There are always many dive destinations
to catch up on, so here are
some brief reviews to help you develop
your travel plans. First, one of our
longtime travel writers was aboard the
Ocean Rover in June (anonymously, of
course) and filed this report.
* * * * *
The Ocean Rover rotates its
year long diving activities between
Thailand and Indonesia to take advantage of the best weather. I had
been on the Ocean Rover in Thailand
in May 2002, so this year I booked
a June trip to Northern Sulawesi. I
spent my first six days at the Lembeh
Resort, which Undercurrent covered
adequately last year. I then transferred
by water taxi to the Ocean
Rover.
The Ocean Rover is among the
most comfortable and best laid-out
of the 25 live-aboards I've taken. It's friendly and helpful crew is
unmatched. My nine days of diving
from the Ocean Rover started with
a dive in the Lembeh Straits, and
then we steamed north to Bunaken
Marine Park for 3-5 dives each day
on great walls and reefs, with dramatic
vistas of lushly covered, coraland-
sponge-encrusted, vertical walls
with great visibility, a few schools
of fish, and dramatic and recent
black lava flows. Underwater, I could occasionally hear the rumblings of
the islands' active volcanoes. While
lounging on the comfortable deck, I
could see plumes of steam.
Water was consistently around 83
degrees, which required only minimal
thermal protection, I kept covered to
avoid the nasty stinging things that
can be in the water. Visibility in the
Lembeh Strait varied between 20 to
50 feet, but who could care when one
is focused on the abundant and magnificent
sci-fi-type critters. Visibility
in Bunaken Marine Park and the
outlying islands increased to 100 feet
at times. Most of the dive sites would
serve up a plethora of unique nudibranchs;
their sightings had me rushing
to the Rover's library of marine
invertebrate ID books.
Stargazers buried into the "muck,"
up to their wary eyes. Some snake eels
had tiny colorful shrimp dancing on
their noses. There were pygmy sea
horses, pregnant ornate ghost pipe
fish, hairy frog fish patiently awaiting
their prey, an out-of-place clown
frog fish struggling along to a new
lair, a volley ball-sized yellow frogfish
perched within the embrace of an
accommodating color-coordinated
sponge and an almost translucent
pygmy cuttlefish camouflaged just
above a sandy bottom. A deadly blueringed
octopus flitted just ahead of
me as I flirted with sense of immediate
danger. And there were delicate
harlequin ghost pipe fish, blue cockatoo
leaf scorpion fish, slim daggers
of razor fish slashing through the
sea, orangutan crabs "pumping up"
with their hairy out stretched arms,
large sea horses including yellow and
brown-banded ones with their prehensile
tails cleverly curled around a
favorite perch while always looking
shyly away from my disturbing curiosity.
Oh, yes, I guess I did forget to
mention the mimic octopus, that can
shape himself to look like a flounder,
a cuttlefish, virtually anything.
This is the critter itinerary, beyond
heaven for serious photographers.
The Ocean Rover's Thailand itinerary will get you through the Andaman
Sea off the western coast of Thailand
and Myanmar for whale sharks, mantas,
schools of jacks, and other shark
species, unaffected by the tsunami.
Great boat, comfortable bunks, good
food. A consistent performer at the
top of its class.
Nancy McGee of Island Time
Scuba, in Lancaster TX set up the
Ocean Rover/Lembeh Resort package.
Phone: (972) 227-6678. Email:
nancy@islandtimescuba.com. www.IslandTimeScuba.com. Ocean Rover:
www.ocean-rover.com.
* * * * *
On Belize's Ambergris Caye, many
operations treat all divers equally--
not good for experienced divers, but
Protech Dive Centre (www.ambergrisecaye.com/protech.com), gets
consistently good reviews. Michael N.
Hofman (San Francisco, CA), who's
had more than 500 dives, says, "They
provide Nitrox, specialize in smaller
boats and will allow you to dive your
computer and your air consumption.
They even took just the two of us (my
snorkeling mate and myself) out for
the dive! By the way, if the management at your resort tries to steer you
to another dive operation, resist--
they may be getting a commission
from the bigger dive operations."
Protech is at the Belize Yacht Club. I
myself stayed there last fall and was
unimpressed with room quality and
maid service for a too-high price.
While our readers have long
touted Galapagos diving with Mark
Bernardi aboard the Reina Silvia (www.reinasilvia.com) there's a relative
newcomer getting raves. John &
Debra Barrett (San Patricio, Texas)
aboard in June says they "have ridden
all the luxury dive boats in the
Galapagos, and none matches the
stability of Deep Blue in a rough crossing
to the northern islands. The yacht
is longer, wider, and does not display
the top-heavy appearance of some
of the competition. The crew is well
organized. Deep Blue charges for all
alcoholic beverages while the competition
does not, but for the price
differential (of at least $50/day), you
would have to drink one heck of a lot
to make up the difference. Deep Blue is a world-class dive yacht. (800-626-
8272 or www.galapagosadventures.
com/DeepBlueTrips.com)
Our February reviewer was critical
of the conservative dive protocol on
Mike Ball's Paradise Sport in Papua
New Guinea. As we reported, Ball
had just returned to the company
he had sold years ago, and while
our review surprised him, he said
he was already getting it back to his high standards. Several readers have
since reported that Ball is a man of
his word. Larry Sandusky (Meridian,
ID), aboard in May, told us that he
had "embarked with some concerns
based on negative Undercurrent review
of an earlier trip on Paradise Sport. Any concerns were completely dismissed
after a couple of dives and
meals. Service was superior, the crew
gracious and helpful, dives were
excellent and our all-advanced diver/
Nitrox group was dazzled time and
again. No concerns with dive profiles,
nothing but positive support from
dive crew." (www.mikeball.com)