Dear Fellow Diver:
"You're in for a real treat tomorrow," Martin, my
divemaster, told me. Colin (that's Captain Colin Aldridge,
the owner of Jost Van Dyke Scuba would be taking us to
one of his secret spots on the Atlantic side, "a sea
mount with tons of fish and lots of jacks and sharks."
These pinnacle dives normally cost $200, but Colin tossed
it in to make up for a week of poor visibility. I set off
with five other divers and Colin, who briefed us while we
geared up at Cathedral, before cruising around the island
tip to the site. We were to enter as a group, head down
the anchor line to the top of the mount at 70 feet, and
make two or three passes around. Colin would carry a reel
with its line tied to the boat in case we lost site of
the anchor line. The water was a milky aqua color as I
went hand-over-hand down the line in 10-foot visibility.
At 96 feet, I put my computer in front of my partner's
mask to show her the depth and her eyes popped. At 110
feet, all I could see were my feet standing on the bottom. Colin aborted the
dive. Seventeen minutes
after starting, we were
back on the surface.
My partner and I
have been diving in the
Caribbean for more than
20 years, seeking out the
less-traveled spots and
hoping to find a place
we would want to return,
from St. Eustatius (very
good) to Vieques (don't
go). When we were in
St. Eustatius, our divemaster
said when he went
on vacation, he went to
Jost Van Dyke. So we gave
it a shot.
Jost Van Dyke (JVD) is three
square miles, with 200 residents,
no doctor and no airport, but it's
overwhelmed at night when hundreds
of people from the endless parade
of BVI sailboats fill its bars and
restaurants. It lies five miles from
Tortola and seven miles from the Red
Hook ferry terminal in St. Thomas,
one of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
At the ferry office, there were no
signs for Jost, so I bought tickets
and luggage vouchers for the M.V.
Native Son, only to learn it doesn't
travel there. I got a refund. Two
guys wearing no uniforms or ID
badges but saying they were from Inter Island Boat Services took my $140 for
two round-trip tickets, and watched our luggage while my dive buddy and I went
across the street to the Marine Market to pick up supplies I had ordered online.
Thirty minutes later, we were in Great Harbour, a picturesque seaside hamlet
on JVD. I picked up our reserved Suzuki jeep and drove to the road's dead end
at Sandy Ground Estates, a 17-acre property on JVD's eastern end. We had to walk
down a steep, 100-yard rocky trail to the manager's office, so we left our gear
locked in the jeep overnight with no problem. Caretakers Leroi and Nadine were
surprised we didn't take the water taxi from Great Harbour. I would have, had I
checked Sandy Ground's "Getting Here" website page, or during pre-trip conversations
with JVD Scuba -- or if I had just simply asked the best way to get there.
Eight villas are spread among a lush, tropical hillside above a private
white-sand shady beach. We had the Hideaway, a two-bedroom unit with a kitchen
and two baths. Every room opened to achingly beautiful views of the blue water
of Baker's Bay, Little Jost Van Dyke and Tortola. Sailing catamarans swept past
all day long. At night, we sat beneath a full moon, listening to the breeze
rustle through the coconut palm and coquis chirping in the garden. As much as I
hated humping up that trail in the morning, I loved the quiet evenings.
Next day, we made the 15-minute drive to the dive shop, a funky little
place with roving kids and dogs, situated on Great Harbour's sandy Main Street.
JVD Scuba is crammed with T-shirts, gear, sunscreen, insect repellant and just
about everything you need (or think you need) for a dive trip. Colin and his
wife, Andrea, own this and three other shops on Tortola. She checked our C-cards
and introduced us to Martin, our divemaster whose Cockney humor helped overcome
what turned out to be not the best of diving.
For the next six days, Martin hauled our gear bags to the 27-foot Dedicated,
sitting just off the beach. JVD Scuba runs five 27- and 29-foot boats, plus the
55-foot Nautilus. All have first-aid kits and oxygen, and get to most sites in
less than 30 minutes. We geared up on aluminum 80s filled to 3000 psi. (Nitrox
tanks are available, which Martin ferries over from Tortola daily.)
