Diving Honduras: Advice for experienced dive traveller please:)

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Messages
2
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Location
Vancouver
# of dives
500 - 999
I am planning a trip to Honduras and know nothing about the area. From what I have read it seems Roatan is very well known. My preference is to dive with a small group of like minded photographers and experienced dive enthusiasts who enjoy current / drift dives and avoid dive sites named Coral Garden. I am trained as a PADI Instructor have just over 1000 dives since 2000 in the Caribbean, Indonesia, Micronesia, Philippines, & Australia, and would love to hear comments and recommendations for liveaboard or land based action. Thanks in advance for your tips. Best fishes:)
 
I liked Anthony's Key.

Not much for drift diving but plenty of opportunity for photography.

There is a new liveaboard for diving the Bay Islands. I don't have any experience with it and I haven't heard anything.

Bay Island Yacht Charters - Caribbean Pearl II
 
I am planning a trip to Honduras and know nothing about the area. From what I have read it seems Roatan is very well known. My preference is to dive with a small group of like minded photographers and experienced dive enthusiasts who enjoy current / drift dives and avoid dive sites named Coral Garden. I am trained as a PADI Instructor have just over 1000 dives since 2000 in the Caribbean, Indonesia, Micronesia, Philippines, & Australia, and would love to hear comments and recommendations for liveaboard or land based action. Thanks in advance for your tips. Best fishes:)
If you are looking for current/drift dives Roatan wouldn't seem to be the place to look for that. It's also what I would call "good Caribbean diving" and certainly doesn't going to compare to the Pacific destinations you've been to. A lot of diving in Roatan is off small boats where dealing with a large camera rig (assuming that's what you have) is not ideal. There are a couple ops with larger boats but it's not the norm. If by "avoid dive sites named Coral Garden" you mean you're not much into pretty reefs with fishies and little stuff, understand that's a fair bit of what's there. What is it you are looking for?

I think the closest thing to a live aboard in Roatan is going to be staying at Coco View Resort.
Actually the closest thing to a liveaboard in Roatan would be a liveaboard, namely the Caribbean Pearl II mentioned. (Which also spends time at Utila.) Might be the most likely place to find a group of photographers to hang out with, of course that depends who happens to be on the same charter as you. Cocoview has it's points - it does fall in that "land-based liveaboard" category - and is very popular. And has larger boats, which often have few people on them because they're all off shore diving or sleeping after a couple days. But it's on the south side and I'd say the area they dive falls even more into the "Coral Gardens" category than the north side, or even the south side of the west end, which seem to have more structure and some chance of a few larger things.

Some bits about CP2 can be found in these threads-
http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/liveaboards-and-charter-boats/474775-caribbean-pearl-ii.html
http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/li...ats/495738-picking-caribbean-live-aboard.html
 
The MV Pearl is the Honduran liveaboard - Bay Island Yacht Charters - Caribbean Pearl II They run between Roatan and Utila stopping at the seamounts one day also. Looking at their itinerary on the Roatan side it looks like they dive Peter's Place which is a good drift dive. Most of the others listed are not though. On Utila Blackish Point is also IIRC. Good dive anyway it's on the top 50 dives of the world list on ScubaDiving.com. As is Mary's Place off Roatan which they dive also. Not a drift though, more like a crack.

If the current is running right, Half Moon Bay Wall is also a drift dive. Our DM told us you can sometimes drift between 2-3 other sites on a good day. Not the day we were there though - it was barely noticeable. When the Pearl was the Utila Aggressor I saw it moored there one day.

The far west point Roatan dives are all good drift dives, Texas, Pablo's Place, West End Wall. We dove Texas and it was running - we surfaced 10 minutes downcurrent from where our dayboat captain thought we would. And I'm not great on air. Many of the West Bay/West End shops dive those.

I've also read (no personal experience) Morat Wall off Barbareta described as a 3 mile long drift dive. Likely a private charter for any Roatan operator willing to go there. Zeppelin goes out there also on a charter basis - Zeppelin Dive & Sail | Private Liveaboard Diving Sailing CaribbeanZeppelin Dive and Sail

hth,
 
I see this thread as an interesting entre' into the viability of liveaboards as a marketable product. If you're going to charge more, you have to have the appearance of providing more.

