Ginnie Springs--did we miss something?

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Lorenzoid

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My wife and I drove down from Atlanta to check out Ginnie Springs and get in a few practice dives before an upcoming big trip. This was only my second dive trip to a FL spring, the first having been to Devil's Den and Blue Grotto about eight years ago. My wife had never dived in freshwater. We found Ginnie to be disappointing and wonder whether we just didn't do something right. The people at the dive shop really didn't give us a good orientation, though we told them we were newbies at this and asked for whatever advice they thought might be useful to us. The orientation video didn't have any more information than what was available on their web site.

I can understand the allure for the Cave Diver, but for the OW diver there is only so much to see, isn't there? We went into the "Ballroom" or whatever it's called, checked out the grate that blocks the cave entrance, and after maybe 15 minutes of looking around and pointing our lights at the walls we shrugged our shoulders and left. Did we expect too much? Did we miss something? After that, we swam out into the river, which had horrible vis, so we left. We really didn't feel like gearing up again to see the nearby Devil's Eye, etc., because from what we understood that site has even less (or just as little) for the OW diver to see, as OW divers aren't even permitted to carry lights.

Although it was eight years ago and I have been to many more amazing places since, I recall having enjoyed Devil's Den and Blue Grotto in nearby Williston. If I recall, there were some lights and multiple ropes to guide the most casual OW diver to areas of interest. If I recall, we had no problem occupying ourselves for more than 15 minutes there and enjoyed about half a day at each place. I also spent a day diving in Mexican cenotes with a cave diving guide a couple of years ago and thought that was one of the most incredible dive experiences I have ever had. Have my expectations been raised too much by so much great diving? :dontknow:

The experience was also dampened by having to navigate past families with little children swimming in the spring and going up and down the same stairs we used to enter and exit in our dive gear. It was chaotic. Totally different from what we are used to from diving in the ocean. Totally different from what I (vaguely) remember of Devil's Den and Blue Grotto, too.

Are we morons? Did we miss something? Although diving in a freshwater spring is a novelty for me that I kind of enjoy, I think that as OW divers it would be a better use of the time and money we expended in driving 5-1/2 hours from Atlanta, staying a couple of nights in a hotel, etc., to apply those resources to a dive trip elsewhere, like maybe Boynton Beach or the Keys.

For the Cave Diver, I'm sure Ginnie is nirvana, but I think we'll stick to the ocean.
 
Ginnie Springs is a waste of time unless you are cave or at the very least cavern, IMO. Even the cavern portion of the Eye and Ear aren't that great according to what I've been told. I won't go back until I get Cave.

Between hearing about Ginnie here on SB and it being the subject of a glowing weekend getaway article in Scuba Diving mag a few months back, I guess I expected more. By the way, Scuba Diving's recommendations of where to stay and where to eat were great, but the diving sucks unless one is a Cave or Cavern diver, as you said.
 
Ginnie is awesome when going to the MegaDive with Scubaboard. Otherwise, not sure it would be worth the 5.5 hr drive as an OW diver.. which is how far I drive to get to GS.
 
I went with a group from school to Blue Grotto and Ginnie early in the spring (mid April I think). Blue Grotto was very nice, and was an enjoyable trip (can't believe one dive was 45mins, it felt like 10). Ginnie was a bit boring since I did my OW training there, but Devil's Eye/Ear are interesting to just go down and look in. The river can be a bit murky, but down near the bottom it usually clears out and is cool to drift down and find things that people drop in the river as they tube down (got a new pair of Oaklies).
Has anyone dove Troy? We were going to go there instead of BG, but the Swannee had flooded out and it was closed to divers due to extremely low vis.
 
Tend to agree w/ you 100% Loren

I don't see it either, but others swear by them, and take a look at how many times they are recommended as places to dive, especially for those visiting FL - I certainly "get it" if I was a cave diver.

Since you mentioned it.......

While no magazine can equal the old "Skin Diver" for hype and BS, I tend to take with a grain of salt any glowing recommendations next to the full page add for the property/supplier mentioned/profiled in an article - just sayin'

PS The best was an article in "Skin Diver" written by the operators wife - like she was going to point out anything bad, or even had a shred of objectivity - guess its better to abandon all sense of objectivity - "SD" was one of the worst magazines ever written. Not surprised they are out of business.
 
I have warned someone already on this board: diving in Florida springs is totally boring, unless you are a limestone psycho. It is just limestone, limestone, limestone, limestone, limestone...all the same limestone at 10 and 45 feet. At least, Devil's Den has a couple of catfish.

As for the Ginnies, rent a canoe and go down the river.
 
Of course, I don't understand why people aren't enthralled with limestone, but . . . I agree. For an open water diver, I would think Ginnie would not be a very interesting place to dive, especially given the entry price. Unless you drift the river -- I've never done that, so I don't have any information about it.

But I always feel very sorry for the students who do their OW classes there. Hanging onto rock and looking down into a crack that you can't swim in doesn't seem like an exciting way to do one's first open water dive to me.
 
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