Dear Fellow Diver,
Called the "Galapagos of the Caribbean" by some,
three small islands off Puerto Rico's coast are now being
visited by the Nekton Rorqual. My last trip to the real
Galapagos Islands was packed with adrenaline, so to find
sharks and turtles along with indigenous land species at
the islands of Mona, Desecheo, and Monita sounded too good
to be true. Still, I bought into the Nekton Rorqual brochure regaling "expansive underwater caves, fallen
house-size boulders carved from the island, and intense
fish populations." I could handle "the advanced diving and
swimming to and from the wall below the wave zone to avoid
getting caught up in the washing machine working on full
spin above." And to see numerous turtles "including the
endangered hawksbill and leatherback," would be exciting.
Imagine massive leatherbacks!
The boxy Rorqual, (80 feet long by 40 feet high and
wide, perched on 10-foot pontoons) may be designed to provide
stability and comfort, but it was one ugly boat, and
it took me two days to learn to navigate its decks. The
boat has only a narrow passage on the bow and stern; the
latter has oily "stairs to nowhere," hydraulically lowering
and raising a narrow dive deck that runs the width of the
stern with two stairways leading to the water. Oily,
because they tattooed my dive skins.
They assigned each diver a steel 95 tank, with a
cubby below. One diver found the tank too heavy and opted
for an aluminum 3,000. Entering the water required a giant
stride with a 3-meter drop, while photographers were
requested to exit down the stairs. The divemasters checked
everyone's air and helped divers in and out of the water.
Ladder-type stairs below the surface were climbable with
fins but tenuous when swinging in a current. The crew took fins and tanks from
those who didn't want to
make the awkward climb with
heavy gear.
After hanging on the
deco-bar at 15 feet, it was
about a 10-foot ascent to
the Christmas tree ladder
extending into the water.
Once I climbed up the ladder
by swinging my fins to the
next rung, I then climbed
aboard the twin stairwells
walking backward -- that's
the recommended approach on the Rorqual -- up to the dive deck and my seat. After
removing my tank and disconnecting my regulator, I proceeded up more stairs to the
narrow stern passageway where there were two hot showers. By the time I got under
the warm water, I was freezing. Then I froze again while climbing the stairs to the
salon deck to retrieve a warm towel. But wait: I forgot to sign in from the dive
on the lower deck. After retracing my steps on several occasions, I learned to
yell down to someone still below. If there was a light or lock in the public head
next to the showers, I never found it, so while I struggled in the dark for a post
dive pee, other divers frequently stormed in. Men don't mind; ladies said they
did. It was another flight of stairs to the sundeck where I filled out my log or
put on my suit before a dive and occasionally warmed up in the hot tub. It's good
exercise, four or five times a day, but some divers didn't appreciate it.
Making the five advertised dives a day was tough. The first dive was 8
a.m., "mas or menos," which meant completing two dives before the dive deck was
roped off for lunch at 11:45. So I limited dives to about 40 minutes to get in
proper surface intervals. After two morning dives in one location, the boat moved
for two more, opening the deck at 2 p.m., then closing it promptly at 5:45 p.m.
Some enthusiasts who didn't care whether their food overcooked on the steam buffet
returned to the boat late. They were reprimanded. After dinner, one could take a
night dive, but few did. The crew did attach Cyalume light sticks to the hang
tank and tag line, placed a strobe on the bowline, and asked us to carry a spare
light between buddies. There would always be a divemaster on the dive deck and
one on upper deck. Few people made night dives because of the repetition of the
site, current conditions, or the late hour of the dive.
This is not an oil platform |
We spent our first diving day at
Isla Desecheo. The mountain-like
island, inhabited by monkeys, red-footed
boobies, and frigate birds, has a lowlying
shoreline with slopes rising 715
feet. Located 12 miles from Mayaquez,
there are several protected coves where,
if time permits (I think this is wishful
thinking), it is possible to kayak (the
boat carries several). The lee side
offers shallow patch reefs with many
sponges, especially awesome barrel
sponges. The U.S. Navy previously used
Desecheo as a bombing range, and at
Bomber Anchor Valley I saw several unexploded bombs and a 200-year-old anchor.Surge gently rocked me sideways, sometimes kicking up sandy areas and reducing visibility.
While there were plenty of small tropicals, an Atlantic barracuda and a
bonito were the only unusual thrills. The spur and groove terrain had gullies.
Occasionally day boats visit from the city of Rincon.
Unable to fix the line to the next mooring, the Rorqual returned to Bomber
Alley for our second dive. Viz varied from 60 to 100 feet (water temp was 78F),
and divemasters determined current strength by eyeing the hang tank. However, it
was not unusual to find the current at depth flowing in the opposite direction.
(While the seas were generally calm, we had a 1-2 knot current on several dives;
my buddy aborted a dive when the surface current whammed her against the boat
while she was using the granny line). Captain Nelson's briefings included good
terrain descriptions, compass headings, and potential unique critter sightings --
that didn't occur. After a day boat left, we moved to Green Plate Special, probably
named for the numerous flamingo tongues munching on seafans. I saw more
shells here than I've seen in the entire Caribbean, but the soap fish and sharptail
and snake eels we were told to look for had fled for greener pastures. Many
beautiful sponges had hard coral
encrusted on them. And where
were the schooling fish? The
reefs were beautiful, and the
small fish were nice, but the
pelagics, leatherbacks, and loggerheads
-- the big stuff --
were missing.
