I have not been to Curacao; been to Bonaire 7 times, and since they're billed as similar, I've had the same interest you have, and have read the threads as they've come up comparing the two. I've seen people post that drive time between sites is much longer and beaches sandier on Curacao.
It's said there are more non-dive activities on Curacao, which is less focused on diving tourism. In Bonaire you can do kite boarding, wind surfing, drive through the park at the north end of the island, and visit the donkey sanctuary, so you can do other things, but Bonaire lends itself to the dive-dive-dive mentality (which I like).
I think the West end of Curacao has more of the "dive-dive-dive" mentality than the East end. Although both ends have an abundance of dive sites. Curacao has similar topside activities minus the donkey sancturary-which I loved(although my photos with the donkeys were marred by my scraped up chin
I hear good things about the ostrich farm and ATV tours, I have not participated in either.
I'd like to better understand the 'work flow' of diving Curacao vs. Bonaire. In threads on Curacao, people often mention the Dive Bus, for example, which if I understand correctly takes people around to sites? Whereas in Bonaire, independent shore diving is so engrained whenever people ask about boat diving Bonaire, it seems some of us try to talk them out of it!
I have to respectfully disagree with this assessment. I saw far more dive boats in Bonaire than Curacao. We passed on the Klein Bonaire which was perplexing to numerous divers. I will definitely do it one of these days. We were already booked on the East End shore dive and did not want to over-commit.
I have not used The Dive Bus. It certainly seems like an enjoyable option-especially for those staying on the East end of the island, people lacking a dive buddy, those new to the island or shore diving, or simply the desire for an extra set of eyes in finding the critters. Watamula is a stunning dive which is a 5 minute boat dive from the dock at Go West diving. Other than those two options, shore diving seems to be the most popular way to dive the island.
Bonaire workflow:
1.) Stay at dive resort - could be Buddy Dive or Captain Don's or what-have-you.
You have the same convenience as staying at the Lodge Kura Hulanda or All West. Although not as many options as Bonaire i.e. drive thru filling stations through out the island.
2.) Get up in morning, eat breakfast, walk out to rental truck, pile your gear to the front of the truck bed, put 2 tanks apiece (probably included nitrox EAN 32) in the back half of the truck bed.
Applicable to either island. Both All West apartments and LKH have tanks on site. I have heard that Go West diving is revamping their system so that one can drive through and load up the tanks instead of schlepping them up and down stairs.
3.) Drive along the shore-hugging road around the island looking at the road-side yellow rocks with dive site names. When you see one you like, pull in, back your truck up facing the ocean, get out, gear up, walk in.
The shore hugging roads are definitely the advantage Bonaire has over Curacao. In Curacao you can easily find the dive sites with a map. Often you will find a rock with the dive flag painted on it at the entrance road to many dive sites. Not as well labeled as Bonaire, but we never had any problems navigating or finding desired sites.
4.) Come out, drive down the road a piece, pull in another site, go in, then head back to the resort, eat lunch, get fresh tanks, go dive 2 more sites, come back, rinse gear, shower & go eat supper. 4 Dives/day!
I gotta hand it to you die hard divers who do 4 or more dives a day. I usually do 2-3. However most of this is due to laziness on my end. I like to sleep in, sip my coffee, read the news and general lollygag until I get off my but and start loading up gear.
So, how does Curacao compare to that?
People have posted that at Curacao there are often 'facilities' at dive sites -
for a fee. Concessions, a rest room, etc... And post about renting tanks at a dive site?
There is an abundance of dive sites which do not have any facilities or creature comforts. They are similar to Bonaire where you are often the only divers at the site. The roads to Curacao dive sites can be quite challenging. The only two sites which I dive with facilities are Porto Marie and Cas Abao. If I remember correctly, the fee was $6-7 dollars per car. A small price to pay when you have access to concessions, toilets, rinse tanks and a locker. It is a treat for me to spend my surface interval where a toilet is available, a locker where I store a hat, beach blanket and book. Some times I have resorted to taking a 2 hour surface interval, although a some of that time is observing the form fitting swimwear choices of other beach patrons
We usually bring our own tanks since we book a tank/lodging package deal. However, if the dive shop at these sites-mainly Cas Abao offer us some tips and advise, I will tip eventhough I bring my own tank.
Do Curacao divers, stay at a dive resort, load up the truck with 'all you can eat buffet, 2/person at a time' EAN 32 nitrox, & head out diving for free at large numbers of shore sites? Can you get the 'Bonaire workflow' routine I posted if you go to Curacao? If not, what's the closest equivalent?
Yes, sometimes we will take more than the 2 tanks per person-especially if doing a night or evening dive. I think the closest equivalent is perhaps Grand Cayman. We did an unlimited shore diving package there. But be prepared for jaw-dropping prices.
Richard.