By now, the USPS willing, you
have received the 2006 Chapbook, and
I trust you find it helpful. Diving destinations
are not static, so from time
to time we provide important updates
so you won’t have to wait for the next
Chapbook. Here are several reports
I hope you’ll find useful for planning
your next dive trip.
Holbox: In October 2004, we were
the first publication to tell divers
about the scores of whale sharks present
every summer near the island of
Holbox, north of Mexico’s Yucatan
peninsula, a three-hour drive from
Cancun. Our reviewer returned last August to report: “Have Holbox
sharks grown so accustomed to seeing
snorkelers that some of them no longer
veer away? Entering the water in
front of the shark, I was staring into
the mouth of a 40-something footer.
If I didn’t disobey the ‘no-touch’ policy,
there was going to be a head-on
collision. So I gently pushed myself
away from the krill-sieving mouth and
avoided the sweeping tail.
“The opportunity to snorkel
with whale sharks in 35 feet of water
has put the small fishing village on
the map. After our article, Onny
Alemanni, owner of Hotel Mawimbi, received scores of inquiries.
However, many of our readers chose
to stay elsewhere, preferring air-conditioning
to her thatch-roof waterfront
charm. In 2004, it was possible
to get alongside whale sharks without
being surrounded by other lanchas.
This year, I counted 26 boats in the
area, and an additional 15 boats from
Isla Mujeres. Some carried as many
as a dozen passengers, the adventurous
jumping in the water. They have
put additional rules in effect, but the
increased number of snorkelers and
boats hampered encounters. Yet in
2005, Holbox was better than ever. “This year, giant mantas swam
with the whale sharks, performing
incredible aquabatics. Like seeing
each remora and scar on a shark,
the mantas were so close I could see
sea lice on their backs. Other rays
included the giant, golden, cownosed
and eagle rays, plus unsighted
white or guano rays. Beyond the 50-
feet depth where the whale sharks
scoop pea soup plankton, there are seven species of shark. Along flamingo-
inhabited beaches, three species
of turtles hatch during the summer
months. Onny offers scuba diving,
but she will not take advance reservations.
Diving is determined by weather
and visibility, and sites are an hour
or more distant, 25-50 miles from
Holbox. There are mantas, cobia,
bull and white tip sharks, sunken
fishing boats, and walking bat fish. Groups up to six can charter awningcovered
pangas for whale shark snorkeling
or scuba trips. Individuals can
reserve whale watching with Onny
for $120/day or join one of the many
trips leaving daily from Holbox. It’s
no longer a private adventure, but
it’s still as good as it gets.”
For the full report, see
Undercurrent, October 2004. Contact Onny at Posada Mawimbi; 911-52-
984-8752003 or www.mawimbi.net . . .
visit www.holboxisland.com for more
information. . . . Hotel Villas Delfines
($70 to $150 double, depending
upon the season) is a good upscale
selection.
San Andres and Providencia,
Columbia, Revisited: In 2002, our
reviewer reported on these two
islands, about 90 miles off the
Caribbean coast of Nicaragua. Having
dived nearly every Caribbean venue,
he was enthusiastic about the fish life
and rated it highly compared with
other Caribbean destinations.
This trip, the number of fish had
dropped remarkably and it was no better
than other Caribbean destinations. |
But, many readers followed his
lead, and some said they didn’t find
the quality and quantity of marine
life he reported. So our reviewer
returned last May. Our readers were
right, diving didn’t match up to his
previous visit, only three years before.
“Because these islands belong to
Colombia, few Americans go there,
leaving them to the Canadians,
Mexicans, and Europeans. The
flight from San Jose, Costa Rica, to
San Andres takes 65 minutes, and a
round trip ticket costs around $250,
making it a reasonable side trip for
anyone visiting Costa Rica.
“Like Los Roques in Venezuela,
San Andres’ reefs are loaded with
gorgonians. Many easy dives are
along the west side, where walls start
at 10 meters or more. Here they lack
variety and have far fewer large fish.
