smud
Dear Fellow Diver:
I was fortunate to have taken my Sulawesi dive trip in early June, before the
earthquake and tsunami that has killed at least 1,500 people. And now Mount Soputan,
on the northern arm is ewrupting lava and spouting ash three miles into the air.
While I was there, volcanic peaks were simply scenic charm along the horizon as my
spouse and I, the only passengers on the dive boat, cruised around the northeastern
tip of Sulawesi Island. However, I still had not enjoyed the ideal vacation yet: I
had been wiped out by a bout of lower tract "discomfort" at Lembeh Resort the week
before. Fortunately, I had only missed one
dive, thanks to three days' worth of azithromycin
(recommended in Indonesia for traveler's
diarrhea, versus ciprofloxacin used in
other countries), but I was now in the mindset
for relaxing dives that weren't exerting.
So, I was ready for a change of scenery and a
slower pace at Siladen Resort, a sister hotel
to Lembeh Resort.
My Lembeh and Siladen Resorts package
included a land transfer from the former to
the latter, but when I heard about the boat
transfer involving two dives in the threehour
cruise, I opted for that upgrade. Why
drive when you can dive along the way to
your destination? I found it to be an amazing
deal. We moored off Bangka Island, equidistant
between Lembeh and Siladen. Divemaster Ramly outlined the dive at Sampiri 3 on a whiteboard, the main attraction being a
volcanic hot spring. Within minutes of backrolling in and settling to the bottom, he
found a blue-ring octopus hunting along the sand. Its rings pulsed bright blue whenever
Ramly waved his tickle stick. I took multiple photos before moving on to other
creatures -- a tiny hairy shrimp (alas, the devious creature was hard to catch in
focus), pygmy seahorse, harlequin and orangutan crabs. After feeling the heat of the
hot spring at 70 feet, I passed a football-sized giant frogfish while ascending to
the surface.
As our boat nudged onto a shady beach on the tiny island of Pulau Siladen, I got
the sense my time here would be as uneventful as I wanted it to be. A group of villagers
sat in the sand; dogs wandered back and forth. Boat crew hopped in the water,
hoisted our luggage on their shoulders, and loaded everything onto a large pushcart.
A young lady from the resort met us, explaining that at low tide, their dive boats
must moor next to the village's deeper jetty instead of the resort's shallower beach.
A resort golf cart normally shuttled to and from this low-tide mooring, but it was
out of commission. The 15-minute walk turned out to be an easy stroll on a paved
sidewalk that took us past children pedaling on bicycles, and a tiny bodega with
snack food and powdered coffee hanging in its screened windows.
I opened the main gate and went down the covered walkway that wrapped around a
sprawling salt-water pool, connecting the
front desk, restaurant and cozy bar with
pool table. I was warmly greeted at the main
office, then shown my home-away-from-home.
The 520-square-foot garden view villa, occupying
half a duplex, was paneled in wood,
with high peaked ceilings, and looked out
over some parched, scruffy-looking plantings.
A footpath led to the porch, holding
a small couch, table and drying rack. A king
poster bed draped in mosquito netting stood
in the middle of the air-conditioned room.
A nook contained a five-gallon jug of drinking
water with hot and cold water spigots,
instant coffees and tea bags. Electricity
was 220-volt, with outlets close to a desk
I used for my camera station. Our greeter brought me a multi-outlet power
strip and towels from the camera
room. In the shower in the openair
bathroom, water from a rainfall
head flowed down onto thick
black tiles, with blue sky and
tropical foliage perched overhead.
Body wash, conditioner and
shampoo in capped ceramic vases
sat on an altar-like stand.
Showering was like performing
a primitive cleansing ritual.
The only flaw: the odd mosquito
flying in from above to disturb
my meditations while sitting on
the throne.
After eating breakfast that was served at 7 a.m., I headed to the dive center
for our 8 a.m. briefing before walking to the boats. Two morning boat dives were followed
by lunch at 1 p.m. Siladen's dives were spa-like, usually drift dives requiring
little energy. My standard routine: dropping into 60-foot-plus visibility, drifting
along a sloping or steep wall, staying at depth for awhile, then gradually poking my
way back up. Bottom times usually exceeded an hour. We often meandered around 60 feet
for a long time, so I requested nitrox after the first day. Water hovered around 82
degrees; my 5-mil and hooded tunic worked great.
Bunaken Marine Park is home to nearly 400 coral species; they looked healthy
because so many coral polyps were fully open and feeding during the day. Plenty of
sea whips gave me many opportunities to spot and photograph the tiny whip coral goby.
