The dive industry is ever changing and divers are
always looking for new information, good and bad, about
their destinations. Dive travel isn’t cheap. Here are important
tips from our readers and other good sources that
will help you spend your money wisely.
A Budget Pick in Bonaire: Bonaire is high on divers’
lists but it’s also high in costs. For budget-minded divers,
Jerri Smith, an Undercurrent subscriber from Kerrville, TX,
recommends the Golden Reef Inn. “Upon arrival on the
red-eye from Houston, we were greeted by a GRI employee
and taken to the hotel for a few hours’ rest, thanks to
an early check-in. Plenty of towels, the units were spotless,
and management was helpful. Unfortunately, our A/C
didn’t work for most of the week, but we were accorded
a partial refund.” Golden Reef uses WannaDive as their
main dive operator, and Larry’s Wildside Diving for East
Side sites. The “Stay, Dive and Drive” package for seven
nights in a one-bedroom with full kitchen is $542 per person;
with a daily one-tank boat dive, it’s $667. (Website:
www.goldenreefinn.com)
Too-Short Dives in The Bahamas: It’s becoming
more common for resorts to do shorter dives, but subscriber
Terry Garland (Naples, FL) feels he came up with
too much air during his trips with Stuart Cove’s in Nassau.
On the first day, total dive time including safety shop was
35 minutes. On the second day, both dives were bad and
once again, 35 minutes for each. “All dives are guided
and held to less than decent dive times,” says Garland.
“I had some dives that I was forced back on the boat with
1800 psi. I am an advanced open water instructor, and
still I only had 35 minutes dive time in 40 feet of water.”
The shark dive on the third day made for good pictures
of sharks feeding, but once again, “it was, ‘hurry up and
get back on the boat, we got your money, so who cares?’
At $140 for a 2-tank shark dive, ouch.” Another gripe:
The lack of rinse bins for cameras. “Not even a bucket for
the shark feeding. They acted like the only camera that
mattered was the staff photographer’s. They need to take
some of their overpriced dive fees and buy some decent
rinse bins.” Stuart Cove’s recently sunk another wreck
off the coast of Nassau to create its eighth artificial reef,
but why bother if you only have 35 minutes to see it?
Cold Pizza in Curacao: Divers having a hell of a time
finding their way to their hotel in the dark can take an
example from Pat Sinclair, an Undercurrent subscriber
from Tampa, Florida - - order a pizza for delivery. When
asking directions from the airport rental-car agent to
the Lions’ Dive and Beach Resort, Patricia and her
husband were told to go over the “big bridge.” “Well, it
was dark, who could see if the bridge was the big one
or not?” says Patricia. After driving around in circles for
three hours, they went to a Domino’s Pizza for directions.
The staff told them to turn left at the Burger King
sign. One problem: The Burger King was closed and
no longer had a sign on it. Then came time for drastic
measures. “We went back to Domino’s, ordered a pizza
to be delivered to Lion’s Den and then followed the
driver to the resort. It was the only way!”
California Divin’: Travelers to San Francisco looking
for a good scuba diving site need to go two hours south
to Monterey, known for kelp forests, sea otters and
cold-water marine life rivaling that on any tropical reef.
Subscriber Jon Scott (Plainfield, NH) recommends the
Monterey Bay Dive Center. He took a two-tank boat trip
on its 40-foot Silver Prince for dives at Third Pinnacle
in Carmel Bay, a 40-minute ride. “I had to rent since the
airline misplaced my gear, but the dive shop was easy to
work with and had good quality equipment. Good dive
and safety briefings, and good roll-call procedures. Nice
breakfast (bagels, coffee) and snacks on board. Entry
is off the side by giant stride, you return by stern ladder
and staff assists with fin removal. All gear setups are
divers’ responsibility.
“Interesting channels to swim through, and every
hard surface was covered with colorful anemones,
urchins and cup corals. The visibility and color were
even more spectacular than expected. Thick clouds of
fish everywhere and after a few minutes clinging to
stalks of kelp, you become invisible to them and they
swarm around. The dive staff made potentially challenging
dives (cold water, unfamiliar conditions, surge, etc.)
a blast and left me hungry for more.” (Website: www.
montereyscubadiving.com)
Management Changes in Costa Rica: Readers have
given Rich Coast Diving positive reports in the past but
new management is changing some opinions. Martin
and Brenda van Gestel, who ran the Silent Immersion
Dive Shop in Curacao, bought Rich Coast from Jessica
Bradford in December 2005. Undercurrent subscriber
Bob Sivak (Mission Viejo, CA) was less than pleased
with their operations. “On our first day diving to the
Catalinas, they put us on the Salty Dog, an overflow
charter boat that was a joke—nauseating levels of diesel
smoke and a speed so slow I’m sure I could have swum
faster. The head was ‘closed to men’.” Sivak called
Rich Coast’s trimaran boat a “laughable” engine configuration
of one small and one medium size outboard
motor. “As far as being a shop that caters to serious
divers, well, I don’t think so.”
