Main Menu
Join Undercurrent on Facebook

The Private, Exclusive Guide for Serious Divers Since 1975 | |
For Divers since 1975
The Private, Exclusive Guide for Serious Divers Since 1975
"Best of the Web: scuba tips no other
source dares to publish" -- Forbes
X
September 2012    Download the Entire Issue (PDF) Available to the Public Vol. 38, No. 9   RSS Feed for Undercurrent Issues
What's this?

Jardines de la Reina, Cuba

is it the marine paradise Anderson Cooper claims it to be?

from the September, 2012 issue of Undercurrent   Subscribe Now

Dear Fellow Diver:

It was expected to be a dark and stormy night. I awoke to the whistle of wind and a persistent tapping like drops from a rainspout. It was my fourth morning aboard the Tortuga, my Cuban floating hotel, in early March, and El Norte had arrived.

Four days before, I had left Havana at 5 a.m. with two American couples aboard a chartered motor coach, and rode for six hours to the port of Jucaro on central Cuba's southern side. Then we had boarded a motor launch for a three-hour journey to the Tortuga, our floating base for the next six days, only to be greeted with the news that an impending storm would require us to dive three times a day instead of two, so that we could get all our allotted dives before the weather closed in.

The Dive Deck on the TortugaOn my first morning, I awakened well before the roomservice coffee delivery to get my system booted and my gear assembled to avoid any last-minute stress. Then I joined fellow divers for a continental breakfast, including eggs and fresh bread (coffee lovers, bring a large cup). This was to be the standard, but sometimes fresh cookies or slices of cake were added. Breakfast introductions revealed one thing we divers all had in common: We were motivated to dive Jardines De La Reina (Queen's Gardens) because of Anderson Cooper's glowing 60 Minutes report on the place (see the video at www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7392092n ). We would soon take our checkout dive where he had praised the most pristine reefs in the Caribbean, and I was ready to find out if it lived up to my expectations.

I geared up on the uncluttered, 22' x 25' aft dive deck, where the only photographer's amenity was a dunk barrel with fresh water. There was a freshwater hose for wetsuit rinsing but no drying rack. All went well until I jammed my left foot into the sleeve of my 3mm full wetsuit. Chinese hand cuffs would have been easier to escape from. I hobbled around and finally fell into a deck chair; four fellow divers politely ignored the fiasco. I untangled myself, stepped into the skiff, and we departed for our checkout dive. Briefed and geared up, I backrolled and descended to a 30-foot-deep flat at Anclitas. I expected the southern side of Cuba, the side that seems to attract most Florida-bound hurricanes, to show some destruction, but the exceptional water clarity, and the health of the sea grass meadows and gorgonians amazed me. It seemed as if every square inch of the reef flat was competing with its neighbor for the nutrient-rich tidal flows. Sea fans were healthy, with perfectly-formed new tip growth, not like the tattered, diseased fans of Bonaire. I followed Fausto, our dive guide, off the flat and down to a sandy level at 60 feet. The photographers studied the bottom for subjects as we moved along a sloped side hill of hard coral. Fausto positioned me so I could be the one to make the discoveries, like a five-inch channel clinging crab, an edible-sized spiny lobster backed into a tight crack, an upright green moray lurking ominously from a series of pillar corals, and a 20-inch-long tiger grouper supporting two remoras.

Jardines de la Reina, CubaAfter I reached 900 psi, I began a slow ascent to a safety stop so I could breathe down to 500 psi and check my buoyancy. This was not to be. Our bubbles signaled Roberto, the boat driver, to drop tiny pieces of fish, attracting one, then three, then five more silky sharks that began circling the boat. The tiny scraps did not produce the melee I had seen on Mike Ball's Spoilsport when dead fish were dropped, just a continuous slow circling. For 15 minutes, they gave us almost every possible angle and pose. The silkies came close enough to touch (I did) or to observe the sun-lit muscle ridges along their sides as they undulated past. I checked my buoyancy and found I had overcompensated for my wetsuit. The consistent 79-degree water would have allowed me to use my 2mm shortie. The belt weights available were exclusively 1.1 pounds each, which made exact buoyancy and trim adjustments easy. Once up the vertical ladder, I exclaimed what a fantastic dive it was. "Just the beginning," said Fausto, "wait for the next dives." And I knew I had eight more dives before El Norte.