We picked up another diver from a sailboat moored in Great Harbour, and
headed off on a flat sea to the collapsed Pirate's Perch, a 150-foot Dutch
freighter sitting upright at 94 feet near the western tip of the island,
where the Caribbean meets the Atlantic. I back-rolled into 81-degree water
and followed the mooring line to a lobster trap where a second line led to
the wreck. The railings and deck were covered with white Carijoa riisei soft
corals waving in the gentle current. A large horse-eye jack hung back from a
cloud of several hundred French grunts. Two decorator crabs on one side were
either fighting or making little crabs. Large bristle worms covered the deck.
Visibility was 70 feet at best; late winter undersea swells had churned up the
bottom, and particulate matter hung in the water column. We wrote this one off
as a checkout dive.
After 35 minutes, we took a 15-foot
safety stop, then Martin ascended to the
untended boat. I handed up my weights
and clambered up a narrow stern ladder
between the twin outboards. Martin
handed out oranges and water, and we
motored to The Cathedral, a two-minute
ride away. After 42 minutes of surface
interval, we were swimming over and
around huge basalt boulders encrusted in
bright magenta, orange and blue. A large
spotted drum swayed in the surge that
led to a funnel-shaped cavern. Sunlight
filtered through a natural chimney in
the rock, and we surfaced in the grotto
under blue skies. Heading back under, we
timed the 10-foot surge and emerged from
the cave to swim along the coast, to
chasms carved by the sea into huge boulders
over millennia. Although dolphins
had been seen eight times the previous week (yeah, the "you should have been
here last week" schtick), aside from a lone barracuda, the fish life was limited
to queen triggers ,queen angels, four-eye butterflyfish, soldierfish and other
common tropicals. The underwater topography was great but I wanted more fish.
After the second dive, I hauled my mesh bags on the short walk to the shop,
washed the sand out of the large plastic rinse buckets, washed my gear and hung
it up. Theft is not a problem on an island with only 200 residents, so they say.
In the morning, I packed it up again. Martin was available to help at any time,
but divers are responsible for their own gear.
The undersea swells dogged us for the rest of the week. The following day,
we headed east to Playground, another rocky site in unusually calm water bordering
the Atlantic between Little Jost Van Dyke and Green Cay. We met at a grouping
of brown pillar coral, and headed through canyons of immense rock covered in
healthy coral and gorgonians, but visibility was down to 50 feet. There were lots
of crevices and swim-throughs, and I did see a big puffer in one cavern, but
what was supposed to be a very fishy dive wasn't, at least from what I couldn't
see. We ended up in an amphitheatre of rock and gazed up at a large tarpon hanging
in the crashing surf above. At the base of the cliff, two lionfish hovered
in small holes in the rock. Between dives, Martin looked in the hold for a
spear, but in vain. He said that groupers routinely take dead lionfish off the
spear, but these predators still remained unspeared as the week progressed.
When we weren't cooking at the house, we tried the local restaurants. JVD
is a sailor's party island, its bar and restaurants packed as soon as the sun
drops under the yardarm, and two hot spots get most of the press. At Foxy's, at
Diamond Cay, the true-to-life Foxy holds court and plays guitar, but service suffers.
Four of the five Foxy's brand microbrews
were out of stock, along with several
standard brands of beer. When I asked for
menus, the bartender looked at his watch,
even though lunch is served until 3:30, and
spent the next 10 minutes trying to figure
out how to make a frozen margarita
instead of taking our order. We walked out.
Foxy's is the only place out on the east
end , and mainly caters to the yachties who
moor there. You could walk there from Sandy
Ground, but has got to a good half mile.
The place is full every night, though, and
does offer free wifi. At the Soggy Dollar in White Bay, visiting day boats are moored cheek-by-jowl in the bay, and the beach
is wall-to-wall people at lunchtime. The Soggy Dollar is living off its reputation,
and you probably won't get even close to the bar. Walk down the beach to
One Love, try the lobster quesadilla or one of the other fresh fish dishes and
relax while the madding crowd carries on elsewhere.