.... If by "avoid dive sites named Coral Garden" you mean you're not much into pretty reefs with fishies and little stuff, understand that's a fair bit of what's there. What is it you are looking for?

Actually the closest thing to a liveaboard in Roatan would be a liveaboard, namely the Caribbean Pearl II mentioned. (Which also spends time at Utila.) Might be the most likely place to find a group of photographers to hang out with, of course that depends who happens to be on the same charter as you. Cocoview has it's points - it does fall in that "land-based liveaboard" category - and is very popular. And has larger boats, which often have few people on them because they're all off shore diving or sleeping after a couple days. But it's on the south side and I'd say the area they dive falls even more into the "Coral Gardens" category than the north side, or even the south side of the west end, which seem to have more structure and some chance of a few larger things.

Roatan liveaboards have come and gone, all for the same reasons that I can see.

If the CP2 is operating on any given week, that's an issue of getting enough passengers to make it workable. The schedule is on 15 different website which agent/manage the sales for the ship. I would contact them before assuming you can "pick a week". Nothing negative there about the ship, but geography and dollars have a large part of the decision making choice for the ship's management and divers, too.

The most cogent post, from Damselfish to boot ;) http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/li...ts/474775-caribbean-pearl-ii.html#post7366622

Any ship's itinerary (dive sites) is primarily dictated by: 1) fuel costs and 2) prevailing wind and wave.

Bay Islands fuel isn't cheap, and if you are using local crew (which is either required by law or local pressures and payroll cost savings), the fuel might easily be the higher cost. There isn't much impetus to move the ship a lot, certainly not pointing it SSE for a long chug over to Cayos Cochinos, which can be a rough crossing, but would be the single best reason to have a Bay Islands Liveaboard trip. A liveaboard venturing anywhere East past Mary's Place (Roatan, fairly far West on the South side) is an unlikely event for a couple of reasons: Fuel coast and complete lack of moorings capable of holding the ship. This ship was in it's original Bay Islands Aggressor (BIA) management when it tore-up the standard Mary's Place mooring They finally built one for themselves that would be adequate for such a vessel. No other such pins were placed on the South shore that I am aware of. (maybe there are more?)

They made forays to other local dive sites from that mooring by small boat. The boat was usually visible form CocoView for the week, at the same time, the passengers had the same but reverse view of CCV. They would ferry divers over to CCV's shore dive maybe four times a week, doing two night dives. Maybe CP2 is being operated somehow different? As many days a year I spend at Coco View, I've never seen her operational as the CP2. Maybe it was an off-week, or maybe they didn't come to Roatan from Utila, but locals told me she was not chartered during this or that period, nor have they seen her running much at all.

The predecessor BIA itin was it's downfall. If the guests spend most of a week bobbing around off the Southern coast doing the same dive sites as CCV, that kind of clientele quickly does the math. $900 for airfare first off. Why pay $2800 for a liveaboard for essentially the same dive sites (and less BT) for $1400 at CocoView? Most folks just don't see a $1400 advantage.

Note the similar issue with the Wind Dancer Tobago liveaboard. The Wind Dancer in Grenada? Cost vs. benefit. Some of the best diving in Grenada (NE Barrier Islands) which would have been the perfect "hook" for a Grenada itin? Too far of a chug to pay for the gas. Smarter to go land based, same diving, cheaper.

Any Bay Islands liveaboard is limited to operation in the wind shadow which is the Southerly coast. Not likely that they are going to expend the fuel to go very far West much less make the crossing to Cayos. The BIA had one grand idea which was to shoot up to Swan (Cisne) Island which is part of the Bay Islands, way NE of Roatan. They had a hassle with permits, mostly the expense. The permitting is also the reason the Utila based liveaboard will not actually dock at Roatan, the wharfage fees at any commercial dock capable of having her would add too much to the already high price tag. So either you fly over to Utila, or they pick you up in Roatan by shuttle launches, while they are in the neighborhood provisioning at the only reliable grocery stores. Why she doesn't tie up at Parrot Tree (Roatan) where she sat idle for years is anyone's guess.

These above kinds of issues killed-off the Hughes Antares II in Los Roques. Logistical issