Dear Fellow Diver:
Jet lag does nothing for attitude enhancement. So
when I travel from the U.S. for a full day or more, my
annoyances are magnified. After the flight to Fiji, then
on to Honiara, I and 10 other divers arriving on the
same flight had to hang around the Honiara Hotel from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m., before being transported to the Bilikiki.
Assured by the pleasant office manager that he would
look for us around 4 p.m. for pickup, I roamed the muggy
open-air lounge and the cooler restaurant, then settled
into a lounge chair in the shade overlooking the harbor.
A birthday bunch of children laughed loudly and peed in
the pool. Unable to nap and knowing I had to pass time
for 90 minutes more in my travel malaise, I ordered lunch
and read a book. At 3 p.m., I looked around and saw that
my 10 companions were missing. When I asked at the desk,
I was told they had left for the Bilikiki. In a slight
panic after I discovered the phone numbers listed in my
paperwork did not answer, I sought aid from a hotel staff
member, who went to the beach and flagged down one of
the Bilikiki's tinny drivers, and I was soon on board. Without an apology, cruise director Kellie graciously gave
me the briefing, and I set up my tank. Cocktails on the
upper deck before dinner adjusted my attitude.
Ten days later, I had nothing but good diving memories.
For sheer coral
beauty adorning winding
canyons and reefs,
Kicha, a dive site in
Morova Lagoon, was a
standout. A few dozen
schooling barracuda
and a large white-tip
were in juxtaposition
to pygmy seahorses,
deep blue sea stars
and cushion stars. You
can't beat an awesome site, so we dived this one a second time.
Catching my attention were a group of
squarespot anthias, males painted magenta
with a blue square. An Indonesian pipehorse,
or its close cousin, was swimming
near a fan; I watched it gently curl its
tail to attach.
The Russell Islands host great caves,
caverns and swimthroughs. At Custom Cave,
three of us followed divemaster Sam though
a 60-foot-long tunnel that opened to a
wide cave in which shimmering shafts of
sun burst through. After exiting, Sam went
his way, and I finned into one cave after
another with gradually smaller openings. I spotted a comet in a crevice at a
cave entrance; deeper within was a paddlefin cardinalfish. A larger crevice led
inside the island to a pool of water opening on land; sunlight filtered through
the trees on thick vines. At Bat Cave, I swam through a wide crevice for 50
feet before surfacing to view bats inside a cave. Seventeen self-absorbed divers
popped up with their shining lights, disturbing the creatures. I dove deep to
avoid being kicked by fins. At Leru Cut, I swam through a narrow passage, surfacing
to find hanging vines and boulders with the filtered light. Magical.
The Bilikiki (the local word for sandpiper) is a well-maintained, bug-free,
older vessel that is 125 feet long and has a lot of character. She and her sister,
the Spirit -- out of commission for two years due to lack of business --
are the only liveaboards in the Solomons. Converted from a Taiwanese fishing
boat, the Bilikiki has been plying these waters since 1988 under the ownership of
Rick and Jane Belmare, who divide their time between Australia and Canada. Much
of the vessel has a bow-to-stern slope (from bed to bathroom in my stateroom),
but wall-to-wall carpet inside and out controls the potential slipperiness. Ten
staterooms accommodate 20 in comfortable bunk beds; my lower was a double-sized
bed. Guest rooms are below decks -- with slatted wood doors and no windows,
they're enough for privacy but not enough to keep out the sounds of your neighbors
talking and snoring, among other actions. Master-controlled air-conditioning
kept cabins at 75 degrees.
Diving must be coordinated with each island's chief and elders, as their
communities own the reefs through customary law. Early on, the Belmares gave them
seeds to grow food other than papaya and bananas. Today, to feed us divers, the
Belmares buy fruit, vegetables and fish from them, while passengers are potential
buyers for the impressive carvings. In addition, there is an undisclosed monetary
exchange and mutual support. One day while steaming toward a dive site, Sam
responded to a village request to help locate a sunken boat that sunk, but the
crew was unsuccessful.
Undersea, Solomon's topography varies widely -- walls, valleys, bommies, caverns,
caves, sandy bottoms, and plenty of colorful soft and hard corals, including
a field of giant sea fans. Tropical fish and critters abound, including the
more esoteric types. Visibility varied between 10 and 100-plus feet because it is
a nutrient-rich environment, often with lots of "stuff" floating. Water ran about
86 degrees, similar to daytime temperatures.