Corsair's has arguably the best food on the island (and right next to the
dive shop) and we ate lunch there frequently, noshing on pizzas, great burgers,
salads, pasta or fish. The dinner menu includes steak, lobster and Thai dishes.
You can hang at the bar with owner Vinnie Terranova (he's from "the islands of
Staten and Long"), take a table, an open-air stool or one of the hammocks on the
beach (use bug spray for the latter). Ivan's Stress Free Bar has a $25 barbecue
every Thursday. It's an island party with ribs, chicken, fish, live music and a
laid-back feel. Colin and Andrea may be there when they're not herding day-boaters
through the Discover Scuba class.
Wednesday found me at the dive shop at 8:30 a.m., hoping to get an early
start, only to find Martin giving a Discover Scuba course to four yachties. I
twiddled my thumbs on the beach until 10:30 a.m., when we headed out on the
55-foot Nautilus to North Wall Right. Colin let us gear up first and get in
the water. A small nurse shark sat in a hole in the wall, and had been there
long enough to acquire a spiny sea urchin on its dorsal fin. The visibility was
improving, and I spied a big spiny lobster sharing its den with a slipper lobster.
Colin called the second dive off, due to time constraints of the other divers
(that sort of thing can be expected, I suppose, at shops catering to sailors
and cruisers), but he promised three dives for the following day, rationalizing
that the visibility would better still.
And it was. Back at Playground, I was amazed at the colors that a little
sunlight and clarity brought to the huge boulders. I saw an eagle ray while
still with my group of overweighted newbies, then headed off alone. The sun sparkled
off azure vase sponges, while coral trout and rock hinds swam among barrels
sponges. Seven barracuda watched me take my safety stop while the rest of the
divers were already back aboard.
So while the visibility just wasn't what I had come to expect for March
in the Caribbean, Colin tried to do the best by us. On my last day, we went to
Great Thatch and Little Thatch, two small islands just off Tortola and in the lee
of the swells. The weather was clear, the water was clearer, about 70 feet, and
I swam alone along a 65-foot wall, enjoying the healthy coral and reef life.
Frankly, the easygoing life on JVD has me looking forward to returning in
the spring or summer, when the swells have subsided and the visibility clears. The frustrating and tantalizing thing is that I had sensed that there's good
Caribbean diving there, but I just couldn't see it. JVD Scuba tries to reward
experienced divers with freedom and better sites, but sometimes it's just the
luck of the draw.
Next time, I plan to stay at White Bay Villas, just over the hill from Great
Harbour. I spoke to another couple staying there who got a last-minute deal on a
one-bedroom condo in a two-unit building, along with a car for a week for $1,400.
You can spend more if you want a villa, but either way, the day boats are gone
by evening, and the sunset is yours.
-- E.H.
Divers Compass: A few U.S. cities have nonstop air to St. Thomas;
Jet Blue is perhaps the least expensive carrier, but you stop
in San Juan, get to St. Thomas late, and have to overnight there
before catching the ferry to JVD in the morning . . . The hourlong
taxi ride from Charlotte Amalie to Red Hook's ferry dock
will cost about $25, plus tip; Inter-Island Boat Services operates
round-trip boats to JVD at 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. for $70. . .
Grocery stores on JVD have only minimal offerings, so order groceries from Marina Market in Red Hook . . . It cost me $1,750 for a week's
stay in a two-bedroom unit, but closer to the action and without the hike are
the elegant White Bay Villas; ask for last minute discounts . . . A Suzuki
Sidekick runs about $50 a day; open-air pickup truck taxis cost up to $25 each
way to Great Harbour, less from White Bay, and you can carry your drink on board
. . . A ten-dive package at Jost Van Dyke Scuba cost $499 per person, plus tax,
and included tanks and weights; gear rentals ( Sherwood BCs and regulators)
are $10 a day, and private charters for the well-heeled are $850 per day . . .
Websites: Jost Van Dyke Scuba - www.jostvandykescuba.com ; Sandy Ground Estates - www.sandyground.com ; White Bay Villas - www.jostvandyke.com ; Inter-Island Boat
Services - www.interislandboatservices.vi