I waded in from the beach slowly, although there were no breakers in
Curacao’s Blue Bay. I dropped slowly to 15 feet, waving encouragement to my wideeyed
buddy, who was making his first open water dive. I pointed out sergeant
majors and juvenile wrasse flitting about the rocks, and elicited a smile by waving
at a tube worm, causing it to retreat into its armor. It was a short, shallow
dive, but my buddy got scared when he couldn’t clear his ears, aborting the
proceedings. Yet it was the most memorable dive I’ve ever made, because that buddy
was my 8-year-old son. Just seeing him suited up in scuba gear made this fanatic
diver of a parent grin ear to ear.
The open water dive is the culmination of a week at Kids Sea Camp, a family
program offered at multiple dive destinations, mostly in the summer (see the sidebar
for details). Founder Margo Peyton, another self-proclaimed “Scuba Mom,” hosts
two months worth of Kids Sea Camps with her own children, 12-year-old Robbie and
10-year-old Jennifer. As a travel agent and owner of World Dive Adventures, Peyton
saw a lack of dive programs that let kids and their parents spend time together
in the water and have quality time apart. In 2001, Peyton opened Kids Sea Camp
so kids could get a fun-filled, educating week, parents and grandparents could
have a guilt-free dive trip, and both groups could get together at day’s end. In
Curacao, the adults dive with Ocean Encounters while kids are at camp. Spots fill
up quickly through word of mouth and former campers returning for another round.
My boy, who has a poor track record with group activities, couldn’t get up early
enough every morning and has asked if he can go back next year.
The kids were occupied from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., leaving me time for a shower
and a post-dive beer before offspring retrieval time. A pizza-and-movie party
allowed parents one night dive, and the staff babysat in the evening for an extra
fee. During the week, my son participated in a treasure hunt on the beach and
created masterpieces with his found objects, kissed a sea lion at the aquarium
(yucky breath, he informed me) and learned about sea life. Months later, he popped
his head up while snorkeling to announce, “I saw a juvenile French angelfish,
mommy.” And he was right.
Sea Camp made use of local facilities, so the program is a little different
in each location. The Curacao camp used the Seaquarium, a facility designed for
children’s educational programs, with a theater for films and an airy classroom
full of games and supplies. The kids snorkeled and dived in an artificial cove
full of fish, while sharks swam on the other side of a Plexiglas wall.
Sea Camp’s centerpiece is diving lessons, something young children ordinarily
cannot get. Kids older than 10 could earn their junior open water certification.
(A new program debuts this year for older kids up to age 15 who are already certified.)
The youngest kids (age 4 to 8) snorkeled on the surface using a regulator
attached to a stationary air supply. The “Seal Team” learned to use scuba gear in the pool, made a dive in the Seaquarium
lagoon, and then dived with their parents. The adult-to-child ratio was very
high, and I never felt uneasy about the
children’s safety. The staff was uniformly
superb and gave any child one-onone
attention when needed. My son can be
especially difficult, but they handled
him with exceptional understanding.
The adult diving was enjoyable
enough to hold my attention for a week. Ocean Encounters was thoroughly organized
without being impersonal. Owner
Nolo Ambrosi mingled with divers daily,
always asking if there were a way to
make our stay better. A few steps from
the dock are a fully stocked rental gear
counter and gear maintenance room. I had
a storage locker and was expected to
rinse and store my gear and set it up in
the morning.
Divers were assigned to one of two
boats at the start of the week. The
Curacao Princess was comfortable, with
a fresh water rinse, oxygen, and firstaid
kit aboard. Sometimes we had as many
as 15 divers but it didn’t feel crowded.
The divemasters, all locals, were personable,
professional, and good about
pointing out interesting critters. They
imposed no unreasonable restrictions,
allowing buddy teams to go on their own
with a 60-minute time limit. I got no
guff about my depth or being the last
one back on board. They either anchored
offshore for a surface interval or came
back to the dock between dives.
The dives were no more than 15 minutes
from the dock and similar in topography:
scattered coral heads in the
shallows, a sloping dropoff that begins at 25 feet, and no dramatic walls. You’ll
be repeating sites if you stay here more than five days. Visibility ranged from 50
to 90 feet with little current, the water temperature was a constant 81 degrees,
and the summer day temperature averages 89 degrees. Afternoon dives were sometimes
available for an extra fee. Gear and tanks were always available for shore diving,
which could be accomplished by swimming out of the cove between the resorts, or by
scaling a ladder attached to the rocks next to the Seaquarium.
