Dear Fellow Diver:
When I arrived at Pirates Point at 7 p.m., my first
stop was proprietor Gladys Howard’s home, the venue for a
hurricane party with her guests celebrating the passage of
Hurricane Fay. It had stirred up the waters enough to keep
the dive boat docked for a day, but nothing like Gustav would
do 11 days later (more about that later).
All rooms at Pirates Point were taken, so that night I
slept in Gladys’ pleasant guest bedroom, which she opens to
an overflow crowd if it isn’t taken by a friend or relative.
After that, I had the choice between one of four sizeable
oceanfront duplex rooms, but they are not air-conditioned,
a lacking amenity during 80-degree nights with little ocean
breeze. I opted for what isn’t much more than a bedroom with
a table in the octagonal-shaped fourplex: comfortable and
air-conditioned but viewless and without much charm.
A Lionfish Sculpture Made from Beachcombing |
Next day, while boats from Little Cayman Beach Resort
rocked and rolled in Bloody Bay, we Pirates Point divers made
a single, very ordinary, beach dive. Divemaster Michelle, a
Londoner, told me she had heard other resorts’ boat captains
talking about how the rough seas had beaten up their passengers.
And besides, she allowed, “We have an older clientele.”
With clear
skies, divers at
most resorts would
have been complaining
about missed dives,
but savvy Pirates
Point divers figured
management knew best. My group included an
adventurous 72-yearold
with a spanking
new, megabuck housed
SLR and dual strobes,
and a teenage diver
as well.
The rest of the week? Flat and calm.
Each day we loaded our gear into vans at
9 a.m. to be motored five minutes near the
Little Cayman Beach Resort, where Pirates
Point docks its 42-foot Newton, the Yellow
Rose. However, for that first beach dive
(Jackson Wall and Cumber’s Cove), we drove
to the west side, geared up, then trekked 50
yards north to craggy, iron stone and coral
shallows before kicking out maybe 100 yards
to a small reef with a few tropicals – black
durgeons, chromis, snappers -- and plenty of
sea fans. The sand bottom was covered with
swaying garden eels dodging a solitary sting
ray; four lobster congregated in a hole. I
slipped through a large chute to the wall.
At 94 feet, I looked up to see a small reef shark slip by. The wall was covered with
silt, few fish, and little color even when the sun peeked through. That was not the
Bloody Bay I remembered from even a decade ago.
But when we returned for lunch, the kitchen produced that same fine cuisine it had
from my visit 15 years before. Today it was a lentil salad, cucumber salad, chicken
minestrone, great chewy foccacia, and brownies. Dinner was marvelous roast beef with
Yorkshire pudding and gravy, asparagus, sweet potato, a green salad. Gladys Howard, who
has created a following like, well, a diving Julia Child, bought this little resort in
1984 because she was a diver and a well-trained chef. Larry Smith, the celebrity Texan
dive guide who died last year, told her about PP and she turned it into an immediate
hit because of the superb wall diving and her scrumptious cooking. Little has changed.
She still serves fresh vegetables for every meal, travels to Houston and Whole Foods to
bring back the latest in grains or other discoveries, and scored fresh tuna steaks for
one dinner, all the while entertaining you with local gossip (some divers return year
after year just to catch up).
The bar is little changed, just more clutter from artwork fashioned by guests from
flotsam and jetsam they collect; some pieces are true folk art. The bar is tight when
20 or so guests are mixing their own drinks (the dive packages are all-inclusive) or
checking their computers (there is WiFi, although in Gladys’ resort notes she tells
people that if they insist on going online, don’t report the news, and there is no TV
or newspapers). The dining room is cheery and comfortable. Meals are buffet; you sit at
a table with five others until Gladys calls you to be served. The waiters-cum-divemasters
keep your goblets filled with passable wines.
