Dear Reader,
A dive that begins with sharks and ends with pygmy
seahorses has a lot going for it. The dive started with
a blue-water descent to 85 fsw. Hovering just above the
bottom, I peered into a low-ceilinged cave to watch sixfoot
white-tipped reef sharks “pacing” back and forth in
the gloom. A silver sweetlips hung with the sharks and a
smaller red striped sweetlips swam upside down under the
overhang. I ascended to the Pink Wall, named for the profuse
soft corals that are trademarks of Philippines diving.
My guide pointed out five pygmy seahorses roosting
in an undulating sea fan, claiming that one of these tiny
creatures, less than 3 mm long, was pregnant. I viewed it
through a magnifying glass and whatever he purported to
see, I didn’t.
I was diving at Atlantis Puerto Galera, on the eastern
shore of the island of Mindoro, south of Manila. The
40-room resort meanders uphill from crowded Sabang Beach,
which is chockablock with resorts, dive operations, restaurants,
trinket vendors, honky-tonks and hookers.
The diving outrigger |
One reason I selected the Philippines is that the
air/land price can be comparable to many Caribbean destinations
and with far better diving. But getting there
included a 90-
minute bus trip
from Manila to
the coast and a
one-hour ride in
an open boat.
However, the
resort staff handled
each transfer
crisply. Upon
arrival, my bags
were taken to
our room while I
enjoyed a buffet lunch. Now I’m accustomed to complimentary
welcome drinks . . . but complimentary
massages? A bevy of women poured
into the room and gave us -- well, a
few guests hesitated -- a head and neck
massage at the table. These were hotel
masseuses recruiting business for inroom
massages.
With several boats each making four
one-tank trips per day, dive sites and
departure times are listed on a white
board. Since I had traveled with five
other divers, they assigned us a guide
and boat. Crew members toted our gear
to the bangka (an outrigger skiff with
partial sun cover, powered by a diesel
engine). After checking c-cards and collecting
wads of waivers, Bala, our boyish-
looking but professional divemaster,
laid out the max bottom time and depth
(50 minutes and 60 fsw on this first
dive). We were to stay together, begin
our safety stop when the first diver hit
750 psi, and surface together.
After Bala’s briefing, I carried my
personal gear to the beach and waded out
to the anchored Jim Jim. I teetered up
a rickety gangplank with a hand from the
boat driver. Ernie’s Point was just minutes
away, as were most dives, so it did
not matter that the Jim Jim had no head,
snacks or drinks. Most days, the boat
returned to the resort after each dive.
Although the air was in the low 80s,
the water during my March trip ranged
from 75–79ºF. Having been forewarned, I
added a vest to my 3-mil suit. But, I
hadn’t planned for the extra buoyancy, so Bala held up the other divers while I
sheepishly went back to the boat for more lead.
Gently drifting past Ernie’s Point, I saw a huge
puffer, two big black frogfish, several lionfish, and
nudibranchs among profuse hard and soft corals in 70-
foot visibility. As we ascended to our safety stop, Bala
deployed a surface buoy so the boat -- which doesn’t
anchor on dive sites -- could find us. At the swim ladder,
I handed up my tank, weight belt and fins before
climbing aboard. The “stay together” rule had been loosely
enforced, and later, two divers wandered away from the
group. One was picked up by a boat from another resort.
His divemaster failed to search for him and the boat
driver never noticed him on the surface. Not good, so we
six vowed to watch out for one another.
Guest rooms are reached via landscaped rock pathways
and flagstone steps. Mine was bright and airy, with
white stucco walls molded into storage cubbies, vents and lighting sconces, giving the place a Flintstones feel. I appreciated the refrigerated
honor bar (a can of San Miguel Pilsen cost about $1.10), complimentary daily
fruit, cable TV, and a small desk. Outside, next to a plastic table and chairs, I
hung my swimsuit on a drying rack. The room had no phone, so I had to walk to the
front desk to ask questions.
They urged us to stay hydrated –- several divers cramped on the first dive
after the long plane ride -- but the running water in my room was unpotable, and
bottled water was 75 cents. I found cheaper water in a nearby store.
Other dives near Sabang Beach featured different fauna. At Kilima Steps, I
encountered a murderer’s row of venomous critters. Bala pointed out porcupinefish
in their tube-sponge docking stations and a well-camouflaged raggy scorpionfish.
An oversized star puffer hovered above the reef, while Moorish idols, triggers and
parrots devoured coral. At the Canyons, I dropped in on king-sized oriental, diagonal-
banded, and dotted sweetlips.
On many safety stops I drifted over reef tops, blown away by the rainbow of
anthias, basslets, cardinalfish, damsels, and wrasses sparkling in brilliant sunlight.
Like denizens of the girlie bars of Sabang Beach, I mused, the reef crowd looks good at closing time.
I plunked down $37.50 for a dusk dive
to ogle mating mandarin fish. Based on my
unscientific survey of T-shirt designs,
these brilliant fish are the signature critters
of Puerto Galera. At dusk, pairs rise
from dead fire coral, swimming upward in a
sinuous spiral, then release their sperm and
eggs before falling back to their lairs.
Beams from our lights or strobes spooked the
little lovers, so we viewed and filmed them
in relative darkness, losing the beauty of
their elaborate coloration. With nine divers
jostling for position, it wasn’t fun. My
advice: Buy the T-shirt, skip the dive.
But don’t skip the day trip to Verde
Island, 90 minutes away. Drifting along the
drop off in 150-foot visibility, I felt that
if Yosemite Park were a reef, it would look
like this. Speckled puffers wove their way
between enormous sea fans. A four-foot octopus
and an eight-foot swimming sea snake
added more drama. I gawked at thousands of
batfish, butterflyfish, bannerfish, angels,
surgeonfish, clown triggers and other beauties
sashaying among the jumble of corals,
sponges and tunicates. Two great dives!
