Our readers and research have uncovered new information
about a variety of dive venues that we want to pass
on so that you may plan for better dive trips. Perhaps
most troubling is a development in Belize.
Last year, we reported how three divers on a day trip
with Advanced Divers in southern Belize were abandoned
at sea; one died and two survived after drifting two nights.
Vance Cabral, the owner of Advanced Divers in Placencia,
had previous safety problems, which Undercurrent had
reported on. After this tragic incident the government
yanked his license as a tour operator. However, we’ve
been told recently by two concerned Placencia hotel owners
that the Belize government may allow him to resume
business. Divers beware. But there is better news.
Papua New Guinea: We reported on Tawali as it was
being opened (February 2005). While our anonymous
reviewer sang its praises, we issued a cautionary note to
wait to see how it panned out.
According to many longtime readers, it’s an exceptional
destination. Jeremy Cohen (State College, PA), who
has logged more than 1000 dives, spent last Christmas
there with local villagers who sang carols in the indigenous
language. “We dove with co-owners Ronda and
Bob; marveled at Capt. Chris’s pirate stories; ate family
style with guests and crew; appreciated the respect for
the environment and for guests; enjoyed international
make-up of the visitors; found the forest, waterfall, fishing
village, and skull cave hikes to be a photographer’s
joy; had no problem with bugs; found staff and dive crew the nicest in 40 years of diving — dive crew accommodating
so our daughter could snorkel while we dove
— night sky overwhelming; the songs from local villagers
paddling dugout canoes across the lagoon at dawn
inspiring. Rooms are huge and comfy and allow privacy.
Views — oh, my.” He loved the diving, and so did Don
Lipmanson (Ukiah, CA) who was there in April. “A pod
of dolphins frolicked in the inlet below our deck several
mornings. All diving is from boats, except the house reef
that appears decimated by coral bleaching, yet harbors
mandarinfish and leaf scorpionfish. Many dive sites within
minutes by fast small boats offered countless varieties of
fish, healthy reefs and pygmy seahorses, commensual and
palimonid shrimp, nudibranchs and flatworms. The muck
diving at Dinah’s Beach, especially at twilight, is a must:
five species of lionfish and three species of anemonefish,
several cockatoo waspfish, Pegasus sea moths, an octopus.
We made some trips past the eastern tip of the island to
outer reefs, where the walls and bommies were stunning.
Humpback parrotfish reached 4 ft., large angelfish were
abundant, a 2 ft. map pufferfish allowed a close approach,
two species of pygmy seahorses were at 75’ and trevally
stalked schools of fusiliers.” According to our readers,
only two problems emerged. Says Lipmanson: “the one
thing conspicuously lacking was a blender for making
tropical cocktails -- even paradise has its drawbacks.” And
Ray Haberman, (Naperville, IL.), adds that while the big
boat Prowler had plenty of room, “the small dive boats,
with four divers and a 3-man crew, are crowded. Setup was
cramped.”(www.tawali.com)
Curacao: Why does the management of Habitat
Curacao, year after year, continue with a surly service staff
that seems not to care about service? We have had critical
reports from the day it opened — “took a half hour
before they took my dinner order and another half hour
to start the service” — and the latest comes from Kevin
Elman, who says that the “hotel and restaurant staff almost
went out of their way to ignore you. To check in I had to
wait for five minutes until the two desk people could finish
their chat and then I had to interrupt.” Elman says the
“dive shop was a smokehouse and it wasn’t the guests (my
lungs actually hurt). They have a dive orientation at 9:00
but the first morning boat goes out at 8:30, thus losing a
morning of diving. When I asked for an earlier briefing, I
was snubbed.”
To get service with a smile consider the well-reviewed
Ocean Encounters, which now operates out of the new
Lodge Kura Hulanda, a member of the highly regarded
group Leading Hotels of the World. Dave Padowitz
(Mountain View, CA) says the
Lodge is at the less developed
west end, a casual sister to the
outstanding Kura Hulanda hotel
in Willemstad, but near the best
diving on the island. “The resort
had recently opened and a few
details needed to be smoothed
out, but it’s a beautiful place.
Ocean Encounters West is run
by the friendly and professional
Jim and Lisa. The house reef at
Playa Kalki is easily accessible
from the beach or the dock. The
reef begins a few dozen yards
offshore at 25 ft with a moderate
slope and good diving from
35 ft down. While there were
plenty of fish in shallow water,
the reef edge was a little too
deep for easy snorkeling. The
Mushroom Forest is 40 minutes
away, but it was overshadowed
by the spectacular Watamula, a
pristine site just a few minutes
from the resort. Watamula had
mild current and gradual slope
with lush soft corals transitioning
to dense and varied hard
coral both at a comfortable
35-45 ft depth.” Undercurrent hasn’t got enough information
to give this our full blessing;
however Ocean Encounters and
a Leading Hotel of the World
is an encouraging marriage.
