Last week, we lost one of diving's truly legendary
figures, Cap'n Don Stewart, who not only put Bonaire
diving on everyone's wish list, but always bucked
convention by thumbing his nose at those who wished
to control the sport. He insisted we keep diving fun. I
loved his attitude.
The good Captain told me that he used to hang out
at the "no-name bar" in Sausalito with hordes of other
scruffy sailors, actor Sterling Hayden among them. In
1961, he set sail down the California coast, stopping,
scuffling and drinking in endless ports, and when he
arrived, "hurricane whipped," in Bonaire, he put on
his mask, stuck his face in the water, marveled at the
reefs and fish and, well, that was that.
I first dived with Cap'n Don in 1976, when he had
a beach shack at the dim Hotel Bonaire, which had
been converted from a WWII internment camp. Bruce
Bowker was his guide. For guided beach dives, we
jumped off cliffs, then used ropes to raise our gear, and
ourselves, back up. He wore no depth gauge, just a red ribbon on his BC that turned shades of blue the deeper
we went; he knew our depth in five-foot increments.
At the end of my diving week, he pointed up the coast,
past oil tanks, to where he was someday going to build
his "habitat." I wished the dreamer well.
A marvelous character in his day, Don was witty,
cantankerous, irreverent, blustery and, for sure, a
top-notch and sensitive instructor whose students
became first-class
divers. In the
days when people
were breaking
off hunks of coral
to take home for
their mantels, he
guarded the reefs
as if they were his
private gardens.
On Bonaire, and
in my heart, his
legend will live
forever.
-- Ben Davison