Hard, rough star coral were covered with so many tiny white polyps, they resembled
super-powdery sugar donuts squashed together in a big lump.
The dive staff, mainly from Siladen and North Sulawesi, gave complete safety
and dive briefings and came to the rescue when my regulator's second stage started
breathing wet. Galen Schmitt, one of the dive center managers, quickly swapped one of
their regulators for mine. The next day my regulator was back on my rig, staying nice
and dry.
Siladen's friendly feeling was led by managers Ana Fonseca and Miguel Ribeiro,
a married couple of Portuguese divers who met while working at another resort. Ana
greeted me with a big smile at nearly every meal, and she switched easily between
multiple languages when saying hello to everyone. Eco-friendly as well, Siladen asked
guests to pack out their own waste plastic and spent batteries, and it set aside a
patch of its beach for a turtle hatchery. Too bad they couldn't do anything about the
smudgy smoke from fires just outside the resort that could pose a hazard to guests
with lung issues in the one or two villas at that extreme end.
I saw so much coral on so many easy wall drift dives that after a while, I
longed for a classic Sulawesi muck dive or two. (Siladen offered them at nearby
Manado, I was just too lazy to request any.) The only time we dove below 100 feet
was to see an uncommon yellow pygmy seahorse on an afternoon dive at Sachiko II off
Bunaken Island. As we descended to 104 feet in 55-foot visibility, I was leery of
making this my third dive of the day. I kept such a close eye on my computer, I felt
distracted from the dive. But that little yellow seahorse got my full attention. The
other divers were not photo-hounds, so I spent some quality time with it, using my
trusty Nikon 105 coupled with ReefNet's 10x diopter. We took the remaining 35 minutes
ascending slowly past nudibranch, many reef fish, large sponges, hard and soft
corals. My computer showed me "in the green" the whole time.
Alvian, my 20-something Sulawesi guide for nearly the entire week, deployed a surface
marker buoy after such drift dives; we'd surface as a group and be quickly spotted
by the boat, often a quarter-mile away. Hot face towels, tea, coffee, hot cocoa
and often sweet cakes were offered after each dive, then Alvian recounted our major
sightings. My log entries filled with orangutan crabs, porcelain crabs, nudibranch in rainbow colors, flatworms, Ambon, leaf and devil scorpionfish, a hairy octopus, little
dancing harlequin sweetlips, batfish, and white tip sharks. I readily accepted Alvian's
offers to carry my heavy camera rig from the dive center to the boat and back. Divers
put on or took off gear in the water. Dive staff always set up and cleaned our gear,
and with care.
Only a couple of other divers joined me on most dives -- a French physician and
a business executive from Monaco now based in Singapore. Both spoke English, and we
got along great. The 3 p.m. afternoon dive left time afterward to shower, prep my
camera and enjoy a sundowner while reviewing the day's photos, all before dinner at
7 p.m. Siladen offered periodic dusk (mandarin) and night dives (the tank-like sponge
crab lumbering past my night-dive lights was hilarious.)
All the dive boats were fully-roofed monohulls, 50 feet long and 10 feet wide,
plenty roomy for the resort's standard max of 12 divers. Twin 100-HP Yamaha outboards
propelled us to moorings, mostly 30- to 45 minutes away, off Bunaken Island
(Siladen's boats moor instead of anchor). The roof was sturdy enough to climb up and
catch some rays topside. A rinse tank for cameras was big enough for my rig and some
smaller point-and-shoots, but too small for a boatload of heavy-duty gear.
Dive staff welcomed me every morning in the open-air meeting area with ample
seating, fish books and charts, boat assignments on whiteboards and dive site maps.
A high-pressure air nozzle and two camera rinse tanks stood near the air-conditioned
camera room, with plenty of stations and towels. The gear storage building next door
was airy, with separate spaces for each villa, standing 15 yards from the shoreline
where dive boats moored. Walking up the beach, I rinsed my feet in a shallow pool,
showered and rinsed my suit in tanks outside the locker area. Staff handled the rest,
including cleaning and drying my gear at week's end.
The sea between the islands in Bunaken Marine Park plunges to 6,000 feet, so
it paid to look away from the walls and down into the blue. Among the fly-bys: huge
green humphead parrotfish and endangered Napoleon wrasse, the largest of its kind.
