(this is a Roatan thread, isn't it?), *
Back to the OP's question,
I don't think these posts were off topic, given that
his destination (FIBR)
is dead center in this shallow-wall zone that is pictured.
Roatan is a
big island with
a lot of different underwater architecture and critters that have been shaped by eons of wind, wave and sunlight.
I keep using phrases such as, "
shallow sunlit walls" and "
unique reef environment with specific niche creature habitat" for the reefs
in front of the pictured area.
Fancy words that are the best I can come up with to describe this diving- like no other in the Caribbean.
The best proof I can offer up is in the form of a "negative". Many, many divers walk away from this South side environment disappointed. Yet-
this is exactly the area that macro hounds and world famous photographers (Waterman and others) live and breathe when on Roatan. The divers who have gained the dive experience and have seen enough Lobsters and 18" Parrot fish- they enjoy this area tremendously.
It may seem off topic until you can compare this unique environment to any other you may have dived.
(Nitrox (
capitalized at the beginning of a sentence 
) is a
great idea if you are diving
Roatan's North and West dives which are inherently deeper. )
It is really no different than any other "shaping of the island" by the constant pressure of nature since it was shoved up by the Earthquakes... or which way the prevailing wind and wave dictate your access.
Would you
prepare the same way :vintagediver: and
dive the same methods :snorkel2:
on either side of Cayman, the two Florida coasts or Bonaire, which end of the Red Sea? You might- :goingdown:
only if you didn't know in advance the differences.
Knowing what to bring to Roatan goes far beyond sun block, denominations of currency hats and type of insect goop.
....................
Too many visitors to paradise (anywhere) believe that diving is simply diving, and certainly on what appears to be a small island~ what difference can there be in diving conditions separated by the ridgeline of an island?
Those little white areas pictured above in the chart...
they mean a whole lot.