Jet Blue is still flying to BON via JFK until Jan 3rd 2026.
There is no direct flight between BAQ and BON. (Z Air currently requires a connection in Curacao.)
Z Air flies direct to BON from Curacao and Aruba.
Winair flies direct to Bonaire from Curacao.
All of this flight info changes frequently, and trying to keep it all updated here is pretty much a fool's errand.

The most accurate and regularly updated info already can usually be
found here on Bonaire Tourism Corp's website. Even that info is sometimes out of date though, because airlines change their schedules often due to demand, business objectives, and season etc.
Several rental car companies, such as AB Rental, offer free shuttles from the airport to their nearby offsite rental facilities. There are several of those located on Kaya Industria, near the roundabout just north of the airport.
The surface sea temperature around Bonaire fluctuates throughout the year depending on season, currents, and climate conditions etc. Surface sea temps sometime drop to 79° F in Feb and March, and rise as high as 85° F in September and October. (
source)
85° F might be the average year-round air temperature, but it's certainly not the minimum. I've personally experienced air temps in the upper 70s several times while visiting during the winter months. Also, max air temps rarely reach the 90s in the winter months, but August-October can be brutal, especially when the trade winds abate. (
source)
DCS incident frequency, cause/summary, and recompression chamber stats for Bonaire's chamber aren't publicly reported or available. Dehydration is certainly one of many possible contributing factors to DCS, but it's a secondary influence only, and not a fundamental direct trigger.
DAN notes that
"Dehydration gets a substantial amount of attention in the lay diving community as a risk factor for DCS, but probably more than is warranted. Sound hydration is important for good health, both for general and for diving health, but for your dive profile, thermal stress and exertion level are far more important risk factors for DCS." (
source)
The last dive site before you need to commit to the one-way northern loop route is 1000 Steps, not Weber's Joy.
Nukove is STINAPA's most northern dive site accessible from shore and outside of Washington Slaagbai National Park. Additionally there are 6 more STINAPA dive sites further north—all temporarily closed due to protect against SCTLD—that are inside of Washington Slaagbai National Park.
Not sure what you mean about checking to see if the road around the BOPEC terminal is open? The only reason it would be closed is if it was temporarily washed out due to heavy rains etc. The BOPEC terminal itself has always been closed off to pubic traffic. The road to Playa Frans goes around it, not through it.
You're missing Bondigro Supermarket on Kaya Industria, Top Supermarket on Kaya L.D. Gerharts downtown, a couple of Chinese-owned markets On Kaya Karona that are similar to Zhung Kong, and a host of smaller neighborhood mini-markets scattered about the island.
BonDiGro is unique in that it's a true warehouse-style market with discount prices (unlike the confusingly named Warehouse Bonaire nearby, which is owned by the Van den Tweel family.)
The Chinese-operated markets are great for American-style pre-packaged dry, canned, and bottled foods, frozen foods, some limited refrigerated items, beer, wine, and distilled spirits. But if you want a good selection of meat, dairy products, and produce etc. your best bets are Van den Tweels, Warehouse Bonaire, and BonDiGro., which are all located near each other on Kaya Industria.
We've been regular visitors to the island for 28 years and our airport departure experience hasn't been at all like you've described above.
When multiple flights are scheduled to depart near the same time the lines for check-in, security, and customs sometimes snake back to point where the lines are bumping into each other.
If you show show up 30 minutes before boarding you
might make it. But if you don't, or if it's close, you shouldn't expect to get sympathy or special treatment from airport staff or the rest of your fellow travelers who showed up an hour or more before you as requested.
In 28 years of visiting the island we've never once had a US airline check our carry-ons for size and/or weight. (I do sometimes worry about tit though, lol. We usually stuff them pretty full. They probably wouldn't pass either criteria if checked.)
Not sure what you're arguing about with the counter or gate agents? Maybe your carry-on luggage? We've always found them all to be generally friendly, professional, caring and empathetic people—just like most other Bonaireans we've interacted with. We've always received reasonable responses from airline and airport staff to any reasonable requests we've made.
What "medical device paperwork" are you referring to specifically? In additional to my carry-on and "small personal item" computer backpack, I've travelled with a CPAP machine as an additional 3rd carry-on item (as permitted by TSA regulations.) It's such a common thing that I've never encountered any airport, airline, or related security staff who were even mildly curious about it.