The skiff's gunwale perfectly matched the dive deck's height. The five of us stepped off while Roberto took our aluminum 80s and BCs to a small island to refill back to 3000 psi (air only). No noise from the compressor or the power generator ever reached our floating hotel. I walked up a stairway to the second floor and the Tortuga's seven cabins. Refurbished in 2008, the upstairs is tiled throughout and has room for 18 guests in a variety of individually controlled air-conditioned room configurations. My wood-paneled cabin, with a double bunk and single bed, had been cleaned by the two young female staffers, and my bed had been made. A large sliding glass window allowed me to sleep bug-free and without air conditioning. I had the choice of 220- or 110-volt outlets to charge my camera and strobe. My gear and clothes alone filled most of the storage space, so I can't imagine sharing the cabin with two others. In my bathroom were a porcelain commode, basin and a tiled shower with a powerful hand-held nozzle. Surface interval over, I dove again and returned for lunch.

Noel, the other dive guide, and I talked about the Tortuga's history while we ate. This 25-foot-wide, 100- foot-long wide steel hotel on a barge was built 15 years ago and intended as oil workers' living quarters. It's now run by the Italian Avalon Company and the Cuban Marlin Company, which have an exclusive license for the Jardines De La Reina protected zone, offering fishing and diving trips from the Tortuga and four other liveaboards. Noel has been with this boat from the beginning, working up from laborer to divemaster, and both and he and Fausto speak good English. A day later, he began guiding a group of four Canadians from a separate skiff, not crowding everyone in ours.

The lunches and dinners emphasized health and value rather than gourmet deliciousness, and used seasonal local products rather than imports. Shredded cabbage with tomato slices and vinaigrette dressing was the daily salad, and mango chunks and pineapple slices showed up three times daily. The starch choices were white rice, rice and beans, and yucca. Fresh fish lovers will love that snapper, grouper, lobster, and shellfish dominate the meals, and I was able to get red meat or chicken if I requested it.

Multiple Sharks on Every DiveBy the third day, I learned the routine. There were no whiteboards communicating dive site names, planned depths or attractions. If I saw fish carcasses in the back of the skiff, it was going to be a shark feed. Twice as many tanks meant bring sun protection; we were going to off-gas at an island beach. Fausto, an SSI-certified divemaster with five years' experience at Jardines, followed routines I was used to: first dives were deep, with an average depth of 102 feet. This was necessary for the deep shark feeds, where a fish carcass was put into a barrel sponge and covered with several pieces of coral. Reef sharks compete with groupers, yellowtails and queen triggerfish, all circling for a chance to stick their heads into the sponge. A great opportunity for over, under, headon or profile shark shots. Then back to the Tortuga or an island beach for the surface interval. The second dives averaged 82 feet, and could be another deep shark feed or an excursion to caverns and a surface feed for silky sharks. Yes, the emphasis of Jardines is the shark show. More than 80 percent of the dives were shark-oriented, possibly in deference to the photographers -- or because I never stepped up and asked for changes of scenery. The depth, duration and activity did not allow me to depart and follow my own profile unless it was to ascend for greater safety. On several dives, I found my aggressive computer indicating only three or four minutes out of deco. Fausto was watching and occasionally motioned me upward.(The nearest decompression chamber is six hours away in Havana).

We usually departed at 3 p.m. for the optional third dive, averaging 70 feet in depth. That was followed by happy hour on the shaded foredeck, where we watched the sunset while a friendly freshwater crocodile watched us, mint leaves were mulled into Mojitos, and multiple plates of pizza and focaccia were passed. Seven of the nine divers were smokers and probably never noticed the diesel smoke floating by as we talked. Beer, non-diet soda and liters of water were $1 each, while wine, liquor, and mixed drinks were offered for $2.

The fourth morning arrived, but El Norte's dreaded effects never materialized. The whistle of wind I thought I heard was from my closed cabin window, the tapping of raindrops was actually early-morning maintenance work on a nearby storage barge. Castro's flag had changed directions in response to the slight breeze from El Norte, the temperature had dropped from the normal 82 to 77 degrees, but the sun was rising and the gray clouds were breaking up as three of us boarded and shoved off. The twin 60-hp Yamahas took our narrow, 26-foot skiff through lagoons without a splash, and steeply banked around mangroves close enough to touch. I sat along the side, facing center, with my dressed BC flat on the floor at my feet. Eight divers could be carried comfortably. A small sunshade shielded only the driver and standing dive guide, so sun protection is a must.