(www.kurahulanda.com)
Sandals, Beaches, et. Al. While these resorts offer
plenty to sunseekers, those expecting decent scuba diving
are nearly always disappointed, if not downright angry.
Thumbing through the last few Chapbooks offers ample
reports from unhappy divers. Steve Giles (Camarillo, CA)
writes that he and four others (all well-experienced divers)
“were steered to the Grande St. Lucian in May by a travel
agent (Classic Custom Vacations) who touted the island
as an ‘up-and-coming dive destination’ — wrong! We
contacted the dive operation by phone, and were told that
we would not be required to dive with beginners. Upon
checking in at the dive operation at 8:00 a.m., filling out
forms and having our C-cards scrutinized, they told us we
must pass an in-water proficiency test at 11:30 a.m. All
four passed with flying colors (a couple of us have nearly
3000 dives and the other two have over 1000 dives), but
we lost one day of diving. To placate us, they put us on an
afternoon boat with two dozen snorklers and allowed us to make a 20-foot dive. The following days we made a ‘deep
dive’(70 fsw max. for 30-35 minutes) and a shallow dive
(20-40 fsw for 40 minutes). Coral growth on the deeper
reefs is healthy and beautiful, not so on the shallow reefs.
The largest reef fish were 8-12 inches and were few. Fish
traps are everywhere. We were encouraged to pay an
additional $100 each for a side dive trip to Martinique
for a ‘45-minute boat trip, 200-foot visibility, and an 80%
chance of seeing whales and dolphins on the dive.’ The
boat trip took 1.5 hours with a 2-hour return trip, visibility
50 feet, and not only were there no whales or dolphins,
but the largest critter was a spotted drum. A freshwater
bucket is on the boat for cameras; however they allowed
people to rinse masks in this bucket (mask de-fog is not
necessarily recommended for use on cameras) and they
allowed people to rinse wet suits in this bucket --- we all
know what people do in wetsuits.”
Nekton Rorqual on Grand Cayman: One of our long
time readers, Terry Schmer(Ocala, Fl), had a generally
grand time aboard the Nekton Rorqual in the Cayman
Islands in May, but raises important points that perhaps
by our publishing them here, we may influence Nekton to
mend its ways. If not, fellow divers, you are forewarned. . .
The Nekton made transfer arrangements with the
Sunset House, where we were able to get a morning
shore dive. Once on board, the Rorqual’s homely appearance
fades quickly. The cabins are actually big enough to
move around in. The first day’s diving was spent at Grand
Cayman, with an afternoon dive at Stingray City in snowwhite
sand in 15 feet of water; about 20 large Southern
Stingrays are hand-fed squid. On Grand Cayman dives
there were many fish and a turtle sighting on almost every
dive. There was an opportunity for five dives a day and
six on days that offered an early dawn dive. . . .The 60
mile crossing to Little Cayman takes all night due to the
Rorqual’s sluggish eight-knot speed. Seas were not rough,
but there was considerable rocking, mostly forward and
aft instead of side to side. The next two days were spent
diving Bloody Bay Wall. Wherever we moored, the site was
absolutely spectacular. Each dive held its own surprises,
from huge green morays free swimming to spectacular
soft coral forests to eagle rays and sharks cruising the
wall’s depths. There were many lobster sightings both
days. The night dives were excellent, with multiple octopus
sightings, squid, as well as nurse sharks. The fourth
day we made the six-mile crossing to Cayman Brac and
spent the morning diving the Russian destroyer Captain
Tibbets.
Unfortunately, the rest of the day was spent refueling.
Passengers were not allowed to remain on board, so we
were forced to spend the afternoon on shore, though
we had paid for a full week of diving, meals, and accommodations
on board. We ended up having to pay for our
lunch and a rental car. . . .We returned to Little Cayman
for another terrific day of diving, then steamed overnight
for a day at Grand Cayman. The next morning they
dropped us off at the Sunset House. Overall, good diving,
good food prepared by a professional chef, a big roomy
vessel, efficient dive deck area, and most important -- a
really good crew. . . . .$250 for Nitrox is high and Nekton’s response is that they must comply with U.S. Coast Guard
standards. O.K., but $250 is still too high! For the week,
the Nitrox equipment was broken down most of the time
anyway. Nekton does not provide anything to drink other
than Crystal Light, tea, coffee, or water. Passengers must
provide their own sodas or alcoholic beverages. We’re
already carrying a huge load of luggage and dive gear,
we’ve just arrived in a foreign country, and now we have to try to find a store in an unfamiliar city and stock beverages
for an entire week ourselves? Nekton’s answer to this
is that they will drive you to the store.
Nekton needs to make some policy adjustments and
their boat will be one of the best liveaboards in the
Caribbean. As she stands now, Rorqual is not reaching her
potential.
