Honduras
The biggest drawback to the
Bay Islands is still the no-see-ums.
These tiny flying teeth can eat you
alive. True, they are cyclical, and
they bother some people more
than others, but the bottom line is
that you have to spend the whole
trip slathered in DEET. Still, the
Bay Islands remain one of the best
bargains in tropical dive travel --
package rates are outstanding.
Roatan is growing wildly, with
new resorts everywhere. Cayos
Cochinos, though now a marine
reserve, has kept its one resort,
Plantation Beach. Guanaja, which
will be covered in the next
month's issue, also has several
new small resorts.
Utila is also on the move. In a
past issue I mentioned that
Laguna Beach Resort owners had
reportedly sunk two million bucks
into making it Utila's first-class
resort; I also asked for a report
from any readers who had been
there. Nels Westman (Capitola,
California) responded:
"I spent seven nights at Laguna
Beach in September. Arrangements
were handled smoothly by their
agent, Utila Tours, for a $645
package including lodging, all
meals, five dive days with two-tank
dives, plus two night dives. I
found the resort lovely, with sandy
beaches, coconut palms, flowers,
and hammocks. Rooms are
spacious with AC, ceiling fans,
bedside lights, good plumbing,
and hot showers. The clubhouse,
bar, and dining room are all fine.
Food was tasty and plentiful,
served buffet style. Bar was well
stocked, self-serviced, and prices
were reasonable. They generate
their own power 24 hours/day.
"The dive boat is new and well
laid out. Plenty of room, shade,
radio, and emergency gear. Entry
is giant stride off swim platform;
easy walk-out return via stern
ladder. Boat handles 12-15 easily.
One divemaster per 5-6 divers.
Unless you object, dive staff takes
care of all your gear (wet suits,
fins, masks, etc.) throughout the
stay -- puts it on boat in the
morning, changes tanks during
day, rinses and dries gear at day's end. Truly pampered diving. They
were fine with computer divers.
"If you are a diver who likes
comfortable diving and scenic
settings, Laguna Beach Resort is
the best thing going on Utila. The
price is right."
Our October 1996 issue
mentioned that we hadn't heard
anything about Romeo's Resort on Roatan since a rash of complaints
in October 1995. Jack
Rawlins (April 1996) thinks this
must be because everyone is
speechless with disgust. "I spent a
horrible week there -- the only
dive trip in my life that was truly
unpleasant. Why, you ask? (1)
Several members of our party had
their locked rooms rifled and lost
all their valuables; (2) the staff
was so depressed and hostile that
when we told them of the robberies
they shrugged and said it was
our fault for leaving things in the
rooms; (3) the boats were cranky
and slow; (4) the divemaster was a
child who obviously had never
been to some of the sites and lied
about it to cover his ignorance;
(5) the head of the dive shop
arranged the dives so that during
the week we never got to most of
the nearby well-known sites; (6)
the food was rationed -- you
literally had to plead for enough
food to fill you up, and you were
refused if the cook didn't like
your looks; (7) the resort sits in a
dank little lagoon, so when you're
off the boat you never see ocean,
get ocean breezes, shore dive, or
swim. Of course the walls were
great, but they're just as great
when you stay at a good resort
like Coco View."
I sailed and dived around the
Bay Islands on the Maid'en Desert back in 1993 and reported a
mixed bag, but all in all a decent
dive trip. J. Presba (Englewood,
Colorado) now warns us that the
boat has changed hands. "The
info in the brochure for the
Maid'en Desert sounded like
exactly the kind of adventure we
were looking for -- not only was it
live-aboard diving but an opportunity
to learn to sail between dives.
I chartered the boat along with a
group of six for a week in September
1996.
"At one point I joked that
the only possible things
left to break were the
toilets or the engine.
Before the trip ended,
the joke was on me." |
"Shortly after arriving on
Roatan, I learned that the Maid'en
Desert had changed ownership
only weeks before. The temptation
is to chronicle mishap after
mishap which occurred during my
week aboard. At one point,
jokingly, I speculated that the
only possible things left to break
were the newly installed marine
toilets or the engine (this boat is a
motor sailer). Before the trip
ended, the joke was on me -- on
both counts!