After years of Caribbean diving, I'd never seen particularly large hawksbill or green
sea turtles. This changed here, most memorably at Lekuan Pygmy, on the far side of
Bunaken. One monster spotted a sponge on the wall that must have looked particularly
appetizing, glided in for a landing, then ripped into that sponge like a dog given a
thick steak.
At Fukui, down at 70 feet, I felt something akin to the holy when we came across a
group of truly giant clams and empty shells, about two-and-a-half-feet across. Was this an ancient family, with the offspring living
next to the sacred "bones" of its ancestors?
By stark contrast, at the end of the dive, we
came across some man-made structures set as an
artificial reef, their lack of marine growth
and unnatural-looking lines reminding me how
important it is to protect the marine life
that's already there.
Breakfast and dinner were set under the
restaurant's open rotunda. As the sun climbed,
I tucked into breakfasts of chilled juices and
smoothies, cold cereal and yogurt with fruit
and muesli, and hot dishes like eggs Benedict,
sausage, bacon, French toast, pancakes and
made-to-order eggs. Lunch was often served on
white-linen-covered tables on the beach, with
dishes ordered from a menu or on buffet tables.
Chef Mateo, an Italian with an animated personality
and charming accent, served up the
fine-dining-worthy cuisine. Starter dishes from
the lunch and dinner feasts included prawn
salad with mint dressing and fusilli pasta with
minced beef and tomato sauce. Main courses included tofu with herbs steamed in a banana
leaf, tempeh-encrusted fish and chicken Cordon Bleu. I tried to save room for desserts
like apple crumble, lemon tarte and coffee mud cake.
The most challenging part of my trip was hunting for and doing justice to what
became my target photo op: a hairy shrimp smaller than the tip of a matchstick. After
multiple failed attempts to get a clear photo, Alvian came to my rescue, finding one
more on my last day of diving. Out of six images, one was clear enough to see its
legs and eyes in the same shot -- a home run.
On other dive vacations, there always seemed to be a timetable to meet, and I've
rushed to board dive boats on time and make every minute count. During my week at
Siladen, watching a blood-red sky at sunset, marked by the massive dark outline of a
,800-foot volcano rising directly out of the sea, the gentle diving and gracious feel
enveloped me. Staff put on no special show for me -- I paid my own way and did not
disclose I was writing for Undercurrent -- but this time, especially after gastrointestinal
issues, being able to chill was the thrill. Siladen was the most relaxing
and refreshing dive experience I've had. I hope Mother Nature gives it and the rest
of the Sulawesi island community a much-needed break from excitement for a while."
-- S.P.
Our Undercover Diver's Bio: "While learning to scuba 35 years ago, my beaver-tail
neoprene wetsuit got me through my YMCA silver-level certification, even if I did freeze
my bippy off during 100-foot descents onto Great Lakes freighters. I've gradually earned
all the main certifications, including Master Scuba Diver, and I have an SDI/TDI/ERDI
solo diving certification that comes in handy when I am sometimes left on my own while
taking photos on dives. In between frequent dive trips, from the Caribbean to the Asia
Pacific, I am a public safety diver and try to dive once a week year-round when our
local lakes are not frozen over, and when they are, I'm ice diving."
Divers Compass: My 15-dive stay came to $2,033 for me, and $1,313 for
my non-diver spouse . . . Round-trip airfare from the Midwest with a
one-night stop in Singapore was $2,471 per person, and boat transfer
for two from Lembeh Resort to Siladen was $325, plus $90 for the two
dives . . . Entrance tags to Bunaken National Park were $10.25; Nitrox
was $8 per tank . . . Complimentary beverages, with the exception of
an extra $2-$3 for gourmet coffees, $7.50 for a glass of wine, $5 for
Big Bintang beers, and $9.50 and up for mixed drinks . . . In addition
to the service fees on our bill, I tipped $200 for the dive staff and $200 for the
resort staff; my regulator rental/repair was $15 . . . Siladen has a strict no-gloves policy, but my doctor wrote an official letter requesting I be allowed to wear them (I
get cold easily, so they were for exposure protection), and the resort didn't question
it . . . Indonesian rupiah, U.S. dollars and credit cards are accepted . . . I highly
recommend overnighting in Singapore -- we stayed at the boutique Amoy Hotel ($180/
night, which included one airport transfer and breakfast) and saw highlights such as
the Gardens by the Bay and Sentosa Island . . . Bluewater Dive Travel put my package
together with expertise . . . Websites: Siladen Resort & Spa - www.Siladen.com; Bluewater Dive Travel - (www.bluewaterdivetravel.com)