If I were going to Hawaii to dive, it's
Kona, the Big Island, that I would
ask for at the Aloha Airlines counter.
But if you're vacationing in Hawaii,
it's easy to end up on the lush green
island of Kauai. If you do, here's a
couple of tricks our correspondents
asked us to pass along to get you to
the best diving.
The first trick is Ken and
Linda Bail's Bubbles Below. These
guys garner the best comments on
the island from In Depth readers,
and they offer a couple of the
ordinary specialty dives. One of
these is to Niihau, a tiny private
island to the west of Kauai. It's
not an easy place to get to; you
can't actually land there unless
you're prepared to cough up
$1,500 or so to try out the biggame
hunting. However, Bubbles
Below will do it as a day trip, a
two-hour crossing from Kauai.
Most of the diving here is
done at Lehau Rock, a volcanic
remnant almost identical to
Molokini, off Maui. The big
difference I noticed was that ours
was the only boat in sight.
My first dive was enjoyable --
the water was crystal clear and
fish-filled, including big schools
of pennant butterflies and false
Moorish idols. I didn't care much
for the 90-minute crossing, but I
would liken it to a good day at
Kaiwi Point on Kona, a fine dive
by almost any measure. The
terrain was much like that of
Molokini, and I spent most of my
dive along the slope of the crater
watching the fish play in the surf.
Linda suddenly went
berserk, pointing at a
small reef fish that looked
like an oddly shaped
pennant butterfly. It was
a Hawaiian morwong. |
My second and third tanks of
the day raised the bar. Dive
number two was at Pu'u Mu'u. I
was in a fairly large group, eight
divers, following Ken Bail through
a huge lava tube that was big
enough to swim through. As we
made our way toward the far side,
Ken stopped and signaled everybody
to drop down on the bottom.
Circling the cavern opening
were four or five juvenile gray
reef sharks, each about three feet
long. Now, this was worth the trip.
While common in the western
Pacific, these sharks are rare in
the human-infested main Hawaiian
Islands. And here I was seeing
a virtual school of them.
Dive number three, Vertical
Awareness, was an exquisite dive
for those not afflicted with
agoraphobia (an abnormal fear of
open places). In honest-this-is-thetruth
100-plus visibility, I descended
an absolutely sheer wall
and kicked along it, enjoying a
profusion of fish. Then I left the
wall and followed Ken out into
the vast blue. No up, no down, no
around -- just blue, until another,
equally sheer wall came into view
on the other side and we followed
it back in the other direction.
In honor of the ongoing '96
Summer Olympics, I stopped at a
two-foot ledge on that wall, firmly
planted my feet, leaped out into
infinity, and performed a perfect
somersault. I then returned to the group, mentally awarding myself
the gold medal in the 300-meter
platform dive.
During the surface interval, I
got to see a rare (and very endangered)
Hawaiian monk seal parked
on a ledge. These creatures
occasionally buzz the dive groups.
On the trip home, we stopped
for a school of dolphins that were
quickly identified as not dolphins
-- the dorsal was all wrong and
they were too big. After a couple
of almost-close encounters in the
water, it was a search though the
critter books. The best anyone
could do was Cuvier's beaked
whale, or perhaps some other
kind of beaked whale. This was an
important litmus test for a dive
operation: (1) if they see some
unusual critter in the water, do
they stop to check it out? and (2)
having done that, do they rummage
through the literature until
they're satisfied they've found
what they saw? Bubbles Below
passed with flying colors (with
Ken calling Linda at home on the
cel phone, saying, "She's the
marine mammal expert").
The next day it was to Mana
Crack along the western edge of
the island. This is their other
"special" dive, a rift in the reef
that provides some excellent
terrain. I found these dives, too,
to be very enjoyable, but not
substantially better than a good
day at one of Kona's better (and
closer) sites. This time Linda was
running the group. She and Lisa
Choquette of Kona's Dive Makai
(whom I consider to be one of the
best divemasters around) have a
lot in common. Linda loves the
little critters out there and knows
every one. Each hole and crack in
the reef ridge was carefully
inspected. Linda timed the dive to
end at a large amphitheater
where a school of gray reef sharks
occasionally hang out. Alas, the
sharks were not in residence, but
it was a fine dive nonetheless.
Toward the end of the dive,
Linda suddenly went berserk,
pointing at a small fish swimming around the reef. I looked, but all
I saw was something that looked
like an oddly shaped pennant
butterfly. When we returned to
the boat, Linda whooped with
delight. We had seen a Hawaiian
morwong, which is simply not
seen around any main Hawaiian
island except Kauai and is rare
even there. "Next time you see
Lisa Choquette, be sure to remind
her she's never seen one," demanded
Linda with a giggle.
Beyond Beyond
I asked Linda, "Is there
anything, um, further out?"
knowing that the northwestern
chain of Hawaiian Islands disappearing
into the setting sun is
renowned for its shark populations.
She smiled and got a
faraway look in her eyes. "Kaula.
It's a few miles beyond Niihau.
That's where Marjean got chased
out of the water by gray reef
sharks. We don't get there often."
Marjean, the amiable and terribly
competent captain, piped up, "I
go there every chance I get."
K. L.
Ditty Bag
Bubbles Below can be contacted at 808- 822-3483. If you're diving Niihau or
Mana Crack with Bubbles Below, stay on the southern side of the island, where
they pick up passengers for those dives.
The crossing to Niihau is very weather susceptible and they understandably ask you
to agree to a regular two-tank dive with them if they can't get across the Kaulakahi
Channel. As it is, Niihau diving is restricted to the summer months. |