"Captain Doug, who apparently
has been with the boat since it was
put into service under the prior
owners and now under the current
owner, was the primary reason we
didn't hold a lynch party before
we left Roatan. This guy tirelessly
did everything he possibly could
to try and salvage our week
aboard -- and he did one heck of
a job! He spent endless hours just
commuting to shore in the dinghy
(after the nonfunctioning dinghy
motor was replaced, that is) to get
tanks filled so we could get in as
much diving as possible. (The
compressor broke on our first day
out. The replacement was an
electric compressor, which took
out the electrical system on the
boat -- so that compressor was
used only once!)
"The intent is not to dissuade
anyone from booking on the
Maid'en Desert, but the new owner
is going to have to do a lot of
work to get this boat in shape.
This boat needs to be advertised
and promoted for what it is -- it's
not in the luxury live-aboard
category, but this type of charter
can have a charm of its own.
Oddly, even with all the problems
and frustrations, we ended up
having a whole lot of fun."
San Salvador, Bahamas
In October, Hurricane Lili
ripped across the island of San
Salvador, taking out the roofs and houses and moving the airport
tower to the middle of the runway.
Club Med was trashed, with roofs
blown off the rooms and water
sports equipment strewn in all
directions; guests complained that
the beach umbrellas and sun
loungers left on the beach were
hurled at their rooms like torpedoes.
Fortunately, the good diving
on San Sal has always been on the
deeper reefs. Roger Chari (New
York), who was at Riding Rock Inn in November, reports: "The first
dive of the day showed the
hurricane damage. Sand was still
choking the reef, coral everywhere
was dead or badly damaged.
Divermasters told me that entire
coral formations had been toppled.
The second day of diving we hit
the deeper reefs and found healthy
reefs that were unaffected by the
hurricane -- fish life remained
abundant." Roger also found the
Riding Rock acceptable and their
dive operation safe and efficient.
"Rooms were spartan, but clean.
Food was basic diver's fare,
nothing fancy, but well prepared."
Indonesia
I contend that some of the
best diving in the world is in
Indonesia, but from my experience
Bali is not where you find
the really good stuff. However, I
wouldn't try telling that to Steven
Altfillisch and his wife, who spent
five days in Bali this August. I'm
sure I would feel differently about
it, too, if I were in the water with
a giant pelagic ocean sunfish:
"We stayed near Kuta Beach
and decided to dive Nusa Penida
Island with Dive & Dive's, based
in Sanur Beach. They promised a
small, fast boat with twin outboards
and sun shade.
"A van picked us up in the
morning at our house for the
short drive. The boat was as
promised, and after a 30-minute
crossing to Nusa Penida we
backrolled into a ripping fourknot
current. The corals and fish
were beautiful as we flew over
them. Twenty minutes into the
dive we spotted a five-foot-tall
mola mola that swam slowly off
into the blue and then returned
for one more look -- the highlight
of the trip!
"As we ate a nice box lunch
on the beach, we watched the
slower boats arrive for their first
dive. All of our diving at Nusa
Penida was in strong currents,
and we had lots of fish on every
dive. Corals were beautiful a nd
undamaged. Dive and Dive's runs
an efficient, no-frills operation."
And where is that really good
stuff in Indonesia? In the August
issue one of our correspondents
reviewed the Baruna Adventurer.
The diving was great, but the boat
and crew had problems. According
to Sidney M. Rosen, owner of
Great Western Travel, those
problems are being addressed. "I
have just returned from the best
month of diving of my life in the
islands of Nusa Tengarra, Timor,
Komodo, Rinja, Banda Islands,
and Alor. I had the privilege of
being invited to join the Baruna
Adventurer with the David
Doubilet Exploration Expedition.
"Mr. John Sujayana, owner of
the boat, has gone to tremendous
efforts and expense to correct the
water-maker and crew problems
and some of the other minor
aspects of the boat that could use
correction -- but these matters
pale in comparison with the quality
of diving and the opportunity to
dive this region of Indonesia.
