Dear Fellow Diver:
"Go, go, go! Over there! Over there!" Several miles
off Isla de Mujeres, our guide was yelling and pointing
to an immense spotted dorsal fin flopped over on the
surface, and a two-foot high caudal fin trailing it by a
good eight feet. I went over there, as fast as I could.
The shark pulled away easily, finning languid "s" patterns
in the plankton-rich water. I clamped down on my snorkel
and swam harder, or maybe the shark slowed, but I saw a
gray shape in front of me, then the white spots, and then
. . .
Whale sharks. For me, they're the Mount Everest
of sea beasts, and like Ahab, I've looked for them in
the seven seas. In Papua New Guinea, Australia, Palau,
Honduras and more. But not one damn whale shark. On Grand
Cayman, a South African guide told me there were so many
off Mozambique that she got tired of looking at them. In
Cozumel last April, I heard about a kid who, on his first
openwater dive after certification, saw a 15-footer next
to his boat. No doubt, I had the whale shark jinx. Then
I received an email from the dive travel agency Island
Dreams, with the heading "Whale Shark Season in Mexico,"
and a picture of a hotel big enough to house an army. I
thought, "Oy. Huge
hotels, all-inclusive
partying, parasailing,
screaming
kids and . . . whale
sharks?" Is this
something real divers
do? But I wanted
to see the sharks.
Each summer,
hundreds of whale
sharks appear off
the Yucatan barrier
island of Holbox to feast in an ocean turned pea-green by a
massive plankton bloom. The Holbox sharks
are spread over dozens or even hundreds of
square miles, in often murky waters. You
can make the tiny town of Holbox home base,
but if you're staying in the Cancun area,
a van will pick you up at your hotel at 4
a.m. ( Undercurrent was the first publication
to break the story of the Holbox whale
sharks; read our review online at www.undercurrent.org/UCnow/dive_magazine/2004/HolboxIsland200410.html )
A potentially denser gathering occurs
with some regularity in the open ocean off
Isla de Mujeres. Some scientists believe
the sharks arrive to feed off the spawn of
tunny, a small tuna species. My late-July
visit would be at the tail end of the full
moon, when the tunny had spawned, and a huge aggregation was predicted.
But I couldn't deal with the mega-hotel or the Playa del Carmen tourist
chaos, so I selected the 65-room Maroma Resort and Spa, a quiet luxury resort 30
minutes south of Cancun and 20 minutes north of Playa del Carmen. After turning
off the main highway, I drove a meandering route through a forest of palmetto
and poinciana, then past a faux-Mayan gatehouse to the lobby entrance, where the
blue Caribbean was visible past the first of three pools. The concierge greeted
me and my partner with margaritas, and we walked down a stone jungle path to
our king-sized room on the second floor, overlooking another pool reserved for
our cluster of eight rooms. But the pool was ours alone because no other guests
were assigned to our cluster that week. At this point, I usually relax and let
my partner wheedle her way into an upgrade or beachfront room. Not this time. No
beachfront rooms available, and others would cost another $1,000 -- per day.
Staying put, I called Yucatek Divers in downtown Playa del Carmen, and spoke
with owner Jean-Yves Moret, a Swiss national, to make arrangements for the next
morning. The wind had kicked up, so Jean-Yves recommended cenote diving, but he
noted that the weather would improve and would not affect the whale shark trip.
So I scheduled three days of cenote diving and two days of ocean dives. Then we
took our margaritas to the beach, reclined on a king-size beach bed under two
umbrellas, and contemplated the blueness of the water. That night, we ate ceviche
at the hotel bar. One restaurant offered high-end Mexican cuisine and western
dishes, while the other, a French restaurant with only seven tables, offered
exquisite, fresh seafood dishes. Later in the week, we tried El Fogon, a taqueria
a few blocks away. It's open on two sides so it gets the breeze, and it has
live music, lots of locals and tasty, inexpensive grub.
The next morning, a family of white-faced coatis descended from the trees
to watch the bellhop load us and our gear into his golf cart for the drive to
the parking lot. We hopped into our rental car and headed into the traffic on
the main highway, passing police checkpoints on the way. Armed with submachine
guns, the cops peered into our vehicle. We -- and all tourists -- passed without
incident, but locals seemed to be stopped for sobriety, overloading and vehicle
maintenance issues.
Yucatek Divers is two blocks from the ocean, in a two-story building across
the street from a local breakfast joint that never seemed to be open.(We had a
spectacular breakfast at the hotel.) After Jean-Yves checked C-cards, I signed
the usual release forms (if I were to check an ailment, he said, I would be
required to see a local physician), and we loaded the gear, aluminum 80s,
weights, four divers and a guide into a van for the 30-minute drive to Chac Mool
to dive the Kukulkan and Little Brother cenotes.