The Yellow Rose is suited well to the 20-plus divers it can carry. After I set up
my gear, one of the well-trained instructors helped me stand by pulling the tank from
the bench holster. At the stern transom, I’d slip on my fins and jump in. As this was
late August and the last week before Pirates Point closed for hurricane season, the
number of divers eventually dwindled to 10, but we were always in two groups, each
with one leader. The mature and expert staff always kept an eye out for stragglers,
and offered a hand with buoyancy. As I studied a pipefish on the reef, I was sinking
too close to the coral and Gay Morse, who has been at the resort for years, pointed at
my fin so I could stop myself. Gay used a slate to alert divers to critters. “Giant
Tunicate!!” On another dive, guide Bob wrote “anenome shrimp.” (I didn’t have the heart
to correct his spelling, otherwise he might send back a copy of Undercurrent, pointing
out my typos.)
Little Cayman is noted for its sheer wall, rimmed with vivid coral shallows,
varying from 20 to 50 feet in depth, all contrasting with flat patches of brilliant
white sand. We dived Mixing Bowl twice. I rolled through a fair number of tropicals at
the wall rim at 30 feet, then floated slowly down past schools of chromis interspersed
with yellowtails. In a hole, I looked at the gnarly claws of a large crab, then
entered a cut at 90 feet, where a free-swimming spotted moray wiggled along, oblivious
to a solo French angel mingling with fairy basslets. After 15 minutes, I worked up to the shallows, where guide Martha
Feinhagen pointed out a dime-sized crab
burying itself in the sand, then a disguised
stingray covered with sand, rising
and falling to its gill beats. A
conch crossed the bottom, inching ahead
every five seconds, the time it took for
it to dig its claw in the sand and push
forward. On a large coral mound, grunts
were stacked like cordwood. Pleasant
dive, as were all of them. The viz ran
about 70 feet. The water was 85 degrees
at all depths on every dive. Like at
Jackson Mooring -- first a mini-wall,
then a sand plateau, then down through a
chute, where a four-foot reef shark shot
by with what seemed to be a snapper nipping
at it.
Ian Stewart, who was running a photo
workshop for the week, told me that
Sarah’s Set was named after a divemaster
of days past who resembled the topography
below. I dropped to the sand, then
down to 70 feet and that vertical wall.
Less than 20 percent was covered with
live coral, and there were lots of algae,
but the sheer wall contrasted dramatically
with the deep blue abyss. Schooling
chromis and snappers swirled just above
me among tube sponges, a throaty barrel
sponge and wire coral. As I stopped to
marvel at the sparkling eyes of a large
pufferfish, I spotted a beautiful lettuce
slug, then a tiger tail extending from
beneath a coral head like a giant night
crawler. Then up to a celebration, where
Gay had tracked down an orange seahorse
she frequently encountered. In the shallows
were endless and unusual blennies,
which caught the eye of most photographers,
while I watched a silvery permit
poke around.
Down deep at Bus Top, named because
one could once see the top of an old bus
from the boat, a reef shark meandered
slowly and a turtle floated in the blue,
as I watched both a queen trigger and
an ocean trigger flutter around. In the
sand flat, two thumbnail-sized flounders
chased each other. Then I crossed to the
colorful reef, where at 15 feet a long,
flat seascape lay, filled with beautiful, undulating blue and green and beige pastel
seafans. As I approached the boat, a school of jacks, with a black durgeon running
with them, stayed in the boat’s shadow as it drifted on its mooring. On the way back,
glistening flying fish skipped off the gunwales.
It’s only two dives a day at Pirates Point, but you can take as much time as you
want(no one seemed to go beyond an hour but there was no limit). It was an easy climb
back into the boat and a staffer always walked everyone to the bench with a steady
hand on the tank. After a roll call to ensure everyone had returned (a lost diver would have little problem kicking the couple of hundred yards to shore) we scarfed down
individual packs of junk food or smeared peanut butter on crackers, washed down with
juice or soda.
Little Cayman is a flat, scrubby island, 11 miles long and a mile wide. Each day,
I hopped on a serviceable, fat-tired bike to peddle about for an hour, maybe out to the
Blue Lagoon bar for a cold beer or a stop at the Little Cayman National Trust building
and a view of nesting booby birds, slowing along the way to watch chunky iguanas waddle
down the road or see ducks and egrets in the pond. Counting the people who work at the
few hotels and condos, there aren’t much more than a couple of hundred people living on
Little Cayman, so other than going to the little market, the Blue Iguana Restaurant or
getting a massage, there’s not much left to do with your down time but snooze and read.
