Dear Reader:
Drifting with the surge through coral-covered canyons,
I passed nurse sharks snuggled into overhangs, seeking
refuge from the current. Two squid pulsated frantically
to get away. I glided over magnificent barrel, strawberry
vase and tube sponges. Dozens of feeding tarpon circled a
bait ball just below the surface of pounding waves. This
was the “Alps,” indeed an exotic Tobago destination.
Diving didn’t begin on a good note. Our first site
was a disappointing basic checkout at 20 ft. in low visibility
over a sandy bottom, so several novices could check
their buoyancy. I entertained myself practicing deploying
a mandatory Hughes-supplied reel tied to a safety sausage.
However, the next swim was at the seldom-visited Diver’s
Reef. Exposed to the tumultuous Atlantic, it was calm
enough for us to take a two-knot current ride across a
plateau at 70 feet. Several black tip sharks stayed their
distance, but a hawksbill turtle hung with me briefly. A
school of spadefish followed two king mackerels. Uniquely
shaped sponges hid an oversized lobster. I considered
it an advanced dive, a very good dive, and already the
novices were loving the drift. The 81-degree water seemed
warmer than the January air.
The Wind Dancer |
When I planned my trip, Hughes staffer Jeff recommended
that I
(and another
couple) arrive
in Trinidad a
day early to
avoid catching
the last
connecting
flight to
Tobago and
risk missing
the Wind Dancer’s departure. Made sense, especially
because late-arriving live-aboard guests
often cause those onboard to miss dives. I
overnighted at the basic Pax Guest House,
with a great view of the mountains. The
next morning, I arrived in Tobago with four
hours to kill. My expected Hughes greeter
wasn’t there, so I lugged my baggage to the
tourist office and called him. According to
reports in the Chapbook, most Dancer clients
hang out at the Hilton before departure.
My reluctant driver wanted $10 to
take me there -– he didn’t work for Hughes
and was paid only to get me to the boat
from the airport, so I ended up poolside at
the airport Crown Point hotel.
Onboard the Wind Dancer, Captain Mike
Kozlow told us that the weather forecast was for sun and calm seas. We’d head
northeast toward Speyside for the good diving. On board since September, he’s
a former eel fisherman and urchin diver who has worked on a Nekton. Like the
Energizer Bunny, he continually puttered around the boat, helping divers. A fun,
hospitable man. Guest services manager Lynne Marshall-Dunn, who had been a dive
instructor in the Red Sea, Palau, and the Philippines, explained the Dancer’s
safety features. Then, plans changed. Three Canadians and two Texans had been
scheduled on the last flight to Tobago and, sure enough, they missed it, as did
two suitcases and a dive bag (which didn’t show up for three days). So, we headed
to Store Bay, near the airport, to wait for the morning and the tardy passengers.
We couldn’t get into the water until they signed the obligatory liability forms,
so we missed at least one dive before we rounded Pigeon Point and headed northeast
into the Caribbean.
Diving was from two custom-built 25-foot fiberglass Bimini-top tenders –-
Trini and Bago –- with center console tank holders where our gear remained all
week. They filled the 3000-psi tanks (usually to 2800 psi) with hoses stretched
from the Dancer. I’d gear up on the 10-20 minute ride to dive sites. The
strictly enforced 45-minute dive (plus safety stop) began with a back roll off the
tender, then straight down, with no dawdling, which often meant I’d wait on the
bottom for novice ear-clearing, eating up precious dive minutes. While the tenders
allegedly rotate sites, I soon realized that the other boat headed to more
advanced sites. When I asked to be moved to the other boat, Lynne “honeyed” me,
saying, “you know, we try to keep friends together.” (Not such a good idea with
some divers clearly advanced and some divers clearly novice.) The second day they
moved me to the other boat, where I was happier just thinking I was visiting the
more advanced sites, though the experience mix on both boats appeared equivalent.
