Dear Fellow Diver,
Discovering new dive destinations has redefined my scuba
diving. Traveling aboard the boutique vessel Arenui, a typical
wooden phinisi, my September trip to Indonesia provided muck
diving, strong currents that required reef hooks, bottomless
reef walls and best of all, amazing new sightings daily. Like
the aptly named Bobbitt worm, which looks like the infamous
member hacked off by the equally infamous Lorene Bobbitt. You
remember that, right?
Departing Benoa Harbor in Denpasar, Bali, we rocked and
rolled overnight in moderately rough seas and windy conditions
as we headed for Lombok Island. I think all of the 12 divers
aboard heeded the predeparture warning: if you are weak of
stomach, pop a pill. The next morning, we dived on the east
side of Lombok near the island of Gili Lawang. Disappointed in
seeing blasted reefs, we moved nearby to make an exploratory
muck dive. Usually observed with his head protruding out of
the sand, a snake eel slithered along. I spotted a school of
striped catfish, crinoid shrimp, a spiny devilfish, a cockatoo
waspfish, a hairy angler (i.e., a frogfish), and ghost and
Halameda pipefish. A carrier crab toted a piece of wood on its
shell. Even so, a mediocre dive, given what was to come.
Our next stop was near the city of Bima on the northern
coast of Sumbawa. The
site of Tanyung Sai had
great visibility, however,
despite being told
not to stir up the fine
black sand, too many
sand kickers -- experienced
divers, mind
you -- ruined photos
by unleashing floating
silt. Still, the critters
were interesting.
A coconut octopus held
a crab in its beak, an orange frogfish was blind in one eye, a pinkie-
size cuttlefish squirted away in a flash.
A rare Melibe nudi, appearing thin and limp,
looked like floating tissue paper. Gerry, the
divemaster, pointed out unhatched cuttlefish
eggs, and a pipefish carrying her own eggs. On
a clownfish, he noted two speck-like microscopic-
size isopods that suck the clown's blood.
The upscale 142-foot Arenui (Indonesian
for "small wave"), was built from mostly indigenous
recycled wood and began operating in
2009. With space for 16 divers, she carried
a crew of 22, including two cruise directors,
Debbie Benton from the U.K. and Geraldo (Gerry)
Arriaga from Mexico City, an engaged and engaging
couple. Their management is all about comfort and service.(At $5,000 plus for 12
days, not to mention airfare, it darn well better be.) Below decks are six cabins;
four master suites are on the main deck. The beautiful cabins have batiks, Oceanic and
Balinese artwork, copper light fixtures and brass hanging hooks. Carved wooden vanities
had round counter tops and marble sinks with brass faucets. While there were no
closets, drawer and cabinet space was ample.In mosaic-tiled bathrooms, waterfall showers
drain on the wood-slatted floors before reaching the toilet.(Toilet paper goes in a
garbage can alongside.)
The unconventional dive deck on the pitched bow, where wetsuits were hung to
dry, would be cramped with a full load of divers. After disembarking from tenders at
the stern (there was a hot water shower there), one had to stroll through the salon.
It worked, because the staff mopped constantly (which is one reason why they need 22
staffers). The cheerful crew always ensured gear was clean, dry, and ready to go. They
transported it to and from the tenders and provided a clean towel after each dive.
Their two basic tenders have wooden seats with spaces for tanks. Rides were 10
minutes or less. (During one ride, Gerry cannibalized another regulator to repair my
leaking ancient Mark V before we reached the dive site.) If the current was strong, we
made a direct descent; if too strong, we went to another site. Like a drill sergeant,
divemaster Tobi would command: "Mask on, air in, 1, 2, 3, go!" and we backrolled. After
the drift, the tenders picked us up quickly and we climbed back in via a metal ladder
with thin and uneven rungs -- it took a hefty leg swing to complete maneuver. The water
ranged between 71 and 82 degrees (air temperatures were in the high 70s). I always wore
a 5-mm suit and added a skin or two, plus a hooded lined vest. Maximum dive time was 70 minutes. While there was a flexible buddy
system, I stuck with Gerry like a leech,
as he had an eye for everything.
