Dear Reader:
Diving in Wakatobi offers two alternatives: a land-based operation with 52
guests staying in a holiday-camp atmosphere, or a trip aboard the Pelagian. While the
Wakatobi Resort’s “house reef” is legendary for its diverse marine life and glorious
wall, trips to nearby reefs involve a 45-minute ride with a dozen other divers. I
opted for the Pelagian’s quieter environs and access to sites the resort’s motorboats
can’t reach.
Wakatobi’s service started with a flourish. After flying 13 hours to Tokyo, then
eight more to Denpasar, Bali. I was met there by the staff, who sped me through customs
and immigration. A twin-propeller beater delivered me three hours later to the
remote airstrip on Tomia, a small island 400 miles east of Bali, and from there my
boat trip took only 20 minutes. The Pelagian was the first stop. Five of us got off
while the rest stayed onboard for the trip to Wakatobi on the island of Onemobaa.
Unfortunately, the trip went steadily downhill. My 11-day trip was marked by
repetitive dives at overfished sites, bad food and overpriced drinks. I can’t complain
about the comfortable accommodations or divemasters’ optimistic cheer, but
those weren’t enough to make me feel I was getting $350-a-day’s worth of enjoyment.
Wakatobi is an acronym for the larger islands -- Wangi, Kaledupa, Tomia,
Binongki – in a group southeast of Sulawesi in the Banda Sea. The Pelagian’s itinerary
included an area 100 miles wide and 200 miles across, mostly in the Tukangbesi
National Marine Park, but the area is so overfished, pelagic lovers will be disappointed. Wakatobi made a deal with locals to protect 12 miles of coastline from fishing,
but this is tiny in comparison with the Pelagian’s range. I came for muck diving,
so my expectations weren’t deflated, but the lack of reef fish gradually made
diving less enjoyable.
After an exhaustive, ill-timed briefing that
forced me to assemble equipment and cameras
in the dark, the boat motored south to start
the next day’s diving at Binongki. It was a
choice site for a checkout dive, but we spent
all day here. Standard dive profiles were
thrown to the wind. The first dive on Fish
Wall was in 30 feet of water for 70 minutes,
the second dive was a drift in 15 feet for an
hour. For the third dive, I descended to 135
feet and followed the Cavern Wall, covered in
pristine coral, barrel sponges, anemones and
nudibranchs. The reefs and walls were in mint
condition, reminding me of Palau and Red Sea reefs in the 1980s. For the night dive,
I was dropped onto Pintu Timur at Binongko. Not much to see, and we all agreed it
had just been one long checkout day.
Built in 1965 as a private yacht, the Pelagian was formerly the Fantasea, cruising
the Red Sea before Wakatobi owners Lorenz Maeder and Erwin Wöber purchased and
restored her. She is steady but slow, with a speed of seven knots. I had one of two
deluxe cabins, with a double and twin bed. Every cabin had a large dresser and closets
with room for suitcases. The air-conditioning was easily adjustable. Plush bathrobes
and towels were luxurious touches. Roomy bathrooms had marble sinks and tile,
glass-enclosed showers with rainshower heads giving plenty of pressure and hot water,
and high-end toiletries. My end-of-day shower was a luxurious joy.
The upper deck could double as a soccer field and offered comfortable seating
under a canvas awning or in teak deck chairs. The area afore the cockpit was my
favorite reading place -- always a cool breeze and I never encountered another guest
there. The main deck’s stern was spacious but the dining table was always covered
in dripping camera gear. I wouldn’t classify the Pelagian as photographer-friendly
-- the camera room was too far from the dive deck. Neither of the two large rinse
tanks was dedicated to cameras, so booties and masks shared muddy water with $10,000
camera setups. Despite complaints, the situation never improved. While the camera
room could accommodate six photographers, I couldn’t imagine the situation if all
12 guests required space. There are dozens of outlets, both 110 and 220 volts, for
chargers but no air compressor.
The four daily dives were at 7:30, 10:30, 2:30 and either a dusk dive at 5:30
or a 7:30 night dive after dinner. Aluminum 80s were filled to 3,000 psi. Dive times
were limited to 70 minutes, 60 at night, so after paying a substantial premium for
32-percent Nitrox fills, I often came up from a 30-foot dive with a half a tank of
air. For every dive, I climbed onto a peppy inflatable powered by two outboards. The
two tenders handled six divers each, plus divemaster and pilot. I did rollouts and
easily climbed back in on a long, angled ladder. Brom, my driver, who spoke fluent
English, retrieved my BC before I boarded and treated camera gear as though it were
his own. I used my safety sausages on two occasions, but otherwise the seas were
calm and currents gentle.
At the large plateau of Metropolis, I swam along the ridge and finally saw some
large fish action -- gray reef and whitetip sharks, a large sea turtle and a huge
school of blue fusiliers. Then we motored to Hoga in the Kaledupa Islands to explore
the unusual contours of the Inner and Outer Pinnacles. I photographed a school of
large chevron barracuda, lionfish, and porcelain crabs posed on mushroom anemones.
Expansive fields of pristine table, brain and staghorn coral crowded together like
commuters during rush hour. The dusk dive was through a series of pinnacles at Hoga
Buoy, with large overhangs at 20 feet. Drifting through the stone reefs, I saw large
crabs but little else.
The Italian divemasters, Marco Camorali and Sissi Pagani, were very familiar
with dive sites and readily available for questions. The Pelagian strictly enforced
the buddy system so being a lone traveler, I was assigned as Marco’s buddy. This didn’t work well. I was kicked in the
head a dozen times, then admonished for
drifting ten yards behind him. But our
relationship greatly improved, and I
respected his profound interest in the
reef flora and fauna. After the third
day, the strict buddy rules were abandoned
and though dive times were still
limited, I was allowed to roam.