Slow Boat to the Galapagos: A word of advice from
subscriber Mark Tarczynski in Los Angeles: Check the
top speed of a liveaboard before you book. If you’re
taking a slow boat, you may be adding too much
interval time to your trip—and losing costly dive time.
Tarczynski estimates his experience on the slow-asmolasses
Mistral made him miss out on $500 worth of
diving. “One diver in our group stupidly got bent just
before we arrived at Darwin Island. We had to steam
back to Baltra to get him to a hyperbaric chamber.
Because the boat’s top speed was seven knots, half that
of similar boats, it took us 29 hours to arrive. We lost
a day and a half of diving and never got to see Darwin
Island.” The rest of his trip consisted of limited diving
around the southern Galapagos archipelago.
Other Mistral mishaps: An inexperienced divemaster
who did not give dive briefings or hand out dive
flags and alert horns, no Nitrox, and a setup area too
cramped for 16 divers. “The swim step is so crowded
that gearing up and loading into the panga is an exercise
in frustration. Half the number of divers would
make this boat more pleasant, but it looks like this
company is not about customer service.”
Fiji Shark-Sighting: Divers who do their research
about the best times to see certain marine wonders
will often be rewarded, but even more so if their dive
operation helps them out. Subscriber Paul deVegvar
(Mount Vernon, WA) raves about his shark-watching
trips last September with Beqa Adventure Divers
in Pacific Harbor. “Beqa’s shop manager, Andrew,
answered all our e-mails prior to our trip to help us
schedule the best timeframes to see all the different
species of sharks that commonly visit their dive
sites. There is no guarantee for wildlife encounters
but Andrew gave us a tip about the best months to
see which species. Thanks to his divesite statistics,
we saw all seven species of sharks during our trip.”
Andrew also helped deVegvar’s group by fixing one of their regulators, lending his personal diving computer
when one of theirs malfunctioned, and gave
them even more tips to enjoy their shark dives. Beqa’s
dive boat was well organized with a personal gear
bin for each diver and experienced divemasters with
more than 20 years’ service. “Dive guide Russi not
only shows you where and what to see, but also how
to approach underwater creatures and structures.”
DeVegvar also recommends the Lagoon Resort at
Pacific Harbor as an ideal place to stay, since the shark
dive boat departs right from its doorstep. (Websites:
www.fiji-sharks.com; www.lagoonresort.com)
New Liveaboard Destinations: The Tahiti Aggressor is moving to Fiji and will now be known as the Fiji
Aggressor - - again (it was the original Fiji Aggressor before being moved to Tahiti five years ago). Aggressor
said it pulled the plug because of the extremely high
cost of operating a top-class liveaboard in French
Polynesia, and the Tahiti Aggressor was finding it hard
to fill its cabins. The 106-ft catamaran hauled out for
annual maintenance and will resume liveaboard dive
trips in Fiji starting May 12, 2007. The 10-passenger luxury yacht Fiji Aggressor II will stay course in Fiji, and
is scheduled for a major overhaul this year. It also has
the Maldives Aggressor currently under construction in
Turkey, and that 20-passenger, all-steel yacht will start
sailing next January. (Website: www.aggressor.com)
Peter Hughes is also adding to its fleet, with a
new, upscale Dancer yacht to start sailing in Indonesia
next February. It will be the company’s largest boat
at 141 feet, and built out of wood in the style of a
three-masted schooner. The interior style will be that
of a “floating boutique resort,” and an indoor lounge
will feature an “e-center” for divers to work on their
digital photography. The eight staterooms will be
larger than the norm at 227 square feet. The “Master
& Commander Suite” at the stern of the main deck
will clock in at 420 square feet with a king size bed,
separate sitting area with a sofa and table with chairs
to give the idea of living in “captains’ quarters.”
(Website: www.peterhughes.com)
-- Ben Davison