At Hot Rocks, a site at Sangeang
Volcano, warm sulfuric bubbles trickled up
from the sand. I admired a pair of cowries,
covered with their black mantles,
resting in a sponge. A large black lionfish
carried eggs on her spine, and a
green turtle gnawed on a sponge. (Gerry had
heard it gives them a "buzz." How would
anyone know?) Glassy eyes rose in columns.
Thousands of crinoids and orange anthias
formed rainbows. A yellow and black ribbon
eel burrowed in the sand under table coral.
When I hit a raging current that created
a black sand storm, I kicked hard to rest
behind a beautiful reef covered with every
imaginable soft and hard coral. In the
shallows, I spied a spiny devilfish, a variety of nudibranchs, and several blue painted
lobsters.
After a direct descent in a two-plus knot current at Crystal Rock, I made good
use of my reef hook to admire a three-foot-long Napoleon wrasse, big-eye trevally,
surgeonfish, schools of fusiliers and several white-tips, one of which was pregnant.
At Castle Rock, I watched surgeons chased by trevally with sharks following. The fish
were so thick I thought the sun had been eclipsed.
Our next stop was Rinca Island's Cannibal Rock. Considered one of the world's top
10 dive sites, it was discovered by the late Larry Smith, an Indonesia dive icon. In
chilly 72-degree water, I found a giant pink frogfish and some red sea apples, a species
of sea cucumber which were closed while others were open and feeding. A yellow
pygmy seahorse clung to a sea fan. Afterwards, while some divers kayaked, I indulged
myself in a so-so massage on the top deck.
We ate when we weren't diving or sleeping. A "small" breakfast included fruit,
yogurt and cereal, followed by a "big" breakfast (including perfectly poached eggs and
crisp bacon) after the first 8 a.m. dive. Lunch buffets included homemade soup, entrees
of fish, chicken, pork, and pasta, plus fresh vegetables and fruit, noodles and rice.
The third dive, around 3 p.m., was followed by a snack of either pizza, fish sticks,
tropical fruit, cookies, even a fresh cake. Dinner was a four-course, sit-down meal
that included a salad, homemade soup, a choice of two entrees, and a homemade dessert
served with ice cream. To accommodate night divers, two dinner times were offered. There was a full honor bar, and a fine but pricey wine ($30 to more than $100). Strong
Balinese, finely ground coffee was always available; espresso was an additional $2.50
(seems chintzy given the Sultan's fortune for this voyage). While food was generally
excellent, the Mexican fare flopped. The only fresh fish served was the first night's
tuna sashimi. (The explanation was that we were diving in a national park where fishing
is restricted, and I'm all for leaving fish on the reefs we visited. But they did
offer frozen tuna, red snapper, or butterfish and honored dietary requests.)
Dinner was served either on the top deck or in the salon, where there were two
tables for eight and a couple of cozy booths. The salon has several lounge areas, a
camera charging station, two Mac computers loaded with Adobe Photoshop CS5, and two
flat screen TVs, used for PowerPoint briefings for each dive. One screen displayed a
virtual GPS of our route. I often kicked back on the top deck in a comfortable canvas
deck lounge.
Before I departed, Ben Davison forwarded me comments from an Undercurrent subscriber
who had been on the boat a few weeks before. She had a few complaints and he
asked me to verify them. Yes, as it turned out, several cabins had occasional roach
sightings. However, I'm little bothered because I expect a few in the tropics (so I didn't keep food in my cabin, as Debbie cautioned). Yes, the boat creaked and doors
rattled. I braced my main deck cabin's creaking door with a towel, and locked the louvered
folding bathroom door to prevent it from banging. The Garuda cabin had exhaust
fumes, but they subsided after a couple days. At the introductory briefing, Debbie
cautioned, "Our wooden decks are like banana peels. Take the gray rubber-mat road. We
don't want you to slip." Yes, the decks were particularly slick when wet, so I always
wore my Tevas. (I'm too old to fall down. Aren't we all?) Steps throughout the boat are
high and uneven. Handholds seem randomly placed. Debbie didn't ignore problems, and in
fact encouraged us to speak up. "It is a phinisi. We have three engineers on board. We
don't want you to complain about something that we will fix for the next group." When
we moved at night, the creaking in his lower deck cabin bothered one diver, so Debbie
had him sleep in an upper deck cabin.
