Dear Fellow Diver:
Max Benjamin, the "First Father" of Papua New
Guinea diving, purchased a cocoa plantation at Kimbe
Bay in 1969, which he segued into an 800-acre palm
oil plantation and a first-class dive resort. Alan
Raabe came along later, and the two bought the liveaboard
FeBrina (Fe = iron, Brina = salt water) in 1991
for Raabe to skipper. They put in moorings to avoid
reef damage, and traveled to remote areas to administer
inoculations. A preschool was built and another is
in the works; water from Walindi's wells is shared via
pipes to nearby folks.
Knowing Undercurrent readers' glowing reports of the
diving and facilities, I signed up for 45 hours of doorto-
door travel, totaling 11,000 flight miles. Flying
from Port Moresby into Hoskins, West New Britain, I was
struck by the dense greenery covering the mountains, and
a volcano spewing smoke. As the terrain leveled, large
chunks of the jungle had been replaced by neat rows of
palm oil trees, refineries and holding tanks. On the
drive to Walindi Resort, we passed houses on stilts with
no running water, and ladies carrying loads on their
heads or selling a few items they had grown. A newsworthy
tidbit came
on the radio. There
had been an arrest
of 29 cannibal
cult members in the
Highlands, eight of
them women, for eating
raw human brains
and making soup
from their victims'
penises. I asked the
driver, a local,
if it were true or
a hoax. "Oh, yes,
very true," was his reply. "Popular some places." Michael
Rockefeller met a similar fate, they
say, in the 60s.
At Walindi, the welcoming hostess
cautioned us not to go barefoot.
Getting betel nut spit on your feet
is a common way of spreading tuberculosis
(the deep-red toothy smiles of
the locals spoke of the nut's popularity).
And to avoid malaria, it's wise
to wear bug spray and cover up in the
late afternoons (and of course, be on
a malaria prophylaxis).
After a good sleep in a large,
lovely bungalow, the night air filled
with the calls of birds and frogs, I was ready to dive. When I arrived at the
dock at 8 a.m, my gear was set up and off we went. A four-foot chop for the
first three days made the hour-long trip to sites jarring in the 21-foot, outboard-
powered, aluminum boat. But what reefs! On the first dive, at Joelle's, a
dizzying variety of tropical fish slowly swam about the seamount, as did schools
of barracuda, big-eye trevally and surgeonfish. Off by themselves were red-tooth
and clown triggers. Clarks, spinecheek and pink anemonefish hid among waving
anemone tentacles. I gave a wide berth to a patch of Corallimorpharia, whose
toxic sticky substance can penetrate a wetsuit and burn like fire.
In Kimbe Bay, the variety of soft and hard corals was staggering. Large
sea fans often harbored glorious nudibranchs. Red sea whips formed their own
little forest while razorfish moved in choreographed unison. My depths ranged
from 70 to 113 feet, and there was generally a safety stop to look for nudibranchs
or observe the schooling fish. Visibility varied from 50 to 150 feet.
Land and water temperatures were in the mid-80s. Perfect.
Max and his friendly son, Cheyne, run Walindi and employ approximately 90
workers. Seven locals provide security: Machetes, not guns, are the weapons of
choice. The resort has 12 well-appointed bungalows facing Kimbe Bay; they lack
air conditioning but screened windows on three sides let in the ocean breezes.
Two additional four-room plantation units can get noisy. Electricity is via generators,
and between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m., only two switches in a bungalow and the
battery charging area (an Aussie three-pronged 240-volt) will operate. There is
a mini-fridge and coffee/tea-making equipment. Well water is potable. A count of
37 guests is a "good full" (mainly Aussies and Japanese, many birders or hikers),
according to Ema, Cheyne's fiancé and registration manager. I was there in
late June, at the end of low season, and there were less than a dozen guests.