Cayman Aggressor IV: Readers report that while
there’s still a lot of good Caribbean diving in the Islands,
the Cayman Aggressor IV falls short as a liveaboard . . .
For example, Wayne LeCompte (Cape Canaveral, FL.),
who’s made better than 1000 dives, says . . .the Aggressor
IV appears to be a well maintained and operated vessel,
but we had a few marine heads that clogged or overflowed.
The generator was off-line for a short period, and
the crew was unable to bring the standby generator into
service. . .The captain warned us that if we did not conserve
water, he was going to eliminate some water usages.
Even before the warnings, the captain recommended
that we hang our wetsuits without a fresh water rinse; the
only exception was if you urinated in your suit, then he
provided a barrel partially filled with freshwater, without
disinfectant. There was no way to rinse any tank-mounted
scuba equipment (regulators, BCDs, etc.). However, he
did give the sundeck a freshwater wash-down every morning,
and windows and the dive deck also received a freshwater
wash down several times . . . there did not seem to
be a proper balance between the boat and the guests. .
. . He insisted that you had to change into dry clothes
before you could enter the salon or return to your room
from the dive deck. It did not matter how dry we toweled
ourselves. When we asked where we were to change,
he offered the deck head (small and a very messy floor,
as it overflowed several times on the trip), the laundry
closet (only a contortionist could pull that off), and the
cramped camera darkroom” . . . In May, the diving was
“by and large better than average,” says LeCompte, who
saw many turtles, a few sharks, plenty of morays, groupers,
southern stingrays, a couple of spotted eagle rays, scorpion
fish, and plenty of small critters: “ The first time we have seen the male yellowheaded jawfish with eggs in its
mouth. Wonderful swim-throughs on most reefs, and the
walls are steep, deep and spectacular. . . .Unfortunately,
there were not many offers by the crew to provide guided
tours, but their attitudes and performance were above
and beyond.. . .Overall, it was an enjoyable trip but below
service level that we are accustomed to on other liveaboards.”
Gilda and Warren Sprung (Houston) wrote: “our 9th
liveaboard; the first on an Aggressor, and the only unsatisfactory
liveaboard. The staff members were wonderful --
Tom, Boris, Yanis (the wonderful cook), and Kat – but the
synergy between the crew was lacking, which added up to
not being in tune with the divers. The accommodations
were lacking in that my husband and I had to crawl over
each other to get out of bed. Captain Sam’s dive briefings
always had the same theme: how lucky we are to be at
this world-class dive site that only he understood. When
Captain Sam informed us to only use the wetsuit rinse
barrel if we peed in them, I asked if the barrel would have
‘Sink-the-Stink.’ He replied, ‘No, it was too expensive!’
The camera rinse station, to my knowledge, never got
changed the entire week. The only way we could enter
any carpeted area of the boat after a dive was to first
change into dry clothes. The only places to change into
dry clothes were the dive deck restroom (very dirty and
nasty as the marine head constantly overflowed) or the
very cramped camera darkroom on the dive deck. Have
I mentioned the reaction of the guests when we were
informed into the week that there was no more red wine?
The $10 per person shore tour on Little Cayman was
more of a promotional thing for the dive operations; why
would I want to go see a research station that is under
construction and their proudest moment was explaining
how their composting toilets would work! This was truly
a class ‘D’ operation as run by Captain Sam. Fortunately
the wonderful efforts by Tom, Kat, Boris, & Yanis raised it
to a ‘C’.”
Oleanda, Rongelap, Marshall Islands: Undercurrent reader Daniel Hartman (Houston, TX) booked this 120
liveaboard through World of Diving (El Segundo, CA)
for May 2006. A month before his departure, Hartman
e-mailed Rongelap Expeditions, operator of the Oleanda,
to ask about cabin assignments. He got a response saying
that “we have put the ship on dry dock to do necessary
maintenance. I offer to send you a refund on your
deposit.” Stuck with nonrefundable airfare, he contacted
World of Diving proprietor Will McFarland, who booked
him a hotel on Majuro and diving through Bako Divers.
Hartman left for the Marshalls with his deposit still unrefunded
and asked if Undercurrent might help. We called
McFarland, who had yet to contact Rongelap Expeditions
but told us he had fronted Hartman’s expenses for
Majuro, would reimburse Hartman’s credit card for
the remainder, and then wait himself to collect from
Rongelap Expeditions. PS: Exercise caution if you book
the Oleanda. Jenny Collister, owner of Reef & Rainforest
Travel (Sausalito, CA), says she stopped recommending
the boat years ago due to communications problems.
There are new owners now, but it will still pay to be
careful. After all, if Hartman hadn’t contaced the folks
at Oleanda, would he have learned of their cancellation
before he arrived?