Dear Fellow Diver:
The good things in life don’t always come easy, especially
when you’re searching for big fish on a Caribbean
dive. But it can happen, even while diving in Utila, I was
surprised to find out when I visited in April. The owner
of my local dive shop had warned me beforehand that she had
been to Utila five times and had never seen a whale shark.
And I had read Undercurrent’s mixed reader reviews and Ben
Davison’s 2003 article in which he rued the tattered coral
and limited fish life. So obviously Utila diving can be a
crapshoot - - but I got lucky. I had some good dives, many
with healthy coral and plentiful reef fish, and even a few
whale sharks.
You may chalk it up to luck, but I think my trip turned
out well because of an optimistic attitude and my determination
to see the best marine life Utila had to offer. Besides,
I think neighboring Roatan is too overrun with concrete and
cruise ships, so this quiet, seven-mile-long island is a
more pleasant alternative. After multiple dive trips to many
Caribbean islands, I saw plenty of personal firsts here.
Truth is, you can’t sit back and hope the critters come to
you; you have to seek them out.
A Bungalow at Laguna Beach Resort |
Take my 8 a.m. shore dive along the Laguna Beach wall,
100 yards off the
resort’s beach. I
had squeezed out a
72-minute dive using
less than 2,000 psi
and, with a rising
sun, I was treated
to the Caribbean
commoners: redband
parrotfish, yellow
goatfish, hogfish,
squirrelfish, tangs
and schoolmasters.
But toward dive’s
end, approaching the sandy shallows near the dock, a pair of spotted
gray-winged little boxcars with snouts
and tails flitted past me; prehistoric-looking
flying gurnards rooting in the sand. Then
a yellowfin mojarra swam by slowly before
vanishing into the green shallows. With 900
psi left, I wasn’t done yet. After a 45-
minute surface interval, I stepped back in
and trailed behind my snorkeling spouse. A
queen angelfish, rock beauty, butter hamlet,
a tube-dwelling secretary blenny, a pop-eyed
porcupinefish and giant hermit crabs digging
in the sand kept me entertained.
While the dive staff didn’t make much of an effort to show me the best of Utila
underwater, local boat captain Wagner “Waggy” Whitefield chased down the big fish. We
were headed back to the dock after the last dive of the day when Waggy got word that a
whale shark had been spotted nearby. Off we sped to catch the action. At least a halfdozen
of the huge fish were there, so all boats on the scene were able to put their
snorkelers in the water. Camera in hand and finning as fast as I could, I got up close
to one of the most magnificent fish in the sea.
I flew from Atlanta on a non-stop to Roatan, then hopped a puddle-jumper to
Utila’s little airstrip. The plane was so tiny that the pilot asked one of the five
passengers to sit in the co-pilot’s empty seat; our bags had to be boated over later
that night. A mini-bus met me at the airport and drove me through the narrow, winding
streets of Eastern Harbor, the island’s only town, then one of Laguna Beach’s
dive boats took me on a brief ride to the resort. Managers Soledad Segura and Matias
Lardizabal, transplants from Argentina, welcomed me at the dock. Over Port Royal beers
and mid-afternoon pizza, Soledad gave a resort orientation in broken English. Breakfast
started at 7 a.m.; boats left for a two-tank dive at 8. Lunch was 20 minutes after
the boat gets back. Then a one-tank dive at 2 p.m., plus a drop-off dive if requested.
Dinner at 7 p.m., or an hour later after the two weekly night dives.
The resort accommodates about 40 guests in rustic, air-conditioned Honduran pine
bungalows on a sandy peninsula alongside a lagoon. The resort was only half full and
incredibly quiet. My cabana had a super-firm king bed, a shelf stretching along the
entire back wall, perfect for my camera gear, but only one outlet (US voltage) in the
bedroom and a second next to the bathroom sink. I watched sunsets from my small private
dock and deck. Plenty of pegs inside and on the porch to hang gear, open shelves
for storage, a closet, and an electronically locked safe. The roomy shower stall was
clean, with a closing door on the no-paperwaste
toilet. Don’t drink the tap water;
instead, bring back filtered water and ice
from the clubhouse. The wood lodge had a
circular bar underneath a vaulted ceiling,
dining areas on three sides and pool table
upstairs in an airy alcove. Wooden paddles
hang on the walls, decorated by dive groups
visiting Utila over the years. One from
ReefNet was decorated with a great barracuda
and proclaimed that the team had identified
over 300 fish species during their
2002 trip.
The dive shop’s own orientation was
given by its pleasant young American manager,
Angie Sims. Experienced divers are
excused from hand-holding. During the first
check-out dive off the shop’s dock, Angie
said with my prior solo-diving experience,
I could do drop-off and shore dives
on my own. After the boat ride to Big Rock, we dropped to the reef 20 feet
below. After some check-out drills,
Kiwi divemaster Nick Blackwell led the
way while Waggy stayed aboard to follow
our bubbles. Nick let me linger as far
behind as needed for photos, so I put
the “patience is a virtue” motto into
practice. Soon I had unpredicted sightings,
such as a rosy razorfish and a
white grouper. A variegated urchin made
a silly picture, having hoisted a thick,
jaunty cap of debris on top of itself.
Secretary blennies, yellowline arrow
crab, and flamingo tongue were present
on every other dive.