Jardines de la Reina, CubaThe ride showed the unique magic of Jardines De La Reina. I was in a textbook barrier reef ecosystem 40 miles from Cuba's coast, significantly different from Bonaire's fringing reef fronting a polluted and rapidly developing coastline. The incoming tide brought very clear water and high visibility to the reef, while outbound flows from the mangroves reduced visibility, and nourished the flats backing the hard coral barriers. Approaching the open Caribbean felt like leaving a protective jade necklace of tiny green islands. After our 12-minute trip to the mooring buoy at Farallon, Fausto briefed us, Roberto handed me fins, and lifted my BC and tank, and I backrolled over 10 or 12 (no one was counting any more) waiting silky sharks. I descended to 85 feet, following Fausto through tight but sunny, open-roofed passages, and left the group to solo glide through a maze of contorted, twisting swim-throughs. We met in a box canyon and reversed our journey, then ascended to yet another surface-interval shark feed. Once aboard the skiff, I expected a quick return to base, but one of the divers had dropped his camera when exiting. We were deposited onto an island while Roberto went off to get fresh tanks, leaving with the admonishment: "If you see a three-foot iguana, well, it's not an iguana!" I walked the sand, finding pristine pieces of plastic trash deposited on the shore and washed into the island's dense foliage. The skiff returned, I boarded, we left, tied up, back rolled, found the camera and re-did the previous dive at a slower pace.

I inspected the underside of overhangs with my Sola 1200 compact light. These shadow zones, illuminated by powerful strobes or high-powered handhelds, revealed psychedelic displays of brilliant algae in shades of red, purple, pink and burgundy, with splotches of yellow thrown in, as well as leaf-hanging vine alga and strands of red and purple wire corals. But there were few small reef fish. Unlike Bonaire's variety of butterflies, angels, parrots and chromis, Jardines is infested with squadrons of plump, lazy lionfish. No removal efforts are being undertaken, and they probably would be ineffective. A guided ascent past multiple castles of fuzzy pillar coral ended my dive.

Back aboard, a diver said to me, "I notice you don't wear gloves." Fausto replied, "Gloves are prohibited in national parks, but you should wear them here so the sharks don't mistake your white hands for fish." Say what! My hands shriveled back into my wetsuit sleeves as though I'd been doused with ice water. Why wasn't I briefed?

The question was answered that evening by Antonio, Tortuga's manager. He admitted he had been taking care of a problem on one of the company's liveaboards for several days, allowing his competent and gracious staff to perform their duties, but not his. We had missed the welcome, C-card check, and briefing completely. He did tell me that the best diving season is from December to April, they never come close to the annual limit of visitors, and he invited me to bring my sling and shoot lionfish next time.

Americans willing to accept the challenges and reap the benefits will like diving in Cuba. The diving is not difficult, though one may find the outmoded facilities a little basic. Regardless, I know I will return. Thank you, Anderson Cooper, for highlighting this wonderful place.

-- J.J.

Jardines de la Reina, CubaDivers Compass: Cuban Diving Centers, the Tortuga's owner, runs both fishing and diving trips from its liveaboards, and its website gives excellent suggestions on money matters and getting there . . . The price runs about $3,630; the cost in U.S. dollars fluctuates because the package price is in Euros, but it includes round-trip flights from Cancun to Havana, two nights in a Havana hotel, the motorcoach and boat launch ride to and from Jardines, six nights lodging, all meals (including four liters of water and one Mojito per day), and 12 dives, but no night dives . . . The flight schedules prevented any tourism, so my shallow impressions of Havana are lots of neat old cars, quiet streets, grand old hotels, faded glory and no convenience stores . . . The Cressi rental equipment seemed in very good shape . . . I was told oxygen and first-aid kits were on the skiffs, and the drivers were in touch with base by marine radio and cell phone . . . It is illegal for Americans to spend money in Cuba, and the moment of truth occurs when presenting your CBP form 6059B to the Customs agent upon return to the U.S., so omit listing Cuba; if you are asked if you visited another country than Mexico, you must say yes, but you don't have to incriminate yourself by stating you spent money there . . . Minimize the risk by obtaining a GOES pass ( https://goes-app.cbp.dhs.gov ) to simplify your return to the U.S. from all foreign countries, and bring Euros as your currency . . . Cubana Airlines allows 66 pounds baggage and did not even consider my carry-on; overweight luggage charges are paid by the kilogram . . . Tortuga's website: http://cubanfishingcenters.com/tortuga.php

I want to get all the stories! Tell me how I can become an Undercurrent Online Member and get online access to all the articles of Undercurrent as well as thousands of first hand reports on dive operations world-wide


Find in  

| Home | Online Members Area | My Account | Login | Join |
| Travel Index | Dive Resort & Liveaboard Reviews | Featured Reports | Recent Issues | Back Issues |
| Dive Gear Index | Health/Safety Index | Environment & Misc. Index | Seasonal Planner | Blogs | Free Articles | Book Picks | News |
| Special Offers | RSS | FAQ | About Us | Contact Us | Links |

Copyright © 1996-2024 Undercurrent (www.undercurrent.org)
3020 Bridgeway, Ste 102, Sausalito, Ca 94965
All rights reserved.

cd