Wrasse flaunted the vast quantity of species in their family: wedge-tailed;
whitepatch razorfish (juvenile, deep reddish-brown); bird and sharpnose. I spotted
a tiny, greenish-yellow fish erratically darting about -- a juvenile whitespotted
wrasse -- then found it in the initial and terminal phases. I often
saw spadefishes (batfish to some), mostly large groups of golden and longfin.
Crocodile flatheads blended in well with the sand and rubble. I occasionally saw
sharks and turtles, bumphead parrotfish, Napoleon wrasse and eagle rays. I found
pygmy seahorses at several sites, and joined in spirited competition with other
divers to find all seven of the Solomons anemonefish species.
Led by their good-natured captain, the Bilikiki crew maintained a high level
of service and safety. They were friendly, respectful and professional -- never
in our faces but always ready to assist. The Belmares show them respect by having
the stern's upper deck set aside for crew use only. The friendly manager/
dive instructor duo of Sam and Kellie were always around between dives, joined
us for sunset viewing and ate meals with us.
They made diving easy, loading the gear each day on their two stable tinnies,
and helping me in and out from the mother boat. When I was geared up and
seated on the stern's water-level loading platform for a solo dusk or evening
dive, one of them was ready to give a firm push on the back for a face-plant
to avoid the tank hitting the platform. The dive deck provided ample space for
suiting up. Rinse tank water was changed daily, with a chemical added to kill
the plankton that die in wetsuits' minuscule nooks and crannies, and stink up
the place. In the lounge space was a large table for working on cameras, while
the charging station was on the upper deck. More than half of the divers had
underwater cameras, a few with strobes. I was ready to punch a certain diver who
banged into me underwater many times with his dual strobes. Of course, this guy
had to get into just the right position, even if it meant damaging coral.
Dive sites were usually just a minute or two tinnie ride. There were no
buddy-dive rules, only a suggestion to limit dives to one hour when the boat
was going to move; otherwise, it was between you and your computer. Kellie or
Sam checked the site before briefing, and one always dived to spot critters for
those who cared to follow. At dive's end, I would hand up my weights and tank,
and climb the tinnie's sturdy metal ladder. After each dive, I went to the upper
sundeck and ensconced myself in the lone hammock, replaying the dive in my mind
for 15 minutes. Afterwards, I visited the deck below, where popcorn, fruit or
cookies were laid out.
World War II history abounds. At the Florida Islands, I floated above
a nearly intact Japanese Mavis seaplane at 100 feet, and a debris field of
planes, boats, bombs, bottles, a tattered Japanese flag attached to a piece
of metal -- and pipefish galore. White Beach in the Russell Islands is an
eyesore, with jeeps, barges, pipes, tires and other WWII leftovers that were
unceremoniously pushed into the water around the island. (The Royal Australian
Navy is still clearing unexploded bombs.) But its marine life at this site did not disappoint: pajama cardinalfish,
eight-banded butterflyfish, needlefish,
morays, barramundi and a puzzling black
caengastropod snail with a fleshy shelless
appearance. When a cuttlefish laying
eggs noticed me, she deposited one
more, then calmly retreated five feet
to watch me. Back on board, I eagerly
watched the National Geographic DVD
Lost Fleet of Guadalcanal.
I could choose to dive at 8 a.m.,
11 a.m., 2 p.m., 5 p.m. and after dinner,
around 8:30. By the time 5 p.m.
rolled around, most divers chose to skip
the night dive and took a drink to the
upper deck to await sunset. One late
afternoon, I went in for a dusk dive in
calm waters, cloud cover, rain in the
distance, and no current on the wall.
Current around the point was strong,
and I decided not to fight it; four dives had left me hungry. With my night
dive light blazing, I exited alone to a black sky, strong wind, two-foot waves
and heavy rain. One tinnie had been waiting along the wall, the other around
the corner, and I was picked up instantly. The rain continued to pour throughout
dinner, blowing under the windows' plastic drop-down coverings; those of us
closest hustled inside. The vessel rocked for part of the seven-hour transit that
night but it was mostly stable.