South Africans Leon and Claudia Pellarini-Joubert, professional underwater photographers
who live in Papua New Guinea, coached us gratis in Photoshop CS5 (see their
work at www.bittenbysharks.com ). While we all had cameras, only one American had an
SLR. Our congenial group -- including two French Canadians, three South Africans, and
three Americans -- ranged in age from the 30s to nearly 70. And none was cranky or a
complainer. One American had biceps that would rival anyone's. To help me get my wetsuit
over my widest part, he gently picked me up off the deck.
Our fourth daily dive was after sundown. While we all participated in one or more
night dives, there were only two regulars. At Torpedo, off Rinca Island, a hairy frogfish
lay camouflaged in soft coral. There were skeleton shrimp, a coconut octopus, even
the Bobbitt worm. The bone-chilling 71-degree water limited my dive to 40 minutes.
With so many liveaboards plying these waters, there is an unwritten rule that the
first boat at a site has priority and others do not put their divers in the water. But
when one boat ignored our presence at Cannibal Rock, we made an exploratory dive in
Crinoid Canyon, returning when the other divers left. Here, I saw two mimic octopuses
that scurried along the sand, not stopping to contort themselves into the shapes of one
of the many critters they could amazingly mimic. In Manta Alley, on the south side of
Komodo Island, 10 large mantas appeared on each of two dives but quickly zipped away.
At Pink Beach, colorful mandarin fish engaged in their mating ritual, swirled in thick
fields of staghorn coral.
Leaving the marine park, we motored to Takat Makassar Channel between Flores
and Komodo. Flying in the current, I buzzed up and past a dozen mantas, hoping they
would dodge me. I was out of steerage control and I'm sure they knew. What a thrill!
Discovery Bay, along Flores Island, is a 19-hour steam from the island of Sabalon. Indonesian fishermen continue to blast fish and destroy reefs. Nevertheless, it's a muck divers' paradise, though one touch from a fin created a black sandstorm cloud mixed with dead leaves and twigs. Here, I saw many new critters: still unplaced in the genus octopus, the mosaic is cream colored with spotted arms. It has a unique darkish mosaic pattern and an extended mantle.
My trip ended at the port of Maumere on Flores Island, with not the best of conclusive dives, but I had so many great ones, why quibble? After our final dinner on the top deck at the "Sky" restaurant, our crew performed a "sing-sing." Dancing and singing, some in Papua headdress, they embraced us goodbye. New friends, great diving, beautiful weather, lots of new sightings, Komodo dragons, excellent food, great service and luxury. The boat amenities, despite some issues, were great. Though it was a pricey 12 days, I left satisfied, knowing that even at the price, I surely didn't get my pocket picked.
-- D.L.
Divers Compass: Depending on the season, the Arenui travels throughout Indonesia for varied periods; My 12-day Komodo voyage cost $5,200, not including alcohol or espresso, plus Nitrox for $180, and one complimentary 30-minute massage . . . My trip required a night in Bali on both ends . . . There is no internet access, and the satellite phone costs $5 per minute . . . Batavia Air charges for excess baggage . . . To get around, you need Indonesian rupiah, not American dollars . . . Maumere is predominantly Catholic, but we could hear the Call to Prayer. . . Having an afternoon departure from Maumere, Arenui arranged a complimentary tour to see a small museum and a village, which is better than sitting at the airport . . . Website: www.thearenui.com