The deplaning passengers were staring at us. You’d think they had never seen
people wearing lobster, parrot, and pig noses before. But we were just a covey of
crazy divers out to have the dive trip of a lifetime -- luxurious and unforgettable
diving aboard Palau’s Sun Dancer II.
Arriving a day early, I spent my first night at West Plaza, a step down in elegance
from the Palau Pacific Resort but at one-third the cost. The room was
simple, the staff pleasant and helpful. Next day it was the Palau Pacific, where
Peter Hughes arranges day rooms for incoming guests to ward off jet lag. My group
of eighteen made up the bulk of the twenty passengers, the boat’s full complement.
A Sun Dancer staffer picked us up at 4 p.m. He didn’t seem impressed by our animal
noses.
The Sun Dancer was squat and ungainly from the stern, but from the side, a sleek
138-ft. study in elegance -- or it would have been, except that it was sitting in a
scummy harbor filled with land/sea containers, with the Star Dancer tied off on the
side. Sun Dancer’s polished wood, curtains, and glassware seemed too opulent for
saltwater-soaked wet divers, though I could get used to it, if the crew wasn’t too
highbrow to put up with a gaggle of woo-hooing divers. The dive deck had lots of
room, plus rinse tanks, hang bars for wetsuits, two hot showers, two camera rinse
tanks, and twin camera tables complete with compressed air and camera towels. The
uppermost deck, the shaded Lido deck, held deck chairs and hammocks. We socialized
on the main deck, where there’s a briefing room (with insufficient room for 20
divers) that has a drop-down erase board and a bright and spacious dining room,
with tables, booths, and chairs. They serve breakfast and lunch at the large island
bar. On the other end of the room were a small coffee bar and a comfy sofa in the
TV area. An area is set aside for smokers.
Down below, most cabins were spacious, with a
picture window with double twins or beds pushed
together to make a king. The Captain’s Room, one
deck down, only had a porthole, but was bigger
and had a TV/VCR; the two forward rooms had
queen beds, picture windows and small TV/VCRs.
All rooms had hair dryers, but none had keys. My
room was quiet -- no compressor noise.
Remembering that the website said we would
depart between 5 and 6 p.m., I was ready to cast
off until Captain Allen said the bay was littered
with coral heads waiting to shred the
bottom of his boat, so we’d spend the night in
the harbor, which may be the normal modus operandi.
We’d depart at 6:00 a.m., he said, but we
left late, so the first dive began late, and lunch and dinner were rushed. Once I
hit the water, though, I forgot all that. With temps from 82° to 85° and visibility
up to 140 (though it got as low as 40) feet, life was good. That riot of
intense colors of fish and coral will calm you every time.
It had been three years since my last South Pacific trip, so I’d grown accustomed
to the muted reef colors of the Caribbean. My first dive at Mutiyar Wall --
“Shark City” -- was speckled with Moorish idols and squarespot anthias, though
few sharks. But at 60' sat a giant clam, well over five feet long and 3.5 feet
wide, big enough to swallow me whole. I hovered over a garden of gigantic lettuce
coral, some leaves so immense it would have taken three of us holding hands to
match the circumference.
It got even better at Ulong Channel, our fourth dive of the day that, due to
our tardy departure, ended up as dusk/night dive. Halfway down the channel lay an
immense stand of lettuce coral measuring 100 feet long and 30 feet high with a
soft coral palette shading from purple to pink to fuchsia to white. Sadly, however,
much of the hard coral was dead, bleached white by the warm waters of El
Niño. In fact, much of the once splendid hard corals of Palau are bleached white,
a severe disappointment to those of us who had been here before. From Undercurrent
reports, I’d expected that, and I came anyway. The big fish action still
makes the trip worthwhile.
If you’ve been there, done that lately, your fellow divers
would love to hear about it, and so would we. So relive
your last trip and tell us what was great and what wasn’t,
and contribute your chapter for the next Chapbook. |
Blue Corner begins
along a nice relaxing
wall. But when I got to
the corner, the current
was ready to drag me to
the Philippines. I
latched my reef hook into
the coral -- standard practice here -- and hovered, mesmerized by scores of
sharks weaving themselves into the throng, darting in and out, working to fill
their insatiable appetites. There were gray reefs, white tips, and the occasional
silky, twenty to forty at a time. Massive balls of barracuda and hundreds of
durgeon and tang swept past in schools so thick I couldn’t see through them. At
times I was engulfed in schools of fish, and then a shark would dart within a
foot or two of me -- an incredible rush. It was a blur of flashing schools and
darting sharks, wild current and powerful surges of adrenaline. Sixty minutes was
gone like that. I was down to a hundred psi and needed to split.
For me, diving from the Sun Dancer (as it would be from the Aggressor, as
well) was too rushed. Diving is done from two tenders, each holding ten people and all their gear. (One was replaced by a local dive boat and driver during the
week, and the second broke down near the end of the trip, leading to three dives
with 20 divers on the tender.) Transfer
gear, climb in one by one, ride 10-30
minutes to dive sites, backroll into
the water, do the dive, climb up the
small ladders with gear on, head back
to the boat, disembark. To get in four
dives, I often had only enough time
between dives to rinse, reload film,
and suit up before the next briefing. (Dives were usually an hour, and the
130' depth was the only restriction.)