Geologically, the Yucatan is a limestone platform with many underground
freshwater rivers running through it. At various places, the roof of a cave has
collapsed, creating a sinkhole and exposing the cave to the surface. While a
haven for hardcore cave divers, a handful of cenotes have caverns with natural
light, and many have multiple openings, so it is possible to swim away from the
entry point and see light in front of you. So, as our guide, Leopoldo ("Polo")
Lacona, explained during the drive, there are special rules: a maximum of four
divers per guide; no dangling equipment or knives; stay one meter away from the
guideline and one meter from the diver in front of you; maintain buoyancy away
from the bottom and the ceiling; carry at least one light and keep it on at all
times; stay above 70 feet of depth; stay horizontal; no scissor kicking, only
gentle finning from knee to ankle; any diver can abort the dive at any time; and obey the rule of thirds -- one third of a tank for the way into the cavern, onethird
of a tank for the way out, and one-third as a reserve. Because most dives
are a maximum of 50 feet deep, it's possible to stay in the water for 45 minutes
or more.
At the site, I set up my gear on a table in the parking lot. Suited up in
a 5mm wetsuit with less weight than usual, due to the freshwater, I walked down
steps cut into the limestone to a pond under a stone overhang. After inflating my
BC, I took a giant stride into the 75-degree freshwater and donned my fins. We
dropped down to six feet, formed a line and swam past boulders from the collapsed
ceiling. Rains had raised the halocline above its usual 30-foot depth, and for
a while I was unable to see much, due to the shimmery emulsion. When I finally
emerged into unbelievably clear water, I had the startling experience of seeing a
diver floating in what seemed to be air.
After a 45-minute surface interval, we were back in at the "Little Brother"
entrance at Chac Mool, and looking up at blue sky and vivid jungle greens
through openings to the surface. Stalactites like gray sea pillars poked up from
the talc-like bottom. It seemed like we were briefly beyond visible light as we
passed through a large room at our maximum depth of 40 feet, then curved around
back to the entrance. After we exited, Polo served sandwiches of "carne misterioso"
and bottled water. It was just enough food to ruin my lunch without being
enough food for lunch. No chips, fruit, dessert or juices, so next time I skipped
it and had a great burger at Zenzi's on the beach in Playa del Carmen.
Next day, the wind was still up, so we stuck with cenotes. Rather than boulders
and tree trunks, Dos Ojos offered long swims around sharp stalactites and
stalagmites, limestone waterfalls and curtains resembling tunnels in the Alien
films, delicate columns and deep, dark chambers leading to more than 60 kilometers
of caves that then link to other sinkholes. On our second dive, we surfaced
briefly in the Bat Cave, a large air dome populated by vampire bats, with sunlight
beaming like a laser through a small opening to the surface, where a rope
led to a platform in the water. I liked diving the cenotes -- I had never done
it before -- and sites like Dos Ojos with its dark, forbidden tunnels gave me a
taste of what cave diving could be like. But in the end, I'm a fish freak and
longed for the open ocean.
The following day, we met at the dive shop for two ocean dives. Six
Belgians formed one group, while my partner and I made a second group with a
young Swiss woman with 10 dives. The gear was wheeled from the shop down to
the beach, while we divers, in our wetsuits
tied off at the waist, walked to
the beach. Oops, not enough tanks. So
the crew ran back to the shop to collect
more, while we hung around in our
wetsuits for too long in the morning
heat. I waded to the 30-foot covered
panga, clambered aboard the stern
between the two outboards, and set up
my gear before we finally took off for
the 15-minute ride to Tortugas. With
10 divers, two guides, and a captain,
the boat was crowded, and I wondered why they couldn't put out two boats if
the rides were only 15 minutes. After
a short briefing, I backrolled into
82-degree water and dropped to 70 feet
over a flat sandy reef. The current
was running at about one knot, and I
drifted past enormous barrel sponges
tilted away from the flow. Eventually
I spotted a few of the hawksbill turtles
that the place is named for, but there weren't a lot of fish, surely nothing sizeable. Polo inflated his surface
signal at 800 psi, and we were soon back on board. The Belgians stayed down
another 10 minutes, but in my mind the site didn't justify more time.