The staff served dinners in the covered, open-sided dining room. Sunday
Roasts offered a buffet of baked whole fish, tender roasted pork and chicken,
and a variety of salads and vegetables. When the FeBrina returns to port, they
put on a grill of steaks, hamburgers and sausages. The local steaks were flavorful
but tough. Their only steak knife, flimsy and dull, had to be passed
among diners. Food is plentiful and good, though occasionally there are shortages
(they recently went three months without any cheeses, and before that, it
was cereal and milk). Bananas, passionfruit and papaya were offered at breakfast
and lunch. My favorite dessert was a banana crepe (pancake) with plenty
of ice cream.
Back to the diving. While I saw gigantic sea fans on several dives, one
on Vanessa's Reef measured in at 12 feet. Bradford Shoals was a super dive,
with schooling and circling barracuda, big-eye and bar jacks, dogtooth tuna and
impressive leather coral. Otto's was bigger than life, with plate corals covering
large areas. Exploring the crevices, ledges and small caves, I spotted young
scorpionfish and a stonefish. Schools of barracuda and big-eye jacks hung in the deep, as did two sharks. Most impressive was a blown-up, silky orange anemone
with short tentacles -- it looked just like a pumpkin sitting alone on an elevated
coral head. Inside were two pink anemonefish measuring a quarter inch and
two inches, respectively.
I must say I've never seen so many bare butts and pee streams. In Kimbe Bay,
we were out for two to three dives, with lunch in between, but no bathrooms on
any of their three boats. The men aboard had no compunction about peeing over
the side or going to the bow, dropping suits and letting loose. One woman lowered
her wet suit, stooped and peed while standing on the ladder. I tried to be
more proper by removing my wetsuit and diving in the water, but the biting sea
lice had me making quick order of it.
For lunch, we would tie up to Restorf Island, and the crew would lay out
the food -- better than the dinners -- on a cloth covering the flat tank storage
area with real plates and silver. Sample fare included curried fish, rice,
papaya, coleslaw and tender, thin-sliced roast beef. One day we dived offshore,
a virtual muck dive that included miniscule wrasse, threadfin, pixie and dwarf
hawkfish, scorpionfish and mantis shrimp. Divemaster Lucas was adept at pointing
out the tiniest of crabs -- tiny green, boxers, pompom and shrimp, well camouflaged
on black coral, crinoids and anemones. I learned from another divemaster
who hunted pigs with spears with his grandfather that a measure of a man was how
many pigs he owned. He proudly told me he owned five.
Dan and Cat, Walindi's dive managers, are highly visible before and after
dives. Dan would stop by the dinner table to brief us on the next day's diving,
asking for requests. Cat thoroughly answered my questions before and during the
trip. In fact, when I realized after I got back home that I had left my expensive
sunglasses there, I emailed Cat, who had found them. A kindly Aussie mailed
them to me when she got home. Everyone I encountered at Walindi was courteous,
helpful, ready with a smile and eager to please. Westerners manage the show but
locals get the job done.
Then it was on to the MV FeBrina, a 73-foot, three-decked former Australian
fishing vessel brilliantly converted into a liveaboard dive boat by Captain
Raabe. The covered dive deck's functionality is top notch. Each guest has two
large wooden stacked bins; on top is ample space for working on cameras. The
crew changed water for cameras and mask-dunking daily. Charging stations, both
240-volt and 110-volt, are on the deck.
When I mentioned I was going to dive the FeBrina, most friends told me,
"You're gonna LOVE Captain Raabe. What a character!" True on the second count,
questionable on the "love" part. It was difficult to deal with his irascible
behaviors or to listen to his diatribes about his handpicked crew, previous
guests and locals -- all of which were peppered with colorful "politically questionable"
remarks (such as "Pat a Kiwi on the head and she'll drop her drawers"). On the other hand, he told captivating PNG adventure stories and even
showed a vulnerable, kind side toward day's end. Everything about him was on
overdrive, bigger than life. A word of advice: If you're going to ask for clarification
of a decision, do it after he goes
diving to decompress. Twice, I and another
diver engaged in heated disagreements with
him over dive-related issues that carried
over to the dive deck. The last day before
heading to dock, Captain Raabe had planned
for two dives. We asked for a third, but he
belligerently said that we were crazy because
we were flying the next morning. We countered
with the shallowness of the dives and
what our dive computer indicated -- going
with DAN's recommendation of 18 hours nofly
was within our profiles. I suggested we
begin with a dawn dive instead of 6:30 a.m. for our first dive because we never
motored at night, but that was met
with flat refusal. Back and forth
we went, getting increasingly voluble.