When the Rorqual is full
with 34 divers, dives are done
in shifts. Even with only 13
(we were all Americans or
Canadians), I still had to wait
my turn to jump into the water,
because there wasn't space
enough in the aisles for two
divers to pass wearing tanks.
While the Rorqual advertises
this as an advanced diver trip
(I didn't notice any novices),
there were rules. If one buddy
ran low on air, both had to
return to the boat. No air
descents below 130 feet, 110
feet on Nitrox. And the crew
reserved the right to check
computers. We were required to
take a three-minute safety stop
on a 3-foot-wide hang bar. We
were advised to use the tag
line if we missed the boat; a
battered skiff trailing the
boat was used to retrieve anyone
drifting.
The mostly under-30, alldivemaster
crew worked their
hearts out. If we wanted to
dive with one of the three divemasters on duty each day, we had to request it. The crew rotates daily tasks, so
tank fills and blends were inconsistent (housekeeping too!). And turnover rate is
high; I suspect that having contracts not even migrants should put up with -- having
to put in a free apprentice week, buying their own Nekton T-shirts and shorts,
and paying for Nitrox -- might contribute. One crew member, Jeff Sandman, was
collecting data for DAN's Project Dive Exploration, to correlate age, medical
issues, prescription medication used, and dive profiles. Volunteers wore a monitoring
device. I found my dive patterns, graphed on a computer at the end of the
week, very interesting, especially the spikes of quick ascents at depth that
exceeded 30 feet per minute.
After three dives at Desecheo, we motored 36 miles at night to Mona, where
the 700-foot pinnacle, which glows red in the setting sun, is thinly covered with
trees. A usual visit to Mona with park rangers to see red-footed boobies, 4-foot
iguanas, and "the world's largest marine-originated cave system" was canceled. It
was wild boar and goat bow-and-arrow hunting season.
Mona diving was better than Desecheco. An awesome wall named Bubbles and
Blossom leveled into a plateau of spurs and grooves. I was happy to see a few
bristleworms and cleaner shrimp, more excited to see a channel clinging crab with a huge claw and an Alaskan-size redridged
clinging crab in a crevice.
Migrating humpback surface sightings
in the distance became more frequent,
as the whales headed 170 miles northeast
to the Silver Bank (see
Undercurrent July 2003 issue).
The smaller island of Monito is
four miles south of Mona and where we
did our first "live dive" (the Rorqual word for drift diving). Live dives
are determined by the inability of
Nekton's skuzzy looking "research"
vessel, the Cachalot, to put a mooring
stanchion in place to prevent currents
from swinging the boat onto the
island. Captain Nelson said that
instead of dinghies picking us up
where we surfaced, we'd return to the Rorqual. When all of us were geared up, the
crew yelled, "dive, dive, dive," and we jumped like skydivers, one after another.
With the bellowing Rorqual motoring overhead, we followed the divemaster, who swam
with a float ball on a reel, and were required to stay tight with the group and
our buddies. After 40 minutes we surfaced in unison, making a 15-foot, 3-minute,
crowded safety stop in blue water. Captain Nelson navigated the big ass boat precisely,
and when instructed we proceeded to the boat, four at a time, one pair
holding the ladder while the other two climbed up.
Nelson had told us to enjoy the surge and drift with the current. But on
the first dive the divemaster swam like hell against a one-knot current, causing
some divers to overexert and run low on air. The dive was later referred to by
the group as an "anti-drift" dive. As we swam along the island wall between fallen
boulders under the crashing surf, I saw a sizable green turtle and a curious 6-
foot reef shark (the only one of the week).
Responding to our complaints, the next dive at Turtle Cove was led by a different
divemaster, one who drifted with the current, which allowed us to enjoy the
boulder strewn terrain and swim-through rock passages. I didn't see the expected
turtles, nor the described area of dense black coral at 60 feet. I did see large
barrel sponges with turtle bites. We did other live dives at Rainbow and Andrew's
walls on Monito before diving on our own again.
Heading back to Mona, we spent the rest of the week at Rainbow Wall, Southern
Pride, and the spur and groove channels of Yuletide. On the first dive I saw a
nurse shark, hawksbill turtle, and yellow ray. On another live dive, at a site protected
by a small barrier reef, we spread out to swim between boulders, through
channels, and under overhangs. The surge was up and down, forward and backward. As
I searched the sand for yellowheaded jawfish, the current created a Sahara-like
sandstorm. I did see a lot of reef fish but nothing unusual or new. On the entire
trip I saw a few moray eels, but only one nurse shark and one lobster.
Of course, one must eat to keep fueled, and while buffet meals were hearty,
they were uncreative. One night it was Italian; lunch might be Mexican food or
sandwiches. Most folks passed on the biscuits-and-gravy-with-grits breakfast.