And, of course, eat the delicious food from Gladys’ kitchen. Lunches were conch
fritters, gazpacho with fruit, barbecued chicken, slightly sweet and tender coleslaw,
beans, snow peas, cornbread, and lots of good salads like beet or even radish salad. One night, it was an Indian dinner with
papadum; another night featured beef
stroganoff and broccoli salad. And desserts:
banana cream cake, fruit cobbler,
brownies.
While Pirates Point has remained
the same since my visit 15 years ago,
the diving has changed. Scientists have
found that Little Cayman has a coral
cover loss of nearly 40 percent in five
years (declining from 26.3 percent total
coverage in 1999 to 15.8 percent in
2004), though it seems to have stabilized.
The primary cause is white plague
disease, which may have some association
with humans. High water temperatures and
coral bleaching have also taken their
toll. Fish life isn’t as prolific but
just about every animal you’d expect to
see in the Caribbean is there. As we all know, coral worldwide is disappearing, fish
life is diminishing, diversity is waning. So while Little Cayman may still rank among
the best diving in the Caribbean, it’s not what it once was - - and may never be. It wasn’t until just this August that spearing Nassau grouper had been banned in the
Caymans; in marine parks, it’s permissible to fish from shore or at depths greater than
80 feet (they better let the grouper live because it’s about the only lionfish predator
in Caribbean waters). Nonetheless, Little Cayman should be high on every diver’s
Caribbean list -- especially Pirates Point. It’s that unique and special.
On my final day at Pirates Point, I was the last to leave. Hurricane season was
approaching and the staff was shuttering the windows and taking down the hammocks. And
with good reason. Eleven days later, Gustav came through, breaking windows, ripping off
corners of roofs and tearing up the foliage. Other resorts, such as the Conch Club and
the Southern Cross Club, didn’t fare nearly as well as Pirates Point. And every boat
ended up in the mangroves, but Gay and her husband Ed Morse retrieved the Yellow Rose and took it to Grand Cayman for annual maintenance a few days later. By the way, Gladys
was in Houston during Gustav, having a second knee replacement. By all accounts, she
will be back for the October 25th opening.
Unfortunately, I can’t report on what Hurricane Gustav did to the diving, but it
came from the south, while Bloody Bay and Jackson Hole are on the north side. One can
expect uprooted fans, sand on the reef, critters looking for new homes. For repeat
visitors, diving after a hurricane opens up all sort of new things. While e-mails
from people living on the island say diving hasn’t changed, we’ll see what our readers
report and let you know in our monthly dive news e-mails to subscribers (sign up to
receive them for free at Undercurrent).
-- Ben Davison
Diver’s Compass: Rates for the coming year are $1,995 per person,
plus a 15 percent service charge, for a seven-night, six-day, double
occupancy package . . . I was a solo traveler who made reservations
a week ahead of time so they waived the single supplement, a pricey
$150 per day in the winter, without my even asking (and not because
they knew who I was, because they didn’t) . . . A warning to anyone
with severe cat allergies: A few cats lounge around the main building
and in Gladys’ home . . . One can rent a car or a moped on Little
Cayman but beware -- I was told by good authority that the proprietor
makes his living from finding dents and scratches when you bring it back . . . At
the far end of the island is a decaying home once owned by Burgess Meredith, where he
sequestered himself, the story goes, to dry out between shoots . . . Cayman Air commuting
cautions: You may be charged for overweight bags; you may have to send bags a day early if you want them to arrive home with you; flights may be canceled, combined
or diverted, therefore mucking up plans as you arrive on or depart from Grand
Cayman . . . You’re required to go to Little Cayman’s garage-sized airport building
an hour before flight time and wait outside in scorching weather . . . Nitrox is
available, but everyone stuck with air; a night dive wasn’t offered, at least not to
me . . . Web site: www.piratespointresort.com.