Polo handed out bottled water (no snacks), and we went ashore near a Mayan
archeological site to do the necessaries in the bushes. A second dive at Sabalos
proved more interesting -- hundreds of blue-striped grunts huddling out of the
current under low coral ledges, a school of horse-eye jacks, southern rays, lobsters
and a lionfish. Now here, I could have stayed longer. My partner had 1200
psi in her tank after a 49-minute dive, but Polo enforced the 800 psi limit,
which the newbie we were paired with reached well before we did. The Belgian
group again surfaced after we were back on board. For comparison, although the
isle of Cozumel can be viewed from the mainland, the underwater topography there
is much more dramatic and the sea life larger and more diverse.
On Wednesday, a van picked us up at our hotel and we headed to Cancun to
begin our whale shark expedition. During the ride, the guide handed out brochures
advising what to do -- and mostly not do -- around the sharks. We were asked not
to use sunscreen, because the nonbiodegradable stuff comes off in the water and
apparently is ingested by the sharks, to their detriment. Regardless, most of the
12 adventurers greased up, then piled aboard a 35-foot modified panga to set off
past Isla de Mujeres for the 90-minute ride to the feeding frenzy.
But it wasn't the sharks that were in a frenzy, it was the tour operators. At least 60 boats clustered in a half-square-mile of blue water, maneuvering
slowly around several hundred sharks. Snorkelers milled around the surface, three
or four to a shark, often ignoring the two-meter distance limit. Some waited for
a shark to come to them. Others thrashed off in pursuit.
Our boat had a different, and I hope, kinder plan. The captain hung around
the edge of the feed, away from a lot of the chaos. We had been set up in groups
of four and cautioned to stay with our guide, Luis. We'd be in the water for 10
to 15 minutes, then climb out so the next group could go in. "When I say 'jump,'
you jump," Luis said. "Don't wait. When I say 'out,' get out, don't worry.
You'll get to jump many times." So after 791 dives that lacked swimming with one
Rhincodon typus, I jumped.
I'd like to believe the sharks were unaffected. They never seemed to change
course. They just swam slowly through the food, oval mouths agape, tiny eyes
watching the curious human-fish trying to keep up as they swam sinuous S shapes
in the blue. The largest were probably 20 feet long, cruising close to the tiny
humans, daring us to grab a fin. Nobody did. Feeding mantas clustered in twos and
threes, and held our attention until the next shark came into view. Then we were
off again, full speed ahead. My best encounters were away from guide and group. I'd pick a shark, wait, and then have it to myself, 30 seconds with the biggest
fish in the sea. An awesome and ancient power, unconcerned with money, man, politics
or the spectacle surrounding itself. Marvelous, stunning, inspiring, humbling.
I loved the sharks. I hated the human spectacle.
On the way back, we anchored in the shallow lee of Isla de Mujeres with many
of the other shark boats. Cervezas and sandwiches were handed out, and fresh
ceviche prepared. I chilled in the calm water and considered the events of the
day, weighing the wonder of the whale sharks against the impact on them, wondering
if I was part of a larger problem.
-- D.L.
Divers Compass: Cancun is easy to reach nonstop from many cities,
with low prices ($650 from Newark, as little as $514 from LAX);
to get my dive bags' weight below 50 pounds, I checked three bags
and paid $40 extra because each bag over 50 pounds would have
cost me $200 . . . I reserved a car from Thrifty for only $42 for
the week, and then found that if I didn't take the $140 Limited
Damage Waiver insurance, they wouldn't rent to me . . . Yucatek
Divers would have picked us up and returned us to the airport for
$70 each way, and they would also have taken us from the hotel
to the dive shop for a fee, but when I added it all up, a car was cheaper and
gave us the freedom to check out other attractions and restaurants . . . I went
to the Mega store in town and bought a case of water, snacks, and sun lotion;
they have everything you need, including beer and well-priced tequilas . . . The
Maroma Beach Resort set me back $3,300 for the week for a pool-view room with
king bed and a brilliant table-service breakfast included . . . If you don't mind a huge hotel, Island Dreams ( www.divetrip.com ) offers packages at the beachfront
Playacar Palace, just one block from Avenida Cinco and its rope-a-dope carnival
atmosphere . . . Bring your own gear and Yucatek Divers charges $75 for a
two-tank ocean dive and $120 for a two-tank cenote dive, or you can book three
two-tank ocean dives, one two-tank cenote dive and two tanks in Cozumel for $380;
the whale shark snorkel trip cost $220, including the round-trip van ride from my
hotel . . . In the afternoons, I drove to attractions like the ruins at Tulum,
where ticket lines were long, and the weather is hot (join a group, if you can);
the ruins at Chichen Itza are spectacular and well worth the trip, but it takes
an entire day . . . Websites: Yucatek Divers - www.yucatek-divers.com ; Maroma
Resort and Spa - www.Maromahotel.com