Even though I went in June during dry
season, it often rained so guests congregated
in the salon, tight for 12 divers
and two divemasters. Most DVDs were bootlegs
and poor copies. Music always played
from the boat’s iPod but there was seldom
agreement on selection or volume. There
was a definite segregation between guests
and crew. Was it mandated? The front of
the boat was off limits to guests, and
the crew never came midsection or aft, so I never learned about their country and
customs.
The salon doubled as the dining area. Standard breakfast choices were offered
daily, and it was then when I chose my lunch and dinner from three choices. Servers
happily accommodated requests and offered some interesting dishes, but overall the
food wasn’t well prepared. Meals were cold, and vegetables and meats were overcooked. One duck dish had the consistency of last week’s pot roast. Though dressed
in imaginative sauces, the chicken was inedible. Desserts were rough. At least the
salad ingredients were fresh and crisp, with plenty of ripe tomatoes, and delicious
Indonesian fried rice and noodle dishes were good alternatives. A bottomless jar
filled with delicious homemade cookies didn’t last long, nor did the fruit bowl of
mangosteens, salak and ripe bananas. Hot water and the espresso machine were always
primed, although I grumbled about the drink prices. Local Bintang beer costing 50
cents at market was billed at $2.30. Sodas were $1.50. Mediocre wine retailing for
$8 a bottle was sold here for $8.50 a glass and $40 to $60 a bottle. Some passengers
racked up several hundred dollars in beverage bills.
Between stops at reefs and walls, the captain motored at night toward the midway
point of Butan Bay, a citadel of muck diving. I loaded my macro lens, champing
at the bit to get in the mud. The first descent was to Asphalt Pier, a village
dumping ground. Critters sheltered in truck tires, engine blocks, thousands of bras
and other detritus of an expanding Third World civilization. I photographed Coleman
shrimp, ribbon eels, longspine and mombasa lionfish, panda and saddleback anemone
fish, and the elusive ghost pipefish, and enjoyed 45 minutes with a stunning juvenile
batfish. The visibility was cramped at 50 feet, and the 78-degree water temperature
was cooler than the average 84 degrees, but there was no current.
The Pelagian |
Next, I explored Chicky Beach’s sandy
slope down to 50 feet and was rewarded with
harlequin shrimp, waspfish, gobies, blennies,
puffers, and an acre of black spiny
sea urchins offering protection for myriad
juvenile reef fish I had only seen in field
guides. Marco spotted the most expertly camouflaged
critters, including a half-inch peacock
razorfish tumbling in the gravel. Many
photo ops were lost to a current-driven sandstorm
but Neptune was forgiven after granting
an incredible night dive. During 60 minutes at
Magic Pier between two and 25 feet, I photographed
mandarin fish and octopuses emerging
from shadows, dense masses of shrimpfish and juvenile catfish, giant hermit crabs and a six-inch decorator crab resembling a ball
of mohair yarn.
Despite the interesting life here, there was no reason to dive the same four
sites four days in a row. The weather had turned to pea soup and I suffered from
cabin fever. Even if guests don’t know where to go in an unfamiliar region, why not
be given a choice of viable options? The Pelagian opted for the easy way out.
The boat navigated back to Wangi Wangi Bay for two days of diving. Apart from
pristine corals and sponges, nothing remarkable. I was resentful that I had traveled
so far for such tepid diving. I’m the guy who never misses a dive, yet here I skipped
several, as did half the other guests. At briefings, I asked, “Will this be the same
sort of wall dive?” Marco’s inpatient response: “No, different wall!” He and Sissi
were tireless cheerleaders, but the fever was not contagious. Our night dive at Wangi
Wangi was a waste of time. I was beckoned frantically to come see what Marco found.
It was a crab. Ten minutes later I was summoned again, to see a lobster. I surfaced
after 24 minutes without taking one photograph.
At Blue Mosque, a double reef on Wangi Wangi’s northern shore, I had an enjoyable
ride at 35 feet past flawless coral gardens and gullies. A resident school of
enormous bumphead parrots joined me for a bit, as did a puffer the size of a Labrador
retriever. Fisherman worked the reef from dugouts, using crude hooks and handlines.
Underwater, I saw freedivers spearfishing. They must be successful -- there are few
large fish and no pelagics on these reefs.
After a final, uneventful dive at Table Coral Rock, we were trapped on board
for six hours while the Pelagian, which boasted a range of 8,000 miles, was using
our time to refuel. A greasy wooden scow filled with gasoline rafted alongside us,
its fumes filling the boat and ruining the only time I had to relax in the before a grueling trip home. It was more than an imposition, and dangerous. At
night, we were ferried to Wakatobi for a barbecue. The food was passable, drinks
were expensive at U.S. $9 apiece, and it was too crowded, although the divers there
seemed happy enough.
The Pelagian spreads a five-day itinerary across 10 days. If you go, consider
the seven-day trip instead, and insist that your itinerary favor muck diving over
walls and reefs. It’s too long a way to come for mediocre diving.
-- D.L.
Diver’s Compass: For my 11-day trip, I spent $3,650 for a deluxe
cabin; it’s $3,080 for a standard cabin and $4,050 for the master
suite . . . For the seven-night cruise, a standard cabin is $2,180
. . . I flew with American and Japan Airlines, connecting though
Tokyo then Denpasar . . . There’s a recompression chamber in Denpasar
near the airport . . . It’s not considered a malaria hotspot but a
series of Malarone can’t hurt; I experienced no side effects . . .
Since the Bali bombings, there are strict security procedures at airports
and hotels, but I felt no threats to my safety . . . Web site:
http://pelagian.wakatobi.com.