Northeast to Mt. Irvine Bay for critter diving. A shortnose batfish ate
bristle worms in the sand. A colorful juvenile queen angel and juvenile spotted
drums were skittish. Channel crabs and spiny lobster peered from crevices, while
urchins and hermit crabs clung to the rocks. A sand tilefish darted into his hole.
Afterwards, guides Roland “CNN” Williams, Leslie “Motley” James, and Tyson Kent,
all locals, checked us in as we boarded on the lower dive deck, then handed us
warm towels after a warm water rinse or a trip to the dive deck head. The three
guys were excellent, skillful divemasters, and fun loving.
After two days of great weather, rain came, dropping the visibility. To
reach Sisters, a cluster of five rock pinnacles, it was a rough ride in choppy
seas, well worth it for the divers on Trini –- not me –- who saw a dozen l0-foot
hammerheads. A squall dumped buckets and the chop became three-foot swells. The
weather didn’t discourage two mating green turtles, however, which only disengaged when the tender approached.
Tyson then led us in the lee of Sisters number 2, where I saw several cherubfish
before the current changed directions. And so did we. A downward surge took
me on an exhilarating roller coaster ride. When I surfaced with the group, the
water was thick with dome jellies. Boarding the tender was never easy in rough
water. Most divers climbed aboard a sturdy ladder after removing their fins; a
firm handhold timed with the rise and swinging of the tender is essential. One
could doff gear in the water with one hand, holding onto the rope draped over the
bow with the other, to avoid drifting away. It was impossible to swim against
the surface current to reach the boat.
Trinidad and its smaller sister Tobago are located at the turbulent convergence
of the Atlantic and Caribbean, northeast of Venezuela. Strong and unpredictable
currents, surge, and volatile ocean conditions make dive planning difficult,
yet the briefings were usually on the mark, with the caveat about changing
currents. While I don’t like being timed or herded, it’s the drill here
and I appreciated guides who could read the currents and keep us out of washing machines. Visibility is unpredictable –- in January it ranged from 50-100 ft. It
can change during a dive (in April and May, and to a lesser extent during the summer,
it drops considerably). We had to stay close to see one another and surface
together. The guide would either tether a float from a reel or inflate his safety
sausage during our ascent to keep the driver informed.
The Wind Dancer is one of the fleet’s older craft, having previously sailed
the waters of Turks and Caicos Islands. Eight spacious lower deck cabins each have
a queen bed with an upper bunk, side-by-side closets over drawers, a sink with
vanity, and a bath and shower. The main deck master suite has a queen bed, larger
bath, DVD player, and real windows. And then there is morning room service coffee
or chocolate, thick terry robes, daily housekeeping and nightly turn down service
with a chocolate on the pillow.
The spacious salon has four tables with a full-size bar, an entertainment center,
and a well-stocked library. The back corner has two pillowed leather couches
across from the fully inventoried “boatique”. The sun deck is expansive with
lounge chairs, a bar, and a barbecue that was fired up Thursday night.
Cook Anton Gray boasted that we would have the best live-aboard food ever.
Unfortunately, he hasn’t been on many other boats. The fare was good and plentiful,
but, other than local specialties like the spinach-like calaloo, breadfruit
in coconut milk, and fiery hot sauce, his meals were unexceptional. “The first
drink is your last dive,” but there was seldom time to drink the complimentary
hard liquor, Chilean wine and Carib beer until divers decided to skip night diving.
And many did later in the week. Though night dives started an hour after
dinner, around 8 p.m., one night the dive didn’t finish until 11:30 p.m., due to a
broken running light on the tender. Full breakfasts were offered and lunch was an
almost dinner-sized buffet featuring tacos, salads, vegetables, and homemade soup.
A sweet roll, coffee cake or brownie was served late morning, afternoon snacks
were such fare as fried calamari or stuffed jalapenos, heavy enough to spoil one’s
appetite for dinner.