Atlantis Puerto Galera was pleasant and
the friendly staff seemed to know my name by
the second day. But, I didn’t spend all my
time here and occasionally meandered into the nearby business district where one
traveling companion got into a few serious pool games. Several single male divers
–- some make annual trips -- were seriously scouting. One said -- and he was
sober -- that he wasn’t going home until he found a wife.
My big gripe was the food. Breakfasts were fine, but lunches and dinners were
fat and carbo-loaded with dishes like spaghetti, potatoes au gratin, fried sweet
potatoes and calamari tempura. They did their best to honor dietary requests, but
only for those squeaky wheels who said they didn’t want the grease. When large
groups hit the buffet, food frequently ran out, and the kitchen replenished it too
slowly. When I booked this trip six months in advance, I was told to expect “gourmet
cuisine” but the chef had transferred to the sister resort. At least that gave
me something to look forward to on the second leg of my trip: Atlantis Dumaguete.
It’s about 250 miles as the crow flies from Puerto Galera to Dumaguete.
Unfortunately, the crow doesn’t carry passengers or luggage, so I had to return to
Manila, then take a one-hour hop on Cebu Pacific and a 40-minute van ride.
Atlantis Dumaguete is a 37-room boutique resort, designed with Asian motifs
and constructed from indigenous Filipino materials. My ground-floor room was
trimmed in native woods and floral-patterned bedspreads, which gave it a much
warmer feel than the cavelike rooms at Puerto Galera. Dumaguete has a tropical
garden setting on an expansive beach sprinkled with modest resorts, private homes,
and primitive fishing camps. It’s without nightlife other than the resort’s openair
bar. The meals were well-balanced with fresh local seafood, sometimes grilled
on the outdoor barbecue.
The bangkas and dive procedures were similar to those at PG. Nearly all the nearby diving was conducted in small, patchy marine preserves, which were more
lush than the surrounding terrain -- though I spotted several fish traps. At least
I saw no signs of dynamite fishing, which has devastated too many Filipino reefs.
Two nearby coastal sites qualified as world-class muck dives. After bouncing
down to the 105-foot-deep Bangka Wreck, I returned to the shallows, where six-inch
white thorny seahorses clung to shoots of sea grass in 11 fsw. They posed patiently
for photos, but the paparazzi left when someone discovered a two-foot anemone
that housed clownfish, small crabs and banded coral shrimp. For 10 minutes, I hung
out with a pair of black ornate ghost pipefish drifting vertically side by side.
Below Coconut Mill pier, divemaster Marco, a trained marine biologist, picked
through the rubble to point out a starry moray in the mud, pincushion starfish,
boxy cowfish, an anglerfish, and an armor-plated broadclub cuttlefish. Finning
around the pilings, I saw a two-inch crystal neon slug, vertical shrimpfishes and
a black, blue and white juvenile emperor.
I also took a full-day trip to Apo Island. In visibility that deteriorated
from 80 to 40 feet, we made three dives with hawksbill and green turtles, sea
squirts, unicorn fish, blue spotted puffers, triangle butterflyfish and soft corals
in an array of pastel tints I wouldn’t believe in an aquarium. There was so
much to see, I found it hard to concentrate on any one critter. While we were
anchored offshore during our lunch break, kids came out to dive for coins.
The larger bangkas, used by both resorts for long trips, were outfitted with
rudimentary “comfort stations” and radios. All boats have oxygen and first aid
kits, according to Atlantis management, but we had no safety briefings at either
location. Unlike Puerto Galera, which is on a busy harbor with a featureless sand
bottom, Dumaguete offers snorkeling and beach diving. Only one couple in my group
tried it, making another dusk dive to photograph mandarin fish.
So, should you go? Well, the diving at Puerto Galera and Dumaguete was
hardly high-voltage. The biggest critters we saw were reclusive white-tipped reef
sharks, king-sized sweetlips, and turtles. While currents were ripping at a couple
of sites, most of our dives were airport-walkway smooth.
However, the underwater scenery was kaleidoscopic in its intensity, with small
exotic creatures I’d never encountered before. A month after we departed, one of
our leaders went to Grand Cayman and afterward told me that he was bored by his
second dive. And, what he paid for a week there wasn’t much less than a week in
the Philippines. Make it a two-week trip, and you have comparable prices and a
new world of diving.
- D.L.
Divers Compass Airfare starts at $1100rt from the West Coast. My
Sausalito dive shop arranged the first week for $2,150, including
airfare, four dives a day, and meals. Dumaguete was $1,250 (pp/do)
for meals and four dives/day . . . Rental equipment and instruction
are available at either location, with tech courses at PG. Nitrox
is $132 unlimited . . . Biggest bargain: one-hour massages at $12
. . . Inoculations for hepatitis A, typhoid, polio and tetanus
are recommended. There were few insects . . . The closest hyperbaric
chambers are in Batangas (19 miles from PG) and Cebu City (68
miles from Dumaguete). . . Each resort has Internet. PG has multimedia computers
for manipulating digital images. . . Power is 220V, with 110V transformers available
. . . The Cebu Air excess baggage charge is 50¢/kg over 60 lbs . . . The
best diving is at the outer islands. Atlantis offers liveaboard trips between its
two resorts (www.atlantishotel.com). The Oceanic Explorer is a popular liveaboard
with a different itinerary (www.amrnour.com/philippines.htm). There are also modest
dive resorts on Verde Island you can find at www.travelsmart.net and on Apo Island
(www.apoisland.com) . . . Visit Undercurrent for full reviews of other
Philippine resorts.