"In short, the boat is now a
solid three stars, if not three and
a half; the food is at a solid fourstar
level, with exotic Indonesian
spices, seasonings; the air-conditioning
system throughout is acceptable, although admittedly
on the weak side for those who
want their cabins at freezing
temperatures."
K. L. Rubinstein shares the
opinion that the Baruna Adventurer is getting it together. "The diving
was spectacular, particularly around
Alor. We were diving along the island
chain, including Komodo, where
we went ashore to see the dragons.
"The boat crew was helpful and
anxious to please. Dive guides were
on each dive, but were not intrusive.
The entire area is still being
explored in terms of dive sites.
"There were 12 divers on the
boat, and the crew used two Avontype
boats to drop us off and pick
us up. The dives were mostly drift
dives, sometimes in strong current.
There was never more than
a 2- or 3-minute wait for a pickup.
"The dive operation was well
run, with the crew taking care of
our gear. The gearing-up area,
however, is small and confined.
With 12 divers, it seemed as if we
were all elbows and knees, and it
would be worse with more divers.
With the maximum load of 18 or
20, they would need to work in
two shifts.
"Space for camera gear was
limited, but adequate. The food
was excellent. The accommodations
were fine, on a par with the
Holiday Inn or Best Western sort
of hotels; certainly not the Ritz.
The air conditioning had been
redone just prior to our trip.
There were some glitches. Notably,
the new large unit in the main
salon went on the fritz as soon as
we cast off.
"After the trip, we spent
several days in Bali and dove two
days with Baruna. These (in
contrast to the Adventurer) were
poorly organized trips. I would
recommend the Adventurer to
anyone, but would not recommend
the Baruna land-based trips
out of Bali."
"Blue Bubble deserves its
fine reputation. We were
in the water and on the
bottom while divers on
other boats were still
lined up at the dock
waiting to board." |
Cozumel, Mexico
In the October issue we
recommended Aldora Divers, with
its fast boats, steel 120s, and
willingness to do the best dives, as
a way to avoid the mass-market diving on Cozumel. I didn't
mention Ricardo Madrigal because
I had not had a report on his
operation for more than a year.
Mark Berger must have noticed the
oversight and sent in this report:
"These guys are the best!
Everyone dove with computers,
and we tried to get the most
bottom time possible. Depths were
usually limited to one hundred
feet on the first dive, but bottom
times ranged from 60 to 75 minutes.
On the second dive, bottom
times would go longer, and for
the experienced divers, ranged
from 80 to 90 minutes. Lots of
good coaching from divemasters
on subtle ways to work with
breath, equipment, and profile."
Fin Beven (Pasadena, California)
writes that he read about Blue
Bubble in In Depth/Undercurrent
and checked them out: "I had
heard of their reputation for
running less formal dives for
relatively experienced divers --
Blue Bubble deserves its fine
reputation. Their boats are small,
but among the fastest on the island.
We were in the water and on the
bottom while divers on other boats
were still lined up at the dock
waiting to board. And after two
extraordinary drift dives, we were
back at the hotel rinsing our gear
while others were slowly puttputting
their way home. The
divemasters acted as tour guides
(not instructors or baby sitters)
for reefs selected by the divers."
George Arnold did five days
with Blue Bubble and found them
"an outstanding dive operation
with knowledgeable, friendly,
safety-conscious divemasters.
Divemasters would have taken us to 150-160 feet had we wanted to
do that. All boats were fast, six-pack
type with oxygen and radio on each
boat. They rinsed, dried, and stored
our gear each day and loaded it
for us onto dive boats. The total
cost was $24.50/dive plus tips."
Fiji
"Any diver who doesn't get In
Depth is a fool [Ed. note: shameless
promotion, but just couldn't force
myself to cut it]. If I didn't, I would
not know about this place. Five
stars plus for finding this one --
the find of a lifetime," write Bill
Myers and Bob Dabkiewicz, of
Pittsburgh. "We just got back from
Loma Loma. This place is magical.
Not only is it possible to see
anything that inhabits the ocean
on these pristine reefs (locals say
they have even seen great whites
outside the reef), but the locals
who work here are happy in a
magical sense. The only bad thing
was having to leave this heavenly
resort to return to the real jungle."
