Donnah
Contributor
Our dive group was in Bonaire April 9-18. My husband and I have been to Bonaire 4 times. We stayed in the Divi Flamingo (our third time there). The rooms were fine (top floor rooms near the water are the best). The second floor rooms have better balconies for drying gear, but in terms of railings and security. One person did have a Lavacore top stolen off her ground floor balcony. The hotel staff was very helpful, but top was never recovered.
The renovation is nearly finished -- it was fun to see the progress on the walkways each day. Breakfast was fine; we usually managed to squirrel enough away for lunch also! We did have dinner twice at the Divi. The meals were fine, but I'm easy to please as long as the food is hot and I don't have to cook it! The restaurants in town are easy to walk to; we usually went early to avoid any crowds and because we wanted to go to bed.
The dive operation there is well-organized. Our two DMs did a good job with a group that included very experienced divers and a few novices. All dives were guided; there were several solo photographers who were put on our boat. At our request, we did many of our dives on Klein. Dives were run very safely. I don't know why I dove Nitrox (on air tables). During the week, 3 dives a day I always had 99 minutes of no-deco. We rarely got deeper than 60 feet and spent at least 20 minutes at the end of each dive in the shallows. Most dives were 60 minute dives. I usually had air to stay down longer, but came up because I was cold. Some people did early am and night shore dives off the dock.
The weather was cloudy and windy. Water was 80 degrees, but most people (except for those with lots of natural insulation) were cold during the second dive. I wore a 3 ml wetsuit and a hooded lined vest with a lined skin under everything. There wasn't any chance to warm up in the sun between dives. Because of the wind, we did Klein first thing in the am before the wind picked up. Lots of surface current. For most dives we were directed to drop to the bottom as quickly as we could. The DM went slowly so we had time to look for critters and take pictures, but we were usually swimming into the current at the first part of the dive.
We saw most of the usual suspects: frogfish, flounders, eels, snake eels, spotted drums, etc. Also some really big lionfish. We didn't see many large schools of fish, or as many fish as I remember. I was disappointed in the health of the reefs in general. Very sad. The cruise ships come right up to the port. Some in our group were doing a shore dive just when the cruise ship left. Total sandstorm and no visibility at all. They had to surface and take a compass heading to get back to the dock. The house reef has been definitely harmed by the cruise ships.
The renovation is nearly finished -- it was fun to see the progress on the walkways each day. Breakfast was fine; we usually managed to squirrel enough away for lunch also! We did have dinner twice at the Divi. The meals were fine, but I'm easy to please as long as the food is hot and I don't have to cook it! The restaurants in town are easy to walk to; we usually went early to avoid any crowds and because we wanted to go to bed.
The dive operation there is well-organized. Our two DMs did a good job with a group that included very experienced divers and a few novices. All dives were guided; there were several solo photographers who were put on our boat. At our request, we did many of our dives on Klein. Dives were run very safely. I don't know why I dove Nitrox (on air tables). During the week, 3 dives a day I always had 99 minutes of no-deco. We rarely got deeper than 60 feet and spent at least 20 minutes at the end of each dive in the shallows. Most dives were 60 minute dives. I usually had air to stay down longer, but came up because I was cold. Some people did early am and night shore dives off the dock.
The weather was cloudy and windy. Water was 80 degrees, but most people (except for those with lots of natural insulation) were cold during the second dive. I wore a 3 ml wetsuit and a hooded lined vest with a lined skin under everything. There wasn't any chance to warm up in the sun between dives. Because of the wind, we did Klein first thing in the am before the wind picked up. Lots of surface current. For most dives we were directed to drop to the bottom as quickly as we could. The DM went slowly so we had time to look for critters and take pictures, but we were usually swimming into the current at the first part of the dive.
We saw most of the usual suspects: frogfish, flounders, eels, snake eels, spotted drums, etc. Also some really big lionfish. We didn't see many large schools of fish, or as many fish as I remember. I was disappointed in the health of the reefs in general. Very sad. The cruise ships come right up to the port. Some in our group were doing a shore dive just when the cruise ship left. Total sandstorm and no visibility at all. They had to surface and take a compass heading to get back to the dock. The house reef has been definitely harmed by the cruise ships.