
Confidently donning snorkel and mask and not caring about the ungainly nature of the fins (flippers to the uninitiated) I waddled and flapped into the warm sea, morphing seamlessly into a mermaid en route. Well, in my head anyway.
Unfortunately, as soon as my face went below the surface, my breathing stopped!
“But of course,” eyes said to brain, “nobody can breathe underwater.” The mask and snorkel were clearly not computing.

Epic Fail
It was a wild adventure fail of epic, humiliating and frustrating proportion. Manly perseverance merely rendered me breathless and claustrophobic. Occasional fish rewarded my farcical flounderings so I spluttered aimlessly in the shallows trying to appear un-phased and confident to any amused sunbathers who might have noticed my peril. Ariel I was not.
Stingray Redemption
Suddenly from nowhere, and inches from my face, a small yellowy-green stingray with stunning blue spots glided past (the imaginatively named Bluespotted Stingray!!)
I gasped (read ‘breathed’) and flicked a fin to follow this magnificent little creature. Half an hour later it was apparent that breathing had occurred! Nature’s teaching in action.

What an experience. Who knows what other fish I saw, but that little stingray was unforgettable and without him I may not have subsequently learnt to dive.
Fair-Weather Snorkeler?
It has since been a great privilege to have snorkeled around the world, unfailingly blown away by the sheer beauty of the underwater habitat and the richness of its inhabitants.
Particular highlights include the charismatic Clownfish in Thailand, brooding Mexican barracudas and giant parrot fish, beautiful cuttlefish and squid, nurse sharks and manta rays in Belize and my favourite tropical fish, the juvenile Yellow Tailed Damselfish, which are not yellow-tailed when young but midnight blue, almost tangibly velvety, with turquoise neon spots.

Being trailed by Ramoras was interesting too; quite a sensation on a non-wetsuited body to have little fish attempt to chew off your bacteria and dead skin!
[Note the lack of cold water locations in the above list. An all-weather camper I may be but where water is concerned I am woefully tropical-blooded!]
Turtle Love
Snorkelling with turtles is the most magical of underwater adventures, experienced regularly whilst living in Mexico and most memorably on our wedding morning in the Seychelles when Wild Daddy and I snorkelled before the main event – Mother Nature’s perfect wedding gift!
All these are the reasons I want Caroline to learn to snorkel.
So What is Goggling Again?
It’s ingenius! Caroline dreamed up the idea for underwater marine observation without the effort nor, more importantly, the cold (especially if wearing a wetsuit);
Simply wear swimming goggles or a snorkel mask, sprawl on an inflatable with head over the side and order Wild Parent to move said inflatable at one’s whim!
Wild Parents eh? Who’d be one?!