Stewardess Anne Trinidad shared two years of boat seniority with CNN. She
delivered room service, served dinner, and changed linens and towels on Tuesday.
The lady can also “wine” or gyrate her hips while dancing to Calypso, which she
did after much coaxing from the crew at our final party, a surf and turf dinner.
The Wind Dancer typically circles Tobago, anchoring each day in sight of
rolling hills, palm-lined beaches, and lush tropical rain forests. On the northern
part of the island, Cliff Hanger was a drift over a plateau covered with oddshaped
sponges. A 10-foot nurse shark was tucked
under a ridge, but I couldn’t stop for a better
look. A handheld GPS from the boat registered a
mere 1.3 knot current. And rain continued and the
boat rocked. Our plan to dive the Caribbean-side
St. Giles islands, allegedly the premier site of
the underwater London Bridge arch, were dropped.
Instead we motored through the turbulent Atlantic/
Caribbean convergence (about a half-hour ride) to
the calmer waters of Speyside harbor.
Here are multiple dive sites –- some brain and
plate corals were bleached –- and several landbased
operators. Colorful houses perch on the
verdant hillside. Cactus drapes over rocks below
the lush rainforest. Long-tail white tropic birds
flew high above. Local fishermen plied the water
in blue-colored pirogues with bamboo outriggers,
catching kingfish and lobster to sell to the Wind
Dancer.
Black Hole Jack was an underwater
coral hillside of gorgonians, corky sea
fingers, sea rods, swollen-knob candelabrum,
and white eye sea spray. There
were fields of magnificent yellow pencil
coral, humongous brain coral, and sheet
and scroll coral. Out of the blue, a
school of spadefish greeted us. A black
remora bugged the hell out of a queen
angelfish. Lobster and king crab peeked
out of holes, while a green turtle slept
under a rock. A red sea horse clung to
the base of a sea plume. Yes, another
excellent dive. And then there is Coral
Gardens, home of Tobago’s signature brain
coral. At a depth of 55 feet, the massive
specimen is 16 feet wide and 12
feet tall, and home to green, beige and
blue lettuce sea slugs.
At Bookends, named for twin pinnacles
with a vertical cut separating them,
a school of tarpon swam in surf crashing
against the rocks. On the third dive
that day I was enveloped by a school of
blue tangs, had a close encounter with
a nurse shark, and admired a large,
ancient,coral-encrusted anchor. Several
lined seahorses clung shyly to gorgonians.
After that, a two-hour steam to
Scarborough, the home port, an overnight,
and an 8 a.m. enforced departure from the
boat. Indeed, a good, fairly priced trip.
I’ve been most everywhere in the
Caribbean, and the Dancer took me to some
of the most advanced and most interesting
dives I’ve had. It’s off the beaten
path and the two days of travel reduce
the crowds. Those who come should be
physically fit to handle the strong currents
and surge. Safe, calm anchorages are few and far between. For those who
don’t have a couple dozen dives under their belts and aren’t up to par for these
waters, Belize would be a more suitable live-aboard destination.
–G.S.
Divers Compass: American Airlines flies to Trinidad from Miami,
Continental from Houston and Newark . . . Tobago Express
(868.627.5160 or callcenter@tobagoexpress.com) flies hourly between
Trinidad and Tobago. Tickets are not issued in advance; get an email
confirmation that you will pick up and pay for ticket at counter
. . . Pax Guest House (868.662.4084 or www.paxguesthouse.com)
is $55 with breakfast. Request a/c room with private bath. Book
the Wind Dancer at 800.932.6237 or www.peterhughes.com. Nitrox is
$150; fills were 29–31.5% O2 . . . Seven-night trip is $1,595 . . .
What started in Belize with Hugh Parkey on Turneffe Island two decades ago has
come to the Dancer; they set clocks back an hour to get more daylight for dives .
. . Various certifications are offered and equipment can be rented; reserve ahead
. . . Tobago has a recompression chamber, but the doctor lives in Trinidad . . .