With the exception of a twenty-something couple, we were a middle-aged group
of experienced divers who were never short of stories. The USA led in numbers,
along with divers from Australia, Canada and South Africa. This was the fourth
trip for an older couple who never lagged in showing enthusiasm. One woman only
snorkeled. She arrived with luggage filled with a treasure trove of gifts for
the villagers, and refilled it with village crafts. We guests intermingled in the
comfortable, covered lounge area mid-decks, at dinner at the three large tables
on the adjoining deck, and on the upper deck for viewing scenery. Plenty of
space and a lot of conviviality.
Buffet meals were attractively displayed, with a plate of fresh tasty fruit
-- banana, papaya, mango, starfruit and wonderfully sweet pineapple. Breakfast
always included eggs (fried like rubber bricks), breads, pancakes or French
toast (no syrup, just jams). Lunches were pizza, quiche, chicken wings or sandwiches,
along with salads -- rice, sweet and flavorful tomatoes, slaw and bean.
For dinners, soup, several salads and potato dishes accompanied the main course,
which was good but generally bland. The roast pork for Sunday dinner was succulent.
Fish in sauce was served a couple times, and crab joined the last meal.
The three cooks were conscientious about providing vegetarian choices. Desserts
were delicious profiteroles, flan and lime pie; ice cream was frequently available.
John, the bartender, would mix a drink and pour out wine, or you could do
it yourself and keep track. The cheapest bottle of wine was $20, or $5 by the
glass; beer was $3.50, shots of liquor were $4. When I asked for a one-shot gin
and tonic, I got two -- and was billed for it.
Between afternoon dives, we visited four villages. At three of them, beautiful
and intricate wood carvings were for sale at reasonable prices. Kellie
and Sam advised that negotiations should be whispered close to their ears, so
fellow carvers could not hear -- and don't insult their art with a ridiculously
low bid. I bought an interesting, well-carved palm nut sculpture with
turtles and fish. At the fourth village, we were presented with fragrant leis.
Most of the thatched houses were on stilts, with a separate kitchen used by
several families.
Overall, we had two bust dives, not bad for a 10-day trip. Off the village
at Peava Harbor, eight of us descended 20 minutes before dusk to await the mating
ritual of the mandarinfish. We formed a loose circle around the twiggy hard
coral and waited. Whenever there was movement, cameras flashed, blinding not only
me but I assume the fish, too. After 40 minutes of immobility, I left without
seeing the elusive mandarinfish. Still, most of us were game for manta-watching
several days later. At Devil's Highway, we quietly waited for them to come sailing
overhead. None came.
To get in three dives on the last day, Sam offered a 5:30 a.m. dawn dive
where we were anchored, Patrick's Beach in the Florida Islands. I was ready 20
minutes early, and two boat crew members magically appeared to put my tank in
the tinnie. I was shuttled to a site near shore, backrolled, and reveled in being
alone in the dark waters. Sam and another early-morning diver were brought to the
area halfway though my dive. Sam spent his time searching and digging out crownof-
thorns starfish. I surfaced to a brilliant sun and a sparkling rainbow. I
couldn't see the tinnie in the glare, but it was upon me in 20 seconds.
Our last dive of the trip was Anuha Island. The sandy bottom with widely
interspersed bommies was full of delights. As I rounded one outcropping, I came
head to head with a two-foot broadclub cuttlefish. After matching the grayish
tan of the rock, the cuttlefish went through an array of color changes, from
yellow to bluish purple to dark brown before finally settling back into its
original color. As we continued our staring match, he came closer and reached
out a tentacle toward my mask. After diving 75 minutes, it was time to end my
wanderings undersea at the Solomon Islands. I spotted Kellie alone and hovering.
I slowly approached and was treated to the view of two robust ghost pipefish, a
reddish-brown variation, side by side and floating nose downward. What a final
image of this great dive trip.
-- J.D.
Divers Compass: My 10-day trip cost me $3,880 . . . Airfare on
Air Pacific from LAX to Fiji was $1,200; from Fiji to Honiara via
Fly Solomons was $875 . . . I used Poseidon Dive Adventures to
set up the trip, and got burned on the inner-island flight leg;
I should have let Bilikiki set it up, as its reservations staff
knows the ins and outs of pricing in that area . . . I dived
nitrox, as did most of the divers, which cost $200 for the 10-day
trip, or $10 per tank. Website: www.bilikiki.com