In 2002, the fish life around San
Andres was a little better than most
parts of the fished-out Caribbean.
This trip, the number of fish had
dropped remarkably, and it was no
better than Grenada, Honduras, and
most other Caribbean destinations.
“Sharky’s Dive Shop is in the
Sunset Hotel, about 50 meters to the south of the Nirvana, where I
stayed. Often, I was the only diver in
the boat with my dive guide, Rafael.
While Sharky runs a safe operation,
I had to push hard to get them to
take me to the best dive sites on the
windward side, far from most resorts.
The problem is a combination of
extra fuel, long boat rides, and often
rougher conditions.
“San Andres’ best wreck, the
Diamond Wreck, was flattened by a
storm and is no longer worth diving.
Tres Piedras, allegedly the most
advanced dive site at San Andres, is
a tight cluster of three pinnacles that
top off at 20 meters with no perceptible
bottom. It is
distant from the
island and similar
to eastern Pacific
sites. The visibility
was good. Morgan’s
Fingers was one of
the better dives, with flying gurnards
in the sand. Blue Wall, the current
favorite dive site for most visitors,
starts at 20 feet and drops vertically,
with nice swim-throughs. The surge
was so strong that during my safety
stop on top of the wall, I shared my
breakfast with the fish.
“The aging hotel Nirvana is south
of the main city, close to most of the
island’s dive sites. An unusually heavy
thunderstorm hit the area, and I got
up in the middle of the night to find
two inches of water surrounding my
bed in my second-story room. They
moved me to a drier room the next
day.
“After a week, I flew north 60
miles to Providencia, a mountainous
island, heavily covered in jungle,
relatively undeveloped, with 5,000
residents who spoke English, Spanish
and Creole. My hotel, the Posada del
Mar was almost empty. I had lunches
and dinners at the Donde Martin restaurant,
a delightful place.
“Felipe Cabeza and his dive guide
Paul added a lot to the quality of
the diving. I had no problem getting
Felipe to visit the best dive sites, spectacular deep walls, and shallower
fishy shoals usually a short distance
away. Still, the fish life appeared to be
half of what I viewed in 2002, but still
double what I have seen throughout
the rest of the Caribbean. I saw big
black groupers on most dives, and
many large Nassau groupers, but
tiger groupers were fewer and smaller.
In 2002, schools of Bermuda chub
were so huge they often filled the
water above us. This time, the schools
were less than half their former size.
There were small schools of Atlantic
spadefish, not as large as before, and
midnight and rainbow parrotfish
even seemed smaller.
“At Manta City I saw several stingrays
and an Atlantic torpedo. TeTe’s
Place, the fishiest dive spot around
Providencia, with half as many fish as
three years ago, still had more than
most anywhere I have been in the
Caribbean. French grunts, lane snappers,
white grunts, yellow and spotted
goatfish, squirrelfish, and trumpetfish
were in the gorgonians. Lots of barracuda
hung in their barred pattern
to signal that they wanted to be
cleaned by the juvenile Spanish hogfish.
During the week I saw a number
of big hogfish that one rarely sees in
most parts of the Caribbean.We paid
Felipe a fuel surcharge to go north to
El Faro, but one reef was too deep,
and the other was spent in a maze of
twisty caves that offered only schools
of sweepers.
“Diving at Providencia is like
turning the clock back 20 years. No
oxygen, no first aid. One of Felipe’s
dive guides was diving without a
computer and during the briefing
told the other divers to stay shallower
than I to avoid getting bent since I
was the only one with a dive computer
(I carry two). Though the briefings
recommend a maximum depth of 40
meters, there was never a problem
going deeper on the walls.”
For a complete report of San
Andres see Undercurrent, August 2002,
and for Providencia, see August
2003, available to Web subscribers.