The coral was healthy; I even saw small stands of nearly pristine elkhorn
coral at the sites around Jan Thiel. This surprised me because Curacao is a heavily
industrial island. A huge oil refinery in the island’s center lights up the
night surrealistically with flames rising from tall smokestacks. Nearly all dive
sites were littered with the debris of ships and other man-made objects, most of
it old enough to be covered with marine life. Depending on your point of view,
this either makes the sites more interesting or detracts from the natural beauty.
I saw the usual tropicals: swarms of brown chromis, French angelfish, damselfish,
fairy basslets, creole wrasse and parrotfish, including a couple of large midnights. I saw no pelagic fish, no rays and only two turtles. However, I saw a number
of eels, including purplemouth, chain, spotted and goldentail morays.
The standout dive on this end of the island was the Tugboat, named for a small
wreck in the shallows of Caracas Bay. A large school of grunts swarmed around a
coral head at 50 feet. An adult spotted drum cruised in its grotto. Cocoa and yellowtail
damselfish defended their territory. I pointed out banded and Pederson
shrimp and arrow crabs to my buddy. In
the tugboat wreck, in less than 15 feet
of water, I found an octopus wedged into
a crack between rocks. At least a dozen
small morays wriggled in crevices on the
wreck, which is also home to many blennies.
The standout dive on this end of the
island was the Tugboat |
Ocean Encounters’ satellite dive shop on Playa Kalki near the west end had a
boat to take divers (who arrive by bus) to the well-advertised Mushroom Forest.
Once we entered the “forest,” I saw the formations that give the site its name:
large heads of star coral eroded at the base that indeed look like mushrooms. They
cover a significant expanse of sea floor above the dropoff at a depth ranging from
30 to 55 feet. Some formations have caves in their centers; I saw a pufferfish the
size of a small Labrador retriever in one and a nurse shark in another.
Sea Camp accommodations were at Royal Resorts Seaquarium condominiums, next
to the aquarium and across a man-made inlet from Lions Dive Resort, where Ocean
Encounters is located and those who book late (like me) were housed. I found my
room adequate, with attractive wood furnishings and soft comforters. The patio
would have been nice if the door hadn’t been so difficult to open and close. The
current is European 220 volt and most of my stuff did not work even with standard
adapters. Maintenance brought a big bricklike power converter which helped a little,
but my laptop charger never worked at all.
The maintenance guys, who are locals, were great. But the largely Dutch staff
at the desk and restaurants was unresponsive at best. For starters, I was shown
to a room overlooking a dirt construction zone. The location and “view” were unacceptable,
and I had to stare down the desk clerk to get a different room. The food
was adequate, but the prices were high and the service painfully slow. I spent a
ludicrous sum on a rental car to escape them. While their service was also slow,
the restaurants with non-Dutch staff were much better. I recommend Rijstaffel
Restaurant Indonesia in the middle of town which serves Indonesian and Thai food;
La Pergola, where I had a first-class Italian meal at a very reasonable price;
and the Grill King, where the waiter threw scraps into the tidepools next to our
table, attracting a swarm of eels.
I think a serious diver not toting kids would be better off at Habitat Curacao
or Sunset Waters Resort (reviewed in the February 2005 issue), on the northwestern
end of Curacao, closer to the best diving. But for me, the week was worthwhile for
the smiles on my child’s face seen through a mask.
--A.W.
Diver’s Compass: Information and signup details are found at www.
kidsseacamp.com....The trip cost over $2600 for my son and me, including
room, meals, five days of boat dives, and camp activities ... Ocean
Encounters charges $5 per Nitrox tank. Connections to Curacao are hard
to find; Air Jamaica was our best option (I stopped over in Jamaica at
no extra charge)….The Seaquarium has a Dolphin Experience program, and
charges an additional $100 to dive with a dolphin in open water. It’s less canned
than snorkeling with a confined dolphin in an inlet although I still felt uncomfortable
with the sideshow feel. Let your own conscience be your guide.