Roatan Suggestions Please

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Kevin Glenn

Registered
Messages
22
Reaction score
1
Location
California
# of dives
500 - 999
Greetings! Planning my first trip to Roatan though I dove Utila years ago and been to other Caribbean destinations. I dive weekly off the shores of Southern California so warm water is a treat! A few questions .. recommendations welcome.

1. Stay at a resort with boats or go with a great dive operator and stay at a hotel? Going with a buddy, it's all about diving, prefer boats that cater to experienced divers. Nitrox is a plus. Would like to do 3-4 dives a day including a night dive or two.

2. What local dive shop is your #1 choice based on above?

3. Where to stay if we go with a dive shop? Has to be clean, don't need a spa or family-friendly, food and drink nearby is good, easy logistics / good if they cater to divers.

4. If you suggest a dive resort, what are your top favorites and why?

Additional suggestions and ideas are welcome.

Thanks for the help.

Kevin
 
Take a look at cocoview.

Two boats a day, moored dive then drop dive off each. That’s four.

Walk in shore diving any time day or night. Swim in their “front yard” which includes a wreck.
 
Take a look at cocoview.

Two boats a day, moored dive then drop dive off each. That’s four.

Walk in shore diving any time day or night. Swim in their “front yard” which includes a wreck.
Thanks! Have you stayed there? I don't think they travel to any northside dive sites. How much of a downfall is that?
 
Thanks! Have you stayed there? I don't think they travel to any northside dive sites. How much of a downfall is that?

I stayed there in Oct 2022 and Oct 2023; that's where I learned to dive. I thoroughly enjoyed my stay there both times. It is, as has been said, "dive camp". If you don't dive, there's very little else to do. If you dive, it's easy to do four or more dives a day.

Lots posted in ScubaBoard about CCV, including posts from people who didn't enjoy it as much as I did. Lots posted about other dive operations as well.
 
You don't often get to experience diving on both sides of the islands on the same trip, unless the weather is uncooperative on the side you are diving from and they have an arrangment for diving on the other side - many shops do. When visiting Roatan I have occasionally seen Cocoview boats in the West Bay / West End area if the winds from the east are so strong that diving on the "south side" is impractical (or downright dangerous).

If I were looking for a "dive-resort" style vacation with a diving buddy (my wife is a non-diver) I would choose either Cocoview or Turquoise Bay. Cocoview gives you a good bang for your diving bucks - with the shore diving available 24/7 (and it is sheltered and protected so diveable in almost any weather) plus the available boat dives you can definitely do a lot of diving while staying there. Turquoise Bay, although they only do three dives during the day (two-tank morning and single tank afternoon) has the advantage of having easy access to north side dive sites that I generally can't reach with an op in West End or West Bay - it's just not economical for them to travel that far up-island so they usually don't unless you are paying for private charter.

For a dive-centric vacation not at a resort, I would go with Coconut Tree Divers in West End. Two-tank dive in the morning and two single tank (separate dives) in the afternoon. They have been around forever and have a great reputation. No end of food and drink options in West End

Pretty much everyone does night dives on request (although with Cocoview for night diving I believe you are on your own in the Front Yard meaning you can do it any day and time you want) - generally with a minimum number of divers signed up (four is pretty typical). Nitrox is also widely available, but often at a surcharge ($8 to $10 per tank is common).

Full disclosure - I haven't dove with any of these operations. I'm basing these recommendations on what I've read over the years and heard while visiting Roatan over the past 30-ish years. But if I were looking for the kind of dive vacation you are describing (as opposed to the vacation with diving that we usually do) that would be my short list.
 

Back
Top Bottom