Nick changed tanks for everyone
and passed out sweet dessert squares
and cookies; each diver had an assigned
water cup to fill from a big cooler.
Briefings were clear and Nick showed
some ribald and juvenile Kiwi humor with
his dive signs (e.g., scratching at his
crotch to sign “crab”), making up for
the lack of a whiteboard or site drawings.
It was easy to get the gist anyway.
Sites were shallow 30- to 100-foot
wall dives with a sandy or grooved ledge
on top, and few swim-throughs or caves.
Only one dive had any current, so it was
easy diving even for the inexperienced.
Yes, the fish population is low.
Large schools are rare, reef fish swam
as isolated individuals. Overfishing has
taken a toll. So I shifted gears to look
for life I might otherwise ignore. At
Big Rock, I photographed delicate blue
bell tunicates and a rare blue-striped
lizardfish. As Nick and crew ambled on,
I lingered to shoot a fat, red longsnout
seahorse. However, soft corals
(especially knobby and porous sea rods
with feathery polyps extended) and hard
coral were healthy and create a charming
seascape. Mainly variations of beige,
they’re not the vibrant neons of South
Pacific and Indian Ocean corals, but
they’re healthy. Bring a 5-mil in the
spring -- water temps in April ranged
from 82 to a chilly 73 degrees.
The dive center and dock face the lagoon. Drying rooms, showers, and camera and
gear rinse tubs were steps away from each other on the wharf. It’s only a four-minute
walk to here from the most distant bungalow. Crew rinsed and hung regulators and
BCDs each evening and set them up every morning. Rinse tanks were refilled then too.
Two roomy 36-foot Newtons had dual-entry stern ladders, suncovers, and heads. Each was
rated to hold 23 divers, but divers were split up between two boats, so I never dived
with more than 10 people, and oftentimes many people skipped dives if the water got
too chilly.
In contrast to the top-notch dive operation, so-so maintenance keeps the resort
out of the luxury class. Light fixtures along pathways often lacked bulbs, and wiring hung exposed. Beach trash was not swept
up daily. Garbage cans at the outdoor
bar could stay half-filled with food and
liquor bottles for days. Drawshades in
my room were inoperable. The power could
go out at any time and there was no
backup generator. And bring DEET: like
other Bay Islands, Utila is plagued by
no-see-ums and mosquitoes on calm days.
Sleepy though it is, Utila is worth
an afternoon’s exploration. You can go
on horseback, trotting the island’s
seven-mile length. Or take the resort
boat to Utila Town, where pedestrians
and golf carts mix with small cars
packed to the gills with entire families.
Smells of grilling chicken wafted
through the air at the open market,
packed with locals. Another highlight: a
walking tour through the colorfully decorated Jade Seahorse enclave of bungalows, restaurant
and open-air bar just off the main drag, where steps and arches are inlaid in
rainbow mosaics of tiles, stones and pieces of mirror.
Meals tasted like they were prepared with love by Mom: nothing fancy, but delicious.
Each meal featured just one main course, served buffet-style, but it always hit
the spot. A typical day had omelets and waffles on the warming trays for breakfast,
grilled hotdogs and burgers at the outdoor bar for lunch, tender chicken and rice with
coconut milk for dinner. Resort and dive staff mingled with guests, often eating at the
bar alongside the rest of us. Kitchen staff smiled ear to ear at us, as we bussed our
own dishes.
Besides that first swim with the whale sharks, the surprises continued almost
daily. On the morning after, more whale sharks were spotted so I made three more jumps.
At the afternoon dive at the aptly named Pretty Bush (lots of tawny soft coral moving
like stalks of grain in a wheat field), I saw a bandtail puffer. On the night dive,
three wire coral shrimp posed leisurely for my camera. I also came away with shots of
rough box, decorator and teardrop crabs, red night shrimp and a large-eye toadfish
fully out of its hole. On the way back from a morning dive, Nick spotted what looked
like a black garbage bag floating in a shallow bay. My dive buddies shouted, “Manta!”
We snorkeled with it to our heart’s content. I got some great movies of the huge
creature -- eight feet, wing to wing -- doing graceful backward loops over and over.
Of course, I can’t guarantee you would have the same sightings I did, and many
readers report disappointing diving, but it seems like I timed my trip just right.
With a double-helping of whale shark encounters and plenty of macro photo-ops, I had
my share of interesting encounters. If you’re a diver with an optimistic outlook and
the patience to look beyond where those missing schools of fish used to swim, you could
come away with a delightful Caribbean dive trip.
-- S.P.
Diver’s Compass: My seven-night, double-occupancy stay with all
meals, airport transfers and a diver/non-diver package came to
$2,600; for surface intervals, there are bicycles, (broken) kayaks,
horseback riding, golf carts and four-wheelers, and the resort’s
boat takes guests to and from town daily . . . Free wireless connection
is available in the main lodge . . . Dive gear can be rented,
but nothing major purchased . . . There is a daily $4 reef fee
and Honduran exit tax of $40 per person . . . Direct flights to
Roatan run through Houston and Atlanta, but Saturday is the only day
flights arrive and depart Utila; contact Utila Resorts, the hotel’s U.S. office, to book flights by calling 800-668-8452 . . . Honduras is subject to hurricanes from
June through November, and the rainy season is October through February . . . U.S.
dollars and credit cards accepted . . . AC current is same as in USA . . . Laguna
Beach Resort’s Web site: www.utila.com.