Someone different briefed us each day,
the quality varying according to who
gave it. There were only three night
dives, so during the evenings I watched
movies on the VCR, browsed their fish
books, chatted with companions, and
relaxed. Still, I like more downtime
between dives.
Underwater, of course, I forgot the hassle and took my quiet time to observe
abundant fish life. Butterflyfish are prolific, especially the pyramid butterfly,
but I captured photos of the panda, Bennett’s, Meyer’s, raccoon, and the saddled
butterflyfish. Batfish, scorpionfish, banded shrimp gobies, the occasional Napoleon
wrasse -- my mind was boggled every dive.
Captain Allen made us feel welcome. He was informative, friendly, and took
time to talk to every passenger. My worry that all the polished wood and glassware
were a sign of a crew too stuffy to have fun was dismissed when we encountered
the Star Dancer at a beautiful spot in the Rock Islands (knowing Peter
Hughes was on board). The Good Captain joined us in mooning the boat, and at the
end of the trip suggested a repeat performance through the dining room windows.
Fun as Captain Allen was, his wife, Jan, complained too often about missing the
house they gave up to take this job, and constantly showed her displeasure to the
passengers, once loudly complaining about our being back late from a dive and
giving us but ten minutes to prepare for dinner. Rudeness wrecks ambiance in such
close quarters, for sure.
But the rest of the crew was first rate. Yanis, the young, bubbly chef from
Belize, did a fine job feeding the hungry divers. Breakfast: eggs, bacon, French toast, cereals, and toaster items. Between dives she produced hot cookies,
chicken wings, or vegetables. Lunch could be enchiladas, pork chops, lasagna, or
ribs, tasty, but too heavy for me with an afternoon of diving ahead. Dinner
started with soup and salad, followed by a choice of entree ranging from chicken,
beef, or pork to fish and seafood. Desserts were amazing. Yanis made a vegetarian
menu for me and anyone with special needs. Drinking (except a glass of wine at
dinner) meant your diving was over for the day.
Tanya and Marcos, wife and husband, are the main divemasters and photo experts.
Tanya’s great photos and her end-of-week photo handouts were real winners. Marcos
put together a terrific trip recap video. Both took us to great spots, pointed out
shots, and make the diving memorable. In fact, a few weeks before, they had found
the nesting site of two cuttlefish, and they took us there. We were like wellbehaved
paparazzi at the Oscars, one person at a time sidling up and taking our
shots. Mr. and Mrs. Cuttle appeared up for a brief tête-à-tête, and, yes, our video
captured them in flagrante delicto. They were the talk of the boat until some divers
saw a 15-foot whale shark, which beat out mating cuttlefish for best picture.
A couple of nits to pick: reviewing the Captain’s log at the end of the week,
it showed 24 dives available. I did every dive offered, save the one I missed doing
a land tour around Peleliu. And I made 22. Could I have dozed off and missed one?
Nope, the log listed our boat ride through the Rock Islands as a dive opportunity.
And Dancer docked in the harbor
the first and last nights,
perhaps to make shopping for
supplies easier, but it means
that this is really a five and
half day trip. We pulled away
from the dock Monday morning
and returned after lunch Saturday.
So, although Palau’s corals
took a big hit, the big fish
are still there, and a liveaboard
is a great way to see
them. Since Palau lacks good
anchorage, the big boats need
tenders to truck divers (only
the six-passenger Ocean Hunter dives without them). But,
since most good sites are at
least an hour’s boat ride from
shore, live-aboards beat landbased
divers to the sites,
giving their divers a chance
to dive without the crowds.
But, live-aboard or landbased,
Palau’s big fish action
is still there, making it
still worth wearing lobster,
pig, or parrot noses just to
prove how crazy divers can be.
-U.K.
Diver’s Compass: Peter Hughes Sun Dancer II: phone 305-669-
9391, fax 305-669-9475, e-mail dancer@peterhughes.com, website
www.peterhughes.com; one-week package was $2,395...they
offer a $500 discount to first timers, but won’t necessarily
offer if you don’t ask for it...strong encouragement to tip
10% of package price...some rental equipment, repairs
possible...Nitrox was free...aluminum 80s, 2750+ psi...ccards
checked...oxygen and first-aid equipment
available...due to significant currents, a sausage and a horn are
mandatory...WWII history buffs shouldn’t miss the $15 tour of Peleliu...in town,
check upstairs across from the mall for souvenir carved wood storyboards...late
February air temp 85° ...often brief, unexpected, and drenching rain
showers...Best time to visit Palau is December through April; avoid February
crowds for Chinese New Year...The Peter Hughes website still advertises Jellyfish
Lake, “a chance to snorkel with thousands of jellyfish ... who have lost their
‘sting,’” but there’s no trip to the lake due to the effects of El Niño (see
sidebar).