One of the biggest complaints we
get from divers who make their first
live-aboard trip is that they pack too
much. Jack and Linda Blake
(Folsom, CA) were aboard Mike
Ball’s Super sport last year and wrote,
“I wish I’d known what to pack and
how much space would be available
in our rooms. Having never been
on a live-aboard, we had no idea
what to expect.”
Let us give you the basics for
most boats plying tropical waters.
First, while some cabins are larger
than others and some boats have
extra storage space, so what? You’ll
still use next to nothing. On board
for a week you’ll need three to four
T-shirts and shorts and a couple
bathing suits. (Since most cultures
aren’t as crass as the American culture,
when you go ashore wear
shorts that are cut well below your
butt.) Underwear is optional.
Women often like to have some kind of
cover-up. Assuming there is adequate
fresh water, when clothes get salt stiff
you can rinse and dry them.
“ With 8-foot swells
in the Gulf Stream ,
12 of the 21 passengers
were ill and
vomiting topside
during the six-hour
crossing . ” |
While you’ll probably be barefoot
the entire time, bring a pair of sandals
because you might make village or
restaurant trips. Take a sweatshirt; if
nights aren’t cool, it’s conceivable the
AC in your cabin may freeze you.
Consider taking a light nylon windbreaker
and bring sunglasses and a hat
to keep the sun off your face. Besides
toiletries, books, dive and camera gear,
you don’t need much more.(Don’t
expect to find hair dryers on board and
don’t even bring them; after two days
everyone looks like hell anyway, so why bother?)
Bring all your gear (except cameras)
in soft-sided cases so you can
roll and stow. Most dive boats store
everything else you bring on shore
during your trip, so pack your travel
clothes and what you need for
extended land travel in a separate
case. Some bare bones boats don’t
have towels. Some may not have
blankets. So, find out ahead of time.
You can end the trip lighter than
you started by bringing items that
you use up or discard: motel soaps,
shampoos, toothbrushes, paperback
books, even old T-shirts
shorts/sandals that a Third World
crew member might want for his
family. And, before you bring a
fish/critter/coral ID book, ask
ahead if the boat carries them.
Replacements are usually impossible
to come by on live-aboards. Bring a
backup for everything: batteries (especially
for your computer), straps, meds,
film, cyalume sticks, or anything you
can’t live without. Bring enough cash to
tip the crew and to cover land expenses
(airport transfers, taxes, etc.) that can’t
be paid by credit card. If you’ve got
some favorite videos or music, you
could bring them. I’ve seen wine snobs
bring a case of their own good stuff.
Even on boats with full bars, selections
are limited, so to be sure of getting a
Stoli martini, bring your own Stoli ---
and vermouth.
Mal de Mer
Divers who head to Cocos Island,
the Galapagos, or other far reaching
places, generally know the possibility of
rough seas and prepare themselves. But
even if you’re headed for normally
calm Caribbean waters, keep in mind
the possibility of seasickness. Aboard
Black beard’s Pirate’s Lady in April, Dean
Knudson (Golden Valley, MN) said,
“I’ve made 12 Gulf Stream crossings on
big and small boats, and the weather
on this trip eastbound was the worst I’ve
encountered. With 8-foot swells in the
Gulf Stream, 12 of the 21 passengers
were ill and vomiting topside during
the six-hour crossing. Having said that,
the rest of the trip was a blast, and most
of the ill passengers later said they
would go again!” In Belize, Doug and
Laura Young (Waco, TX) had a rough
crossing aboard a craft that claims to be
about the most stable anywhere: the
Nekton Pilot. They said the waves
“popped you up and off the bed.” It
was their second time on Nekton and
the first time they got sick.
So, whenever you head out to sea,
consider the advice you find in the adjacent
sidebar.
And speaking of rough waters, keep
in mind that reaching Little Cayman in
the winter aboard the Cayman Aggressor,
which boards at Grand Cayman, is
never a guarantee. As Randy Preissig
(San Antonio, Texas) reports of his
February 2001 trip, “First of all, diving in the Caribbean in the winter is a crap
shoot — you win some and you lose
some. Second, the Aggressor crew
would prefer NOT to go to Little
Cayman, since it entails two allnighters
for them — going and
coming. However, we got together
and told them we’d all brave the
waves and they quickly accommodated
us. The crew was outstanding.”
Undercurrent tip: Get your
group together and insist on going
to Little Cayman if at all possible,
and do this the first day. Keep in
mind that if you’re staying on
Cayman Brac, the weather can still
shut you out of that short crossing to
Little Cayman.
Palau Bleaching
If you’re thinking about diving
Palau, keep your expectations about
the coral in line. Vlad Pilar,
( Toronto), diving with Peter
Hughes fleet in January says his was
“‘high voltage’ diving — Blue
Corner, Peleliu Express, Peleliu Cut
— with 3-4 knot currents. Hook
onto the reef and watch the parade.
Sharks galore, schools of all types of
fish, many turtles. In the German
Channel on three dives I saw four
mantas. The one sad part is that 75
percent of the hard coral died.
There is plenty of soft coral that was
not affected.” Jellyfish Lake was
given up for dead after El Niño, but
he reports that it is “ again swarming’
with two types of harmless jellies. ”
Don Lambrecht, (Rocklin, CA),
aboard the Aggressor in March said:
“Heavily advertised as the best reef
in the world, it pales in comparison
with such places as Little Cayman.
Tremendous damage by El Niño to
Wonder Channel presents a dive on
coral rubble instead of vibrant coral,
though Blue Corner, Blue Hole and
Virgin Blue Hole are great dive sites.
Yet, Sean Bruner, (Tucson, AZ),
missed the big fish. During two dives
at Blue Corner, “neither time were
there ripping currents so the ‘show’
wasn’t on. Current ripping at Peleliu
Tip, but no critter show. What happened ? ”
Finally, in respect to the good
advice above from Randy Preissig
about getting passengers together to
assure you dive where you want to, it
doesn’t always work, as John
Sommerer (Silver Spring, MD)
found out. Aboard the Ocean
Hunter in Palau earlier this year, he
reports that, “An extremely
demanding and wealthy guest only
wanted to dive Blue Corner, over
and over. We did other sites, but
only made it to Peleliu for two dives,
and never made it to Angaur. The captain
mediated to some extent, but
clearly was not able to ignore the
potential impact on a gratuity that I
probably couldn’t compensate him for
the loss of. When I requested that we
repeat a dive site that had really good
hard coral in good light (we had done
it in late afternoon), it produced a look
of despair from the captain — and we
didn’t do it again. I didn’t appreciate a
later statement about how lucky I was
to get to dive the site once, because the
other guest was opposed. At the end of
the cruise, one of the owners matter- of -
factly told us that this guest had caused
trouble on a previous trip. I wish that
we had known from the beginning.
With only six guests, it makes sense to
try for a compatible group, and charter
the whole boat. If you are going on
your own, better to go on a bigger
boat, where no one personality can so
skew the dynamics.”
From where I sit, the Ocean Hunter made a big mistake catering to this guy,
whether a big tip was at risk or the guy
was just pushy. A dive operator is
obliged to consider the welfare of all
guests, not just big shots. A guest like
this shouldn’t be welcomed back.
--- Ben Davison