The first time we tried it Caroline was so ecstatic to see crabs walking on the seabed and the odd fish swim past that I’d have happily dragged her around on the dinghy all day.
PLEASE try Goggling, it’s great fun for everyone!!
Safety First
When using any inflatable in the open sea rather than rockpools there are important safety guidelines to consider. Read my beach safety guide and rip tide survival guide for comprehensive life-saving information, always check local tide times, coastguard warnings and the weather forecast and use a long length of rope to ensure the inflatable can’t drift too far away from the dutiful wild parent.
Top Tips for Goggling
- Avoid claustrophobia – some children get claustrophobic wearing dark snorkel masks so look at spending a little more and buy a clear or lighter silicone mask frame
- Mask or goggles? – having tried goggling with both, I prefer using a proper snorkel and mask as you can stay face-under as long as you like
- Breathing – having goggled in just swim goggles I found the cold water took my breath away so I couldn’t stay under for long. Breathe out while under water to help regulate breath
Get the Gear
Click photos to find the best prices on Amazon for goggles, silicone snorkels and masks, sets with fins and even a full-face mask with a Go-Pro mount!
And here’s a really informative snorkel kit review from the fab Rona blogging at Salt. Well worth a read if you’re researching new gear.
KIDS SNORKEL & MASK
KIDS SNORKEL & FIN SET
ADULT FULL-FACE MASK WITH GO-PRO MOUNT
TODDLER GOGGLES
ADULT SNORKEL & MASK
ADULT SNORKEL & FIN SET
But you MUST try goggling. Go on, you’ll love it!
Sign up to Kids of the Wild to receive all my posts by email, and follow things to do at the beach for kids entertainment ideas in the school holidays. And did you know kids can learn scuba diving from age 8? Learn more in Troy Mayne’s guest post on kids’ diving
Oh, I love snorkelling, and did exactly the same: either held my breath or when scuba diving breathed fast and started rising every time I saw something exciting! Love that feeling of being immersed, like on a different planet.
It’s so funny that it takes our brains a while to trust a new mode of being! Glad I’m not the only one whose breath needed lessons. My favourite nature memory, possibly of all time, is floating with a snorkel a few feet above a Mexican reef, rising and falling with the swell just immersed in the life going on below me. Just breathtaking, in the right way this time! Thanks for reading
Yes, the first time I snorkelled I felt like I was on a different planet, and that I had vertigo, because I was looking down on such a deep drop! And the creatures of course were just incredible and magical.
Ooh may have to try this in Wales this summer! Or in one of our Lakes…
It would be great in the Lakes on a clear day. Let me know if you try it.
This is a fab idea for any wild child who’s unsure of swimming in the sea, it will definitely help boost confidence! I know my lot used to get chilled to the bone swimming around so Goggling would’ve been a wonderful seaside activity for them to try out when they’d got cold. Will certainly be suggesting this to some families here on holiday.
Thanks for sharing with me on #CountryKids.
Great to hear, thanks Fiona. We really love it especially up here in the chilly North Sea. Mexico it ain’t!
Lovely post! And such a good idea, I’ll try this with my boys this summer. I also have a great love of snorkelling, one of the biggest highlights of my travel life was snorkelling with a whale shark. I’d love to experience it with my family next time! #CountryKids
Wow, I imagine snorkeling with a whale shark was unforgettable. Where was that? Let me know how the boys get on goggling too!
I have to confess I’ve never tried snorkling but I can imagine it must be so interesting to be able to take a closer look at what’s below the surface of the water. I love Caroline’s idea to do goggling instead – a great way of being able to get all the fun of snorkling while managing to stay warmer and drier! 🙂 #countrykids
Goggling is a great way to try snorkeling, especially in the UK. You’d love it I’m sure!
Oh wow!! My little boy would absolutely love doing this from his inflatable dinghy!! Next time we are at he beach, I am definitely going to give this a go!! #countrykids
Great! Doubly perfect if you already have a dinghy. You don’t need an expensive mask either for little ones. Hope he enjoys it, please let me know how it goes
Oh this does sound amazing and my boys love the water but not yet something we have tried
It’s really good fun and usually ends up with lots of jumping off the inflatable for fun! Give it a go!
Wow you have had some fantastic experiences #CountryKids
I have been really lucky to have travelled a bit. Nowhere near as much as some people, and lots of nature involved, but I do love getting back home to the UK
What a great idea! I did not snorkel until I was 29. I never really got the hang of it. My son loves to snorkel and scuba dive. #CountryKids
I was a late starter, and don’t snorkel half as much as I’d like to. You should try goggling – never too old!
Aww this is an amazing read! I use to do this as a child! My son still needs to start swimming and I am sure we will try this once he knows how to =)
#countrykids
Awesome! Nothing new under the sun then. Your son will love it if you did too.
Wow, an amazing post! You’ve been underwater in some lovely places and it reminded me that on holiday as I child I used to snorkel. With one swimmer and one learning to swim, we’ll have to try this one day. #AdventureCalling
I feel really lucky and privileged to have travelled a bit, and blessed to have seen so much marine life into the bargain. Can’t wait to snorkel with C in some real tropical waters in the coming years. Your children will love it when they’ve cracked swimming confidrnce!
What a great idea! I have to admit I had a similar experience to you the first time I tried snorkeling, and sadly didn’t have a stingray to distract me, so still can’t do it! This looks like such a good way to get kids used to it! #countrykids
Aha, the kids could be a great excuse to try goggling and work out the snorkel breathing then!! Nobody would know!
This is a brilliant idea, and one for next time we are at the beach.
#AdventureCalling
Glad you like it, it’s definitely great fun, even if you’re the parent at the end of the rope! Watching the kids’ faces is priceless.
WOW this is incredible stuff. Lots of value from this post.. I am planning to do snorkeling with my kids in Maui. what do you think ?
This is such a good idea! Definitely one to try next time we head to the coast. Like you say, it’s a great way to start off a lifelong love (and grow confidence) of the water. Thanks so much for sharing #adventurecalling
Thanks Lauren and sorry for the delayed reply, been on a week’s Cub camp!
Great idea – I love it! I’ll be dunking our goggled-up kids off the end of the kayak next time we’re out paddling haha. Thanks for joining us on #adventurecalling, we’re back open tonight for new posts.
Brilliant, look forward to hearing about your dunking’s and apologies for the tardy response, Cub camp happened! Sounds like Countryfile Live went well for you too.