Also, refer to readers’ comments in subsequent chapbooks. If you care to go,
you’re best off using a travel agent, and I’d
recommend Reef and Rainforest for this destination.
800-794-9768 or www.reefrainforest.com.
Bonaire’s Bas: In the 2006 Chapbook, a
subscriber provided a brief report on Bas, a
private guide in Bonaire. Now, after gathering
more information, let us share a report
from Undercurrent reader Wally Szaniawski
from Greenwich, CT, “I have made several
hundred shore dives on Bonaire’s leeward
side. The windward side is difficult because
of rough seas and tricky access, but a Dutch
diver, Bas Tol, has clocked thousands of dives
and has over 20 established shore sites here.
On a given day, few may be accessible. But,
as a resort divemaster told me with envy,
“Bas always goes.” He takes one or two divers,
maybe more if they match skills and air
consumption. We did three dives, the first to
check my skills at Lac Cai. After a school of
huge snappers, big midnight parrot fish and
a thicket of tarpons in shallow murky water,
we reached a drop-off with 100 ft. + visibility,
and had four encounters with eagle rays, large
numbers of huge snappers, groupers, schools
of Bermuda chubs, green morays, and turtles.
In shallow water, dozens of baby lobsters and
ninety-one minutes of bottom time.
“The following morning big waves
pounded the shore. No problem for Bas. We
arrived at an acceptable site (Bas has them
ingeniously marked to take safe bearings.) We
entered near the lighthouse, swam past 10-
foot elkhorn coral, and drifted over the stunningly
beautiful slope, with healthy soft and
hard corals and six-foot sea fans gently moving
with the surge. In the blue at 100 feet there
was a circling school of huge snappers, including
cubera snappers, joined by jacks. Visibility
was 120 + feet. Then, more than 50 large tarpons
approached closely. Drifting south, we
met large groupers, snappers, turtles, jacks,
and a crevalle so huge I mistook it for a yellowfin
tuna. We exited with no drama at Red
Slave, after 71 minutes, max 100-foot depth,
still with almost 500 psi. Luckily, we caught a
friendly pickup truck for a mile ride back to
Bas’s Toyota and went to Lac Cai for a second
superb dive. Bas’s skills and knowledge of
sea life are amazing. Contact Bas Tol at Kaya
Rotterdam 13, Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles,
tel: 599-717-8830, cell: 599-786-4917, e-mail:
loonybin@bonairelive.com.”
Kiribati: In the 2006 Chapbook,
you’ll find a report about coral
bleaching in Kiribati. However,
Kiribati is a big place and Scott
Johnson (Palm Springs, CA) reports
great dives there, similar to reports
from many readers in the past. Air
Pacific makes the three-hour flight
weekly from Hawaii, so it’s one of
those rare places that divers, at least
from the West Coast, can reach easier
than, say, Palau.
“Kim Anderson, the owner of Dive
Kiribati (on Christmas Island), and
his staff were great! In October I was the only diver there! How Kim can
remember all those great dive sites is
beyond me as there are no moorings.
The diving at Kiribati (Kitty-buss) was
very good, and I compare everything
with Palau. On many reefs I saw two
to three times the number of tropical
fish than I have seen in Palau.
Surgeonfish, peacock flounders,
nudibranchs, giant barracudas, spotted
eagle rays, snappers, Moorish
idols, trevallys, mantas, octopus, dolphins,
occasional sharks and I did
not even get to see all the big stuff
in the Poland area or Bay of Wrecks. We had a few windy days and got to
the sites twice, but each time I got
sea-sick and we turned arond.
“Unfortunately the pelagic population
has been decimated by legal
spear fishing and shark finning.
The government should stop this by
imposing stiff fines and jail time. At
Captain Cook’s Hotel the food was
great but the rooms leave a little bit
to be desired. Make sure your travel
insurance Medvac includes the Coast
Guard, because they are the only
ones who will respond within a few
hours.”