Prime rib and barbecued ribs (cooked in the oven) were popular. Meals were heavy
on the meat, but there was always an option for vegetarians. Food often came
from a can, salad dressings were bottled, and the lettuce was iceberg. Home- baked, packaged cookies were
served after the morning dive
and a hot appetizer (frozen
chicken poppers, eggrolls, or
mini-pizzas) in the afternoon.
No alcoholic or carbonated
beverages are served. Bring
your own and store the bottles
in their cooler. If you miss
this information beforehand,
they make a shuttle stop for
divers to purchase their
drinks before boarding. Each
night there was an interesting
slide lecture (sponges, reef
fish, turtles, and sharks),
but the regular 9:30 p.m. presentation
was too late for
many, so it was occasionally
moved before the night dive,
making that too late for many.
The final evening's presentation
was to be a contest of
guests' photography, but only
one diver used E-6 processing,
and the boat had no equipment
to read digital images.
With the boat less than
half full, everyone was given
an entire cabin, gratis. Upon
arrival, two safety sausages
rested on each fish-designed
bed covering to welcome divers.
At night, a mint lay on each
pillow. The cabins are spacious,
each with a private bath
and new shower. The entryway in each room has a sink, vanity, and draped closet
with shelves. Rooms have full-size windows with curtains (which have lost their
Velcro so they don't stay closed) and soft, uneven mattresses. While the air-conditioning
could be controlled, the vent blew directly onto the bed. The dining room
and salon -- with entertainment center -- was spacious. Outlets for charging cameras
were inconveniently located below cushioned seats. There was a small galley,
and tables for meals lined the walls. The top sundeck had lounge chairs, several
tables and chairs, and a hot tub. Green or blue towels were to be kept inside; the
warm pink towels offered after each dive were to stay on the deck so as not to
"bring microorganisms inside."
For having operated only two years, the steel and aluminum Rorqual seemed
mighty tired. The green-spot, thin, linoleum-looking carpet is peeling, wrinkled,
and stained with bleached spots. The peach walls are marred and chipped. Rust
spots were common. The boat was noisy, especially below decks, where pipes banged
in the walls. Guests staying in rooms on the salon floor got their wake-up call
from the galley or went to sleep listening to music and laughter from the salon.
And an intercom -- "Attention Nekton Divers!" -- blasted into the rooms for dives,
whale sightings, or just calling a member of the crew to the pilothouse. There
was no consideration that someone might be napping. Still, we were asked to walk and close doors quietly. If the bathroom door was left open, it would bang
against the room entry door, ricocheting noise down the hall.
Our final dive site was La Parguera. The prevailing winds swept the boat
200 yards from the wall -- our first choppy surface conditions with seas of about
3 feet. When the divers heard that we were so far from the wall, most opted to
dive in the nondescript terrain under the boat. My buddy and I found the nice
wall, which was without much sea life. Because of the disappointment, the Captain
decided to do a live dive over the wall. At 82 feet I saw a sizable queen angel
nestled in a hole with a green moray -- certainly an odd couple. We could see the
village of Bogueron off in the distance, about a 45-minute boat ride before we
could head off for an evening on the town -- well, a small colorful village.
It was an early morning departure for the airport, as two shuttles drove us
down the gridlocked tollway for 2.5 hours to San Juan. Some divers would wait at
the airport for as long as four or five hours -- not unlike arrival at the boat,
where some had to wait as long as three hours for the pick-up.
By now, I suspect you can surmise my feelings about this trip. If my diving
were to be in the electrified waters of the real Galapagos, then I could have better
tolerated the arrival and departure hassles, mediocre food, strange boat, and rules galore. And that "Galapagos of the Caribbean"? Too good to be true. For
what turned out to be rugged Caribbean diving without critter surprises, the
Hughes, Aggressor, and Caribbean Explorer boats and Caribbean itineraries are far
better options.
-- G.S.
Diver's Compass: My week on the Nekton Rorqual cost $1,575,
including the roundtrip shuttle. ... The Rorqual offered replacement
parts and rental gear, although the camera and video
rentals were "under repair." ... Tips were recommend at 15% to
20%. ... Nitrox, or "geezer gas" as they call it, was an additional
$150. ... The boat departs out of Mayaguez, a port city
on the western coast of the island, a 2.5 hour drive from San
Juan. ... If you're an early arrival at the airport, you wait so
the van driver can pick up everyone. I waited three hours. ... Nekton's description
of a "two-hour picturesque ride" turned out to be almost three hours on a
toll road crammed with traffic. ... A nice touch was a Polaroid photo of everyone
on the bulletin board with our room number, making it easier for the crew and
divers to know who's who. ... Make sure to visit Old San Juan El Morro Fortress
and San Juan Cemetery and wander the narrow streets crammed with tourists shopping
in the many curio-type stores. ... The average temperature year round is 82 F. ...
Luis Munoz Marin International Airport is 1,000 miles southeast of Miami. ... This
is a winter trip for the Nekton Rorqual and is planned for next winter; the Puerto
Rico government is concerned about the moorings they are installing and has stopped
it for the time being; the two parties are discussing the issue.