The full review of Loma Loma is
in In Depth's April 1996 issue.
In August, John and Lee Scruggs
(Loveland, Colorado) did the liveaboard
thing in Fiji aboard the
Sere Ni Wai, owned by Greg Lawlor.
Greg knows Fiji well; he also owned
and operated the Mollie Dean in
Fiji before it was hit by a rogue
wave and sunk a few years back.
"We overnighted at Toka Toka
Resort, a pleasant hotel near the
airport, then took Fiji Air to
Savusavu and a boat out to Moody's
Namena. Tom and Joan Moody,
the owners of the island resort,
had survived the cyclone that had
virtually destroyed their home and
the bures (cottages). Tom has
worked hard to rebuild, and it
showed. The diving was still as
good, but visibility was down a
little. Food was good and plentiful
-- the famous banana-andcoconut
pancakes were great!
"After an enjoyable five days at
Namena, we moved on to the Sere
Ni Wai. The luxurious 101-foot
boat is only two years old and was
designed exclusively for divers (it
does have two seats for avid deepsea
fishermen). Accommodations
are luxurious: double beds and
private heads with showers. The
use of native woods enhances the
overall appearance of the boat.
"Our destination was the
northern Lau Islands. These islands
reminded me of the Rock Islands
of Palau: all limestone, not volcanic
like the other islands of Fiji. Diving
is different here from the rest of
Fiji. We saw less soft coral and
more hard coral. Octopus, sharks,
cods, and various other tropical
fishes abounded. Sometimes I felt
like yelling, 'Get out of my way, I
can't see the other fish!'
"Sometimes I felt like
yelling, 'Get out of my
way, I can't see the other
fish!'" |
"We enjoyed the island and
the boat. Both should be rated
five stars."
PNG Exploratory
Nothing gets my spirit up like
exploration diving. I'm envious of
Peter Jennings's fall trip aboard
the Kavieng-based Tiata. "On a
14-day exploratory to the remote
(very!) Nuguria and Lyra Atolls in
northern Papua New Guinea, the
Tiata and her crew had an impressive
hit rate of good to excellent
site discoveries -- a remarkable
feat for an exploratory. The kudos
go to Capt. David Miller, his
enthusiasm for diving and exploration,
his experience and ability
to use Tiata's mind-boggling
electronics to maximum advantage.
Meals were awesome in
terms of imagination, quality,
quantity, and frequency (burp!).
"Despite the fact that the trip
was a privately arranged exploratory
for experienced divers, with
no guarantee of good dive sites or
diving conditions, less experienced
divers would have enjoyed
the trip immensely. While Dave
Miller focuses on finding the best
action or best critter spot, he is
quick to evaluate the currents and
make sure the dives can be done
safely. The disadvantage of an
exploratory is that you sacrifice
dives while cruising in search of
sites or, if fortunate, because
you're invited to come ashore by
local village leaders (who rarely
see outsiders, let alone foreign
divers). Nevertheless, in 12 days
of diving, I was able to get in 40
dives -- with no regrets.
"We covered over 800 miles
on the trip from Kavieng, on the
northern tip of New Ireland, west
to the island groups of Tabar,
Lihir, Tanga, and Nuguria (an
atoll with a Polynesian population),
then north to the huge,
remote, submerged Lyra Reefs
before returning to Kavieng.
Tiata's stabilizers made the long,
choppy crossings to windward
quite tolerable."
J. Q.
Contact your dive travel agent or call direct:
Plantation Beach 713-680-2090
Laguna Beach 800-668-8452
Romeo's Resort 305-559-0511
Coco View 904-588-4132
Maid'en Desert 011-504-45-1620
Riding Rock Inn 800-272-1492, 954-359-8353
Dive & Dive's 011-62-361-288-052
Baruna Adventurer 011-62-361-753820
Aldora Divers 713-334-3003
Ricardo Madrigal 011-52-987-21578
Blue Bubble 011-52-987-21865
Loma Loma 800-554-2SEA, 011-679-880446
Sere-Ni-Wai 011-679-361382
Tiata 011-675-3257755