Just before he stepped into the
water, he shouted that he was sick of
the lot of us, and that if we get the
bends, just don't tell him about it. We dived three morning dives under 60
feet, finishing by noon.
Regardless, the FeBrina is the
best-run vessel of the dozens I
have been on, thanks to a crew of
eight PNG locals and, yes, the salty
Raabe at the helm. Levo, the engineer,
has five years tenure. Josie,
the boat's cornerstone and 12-year
vet, serves as manager, dive briefer,
instructor and ombudsman, and can
handle the vessel if necessary. The
three "girls," including divemaster
Diane who was pinch-hitting, cooked,
served, cleaned cabins and handled
personal laundry for free. Digger,
another divemaster, and Junior and
Joe, known as "the boys," joined
Josie as dive deck crew. Most dives
are programmed in the FeBrina's automated
GPS system, and with various
crew comfortable at the helm, Captain
Raabe could be elsewhere while motoring.
Cabins, including two singles,
are on the lower deck, bow and stern,
with steep stairs leading down from
the air-conditioned lounge. Heads are adequate but sinks are tiny. There was
plenty of hot water for showering, towels were changed daily, my bed was comfortable,
and best of all, individual AC could be set to personal preference. We were
advised to leave the porthole closed.
Diving was easy: Analyze and record Nitrox, suit up, listen to the barebones
but adequate briefing and don your tank. Walk down the few wide steps
backwards, and Joe is there with your fins. Stride at water level into welcoming
85-degree water with up to 100-foot visibility and no current. Twenty-one dives
were offered on my six-night trip. FeBrina's policy is to have two divers in
the water with guests. Junior, a deckie, not a divemaster, often chose to dive,
especially when there was a shark feeding and I was alone on the other side of
the reef. This young man in his 20s was a terrific spotter of the tiniest, most
esoteric camouflaged critters. We made sport of seeing who could make the "best
find." A floating "pod" of tiny, nearly developed, pinkish eggs loosely attached
by only a thread to each other had us both puzzled
While the FeBrina can take 12 divers, we were four Americans and a Belgian,
ages 28 to 70. Besides me, there was a professional underwater photographer averaging
1,000 shots per day, a geneticist who has been diving 50 years, a nomadic
bon vivant seeking sharks around the world and a psychologist bent on identifying
each and every critter spotted. Relaxing after the last dive of the day,
we shared much laughter and diving tales among us four and, of course, Captain
Raabe. The schedule was a diver's dream. Continental breakfast before the first
dive at 6:30 a.m. A full breakfast to order, then the second dive at 9 a.m. A snack, then the third dive at 11:30. Lunch, siesta, then the fourth dive at 3:30
p.m. Snack, a night dive at 6 p.m., then dinner. Josie suggested three rules:
Keep dives to 60 minutes because the vessel needs to travel during the day, come
up with 500 psi (which was not monitored), and when close to land (which we
never were), ladies keep their thighs covered so as not to insult the locals.
Silver-tip, white-tip and gray reef sharks joined us on most of the dozen
dives at Fathers. At least one swam within 10 feet on each dive. FeBrina encourages
the sharks to stay around several sites by hauling down a bait box, to the
photographers' delight, but preferring natural behavior, I would stay on the
other side of the reef. Once, two large white-tips followed me rather than the
dive guide with the box. I watched my dive buddy, who was heading for the feeding
spot, unaware that two were on his fins, close enough to be kicked -- and
they were. Captain Raabe was going to chum a site we had just dived, and the
sharks swimming there were close and amazing to behold. This time, the bait box
would be 30 feet underneath the boat, and there was no place to avoid them. I asked Captain Raabe if he would consider not doing it, but he berated me
for being "one of those nut jobs" and if I wanted a "natural" setting, then I
shouldn't be diving. "You think it's natural having you down there?" Donning his
tank, he continued his harangue. Sharks swam shallow at the back of the boat,
almost at the surface. I chose not to dive. (Digger, the guide handling the box,
got a nasty bite on the thumb by a red emperor snapper).
Critters were friendly at Father. After posing for photos, a broadclub cuttlefish,
settled down to his natural coloration. As he came closer partially
unfurling and retracting his tentacles, I "mimicked" him by extending my hand
toward his extensions and enjoyed the slow motion dance. On Meil's, a bannerfish
circled within a foot for 20 minutes; when I hovered, he would stop inches
in front of my goggles. Turtles at Jayne's took pieces of sponges from divers'
hands. Our four night dives were good, not great. Divemasters were tenacious
about prodding octopi out of their crevices, which was too much hands-on-critters
for me, but then, I'm not a photographer.
A morning dive at the Arches at Father's Reef on the Fourth of July seemed
very appropriate as the corals and sponges were bursting with colors, much like
fireworks. I swam by six five-foot-long bumphead parrotfish on my way down. On
the limestone mount, two small octopuses crawled about. The only arch is around
96 feet, and if there was another, I never found it. As dozens of pyramid butterflyfish
swarmed around the seamount, I made my way slowly up the mooring
rope, encrusted with tiny critters, allowing time to explore. It's said that 70 percent of all Indo-Pacific marine species can be found in PNG. About all I
missed were orcas and hammerheads, although there were sightings a few miles from
where I was diving. However, the dolphins tried to make up for it with regular
appearances. And both Kimbe Bay and Fathers are great places for nudis. The most
elegant was a white, yellow-fringed heron ardeadoris spotted at Meil's. The flabellina
bicolor and colorful exoptata were nicely spotted, too.
Ending the last dive of my trip, a fellow diver and I turned sommersaults
in the pure joy of these outstanding waters. While on board, I read a just-forlaughs
article Captain Raabe published in Ocean Realm in the late '90s, in which
he was given advice from his "spiritual mentor" in Japan. It goes something like
this: Life is like the shrimp-goby relationship -- symbiotic, always seeking a
balance -- so relax, and let it happen. Max Benjamin and Alan Raabe, above and
below the water, are great examples of symbiosis and seeking equilibrium in a
world where doing so is often not easy.
Travels are not easy, either. The 8 a.m. flight departing Hoskins was simply
not going to, which is often the case. I returned to Walindi for a breakfast
and six-hour wait. Of course, this led to a cascade of missed planes -- every
single one -- and forced overnights in Port Moresby and Brisbane. Air Nuigini
arranged good billeting and a fine allowance for food both places. Stopped by
police armed with M-16's and grenade launchers on my way back to the airport was
a fitting goodbye to this untamed land. They quickly passed us on. "Take Me Home
Country Road" was blaring on the van's radio as we continued on to the airport.
-- J.D.
Divers Compass: Round- trip airfares from the U.S. through
Brisbane run $2,500 to $4,000, depending upon stops and season;
get your visa in advance . . . A Walindi bungalow twin share
for four nights with 10 dives cost me $1,312 . . . On FeBrina,
six nights in a single cabin (it's typically eight nights) was
$2,261; Nitrox was $150 and good wine is complimentary at dinner
. . . I arranged my trip through Cliff at the dive travel agency
Reef & Rainforest ( www.reefrainforest.com ), and he also enjoys
staying here . . . A PNG visa on arrival is $49; exchange money
in Port Moresby Immigration, next to where you buy it . . . Make sure your
agent for Air Niugini flights gets the divers' extra 33 pounds luggage allowance,
which brings it up to 68 pounds for PNG domestic flights, 99 pounds for
international; that airline mandates only one carry-on weighing no more than 11
pounds, but my small carryon and backpack were not weighed nor questioned . . .
Laundry was complimentary both at Walindi and FeBrina, so take only a couple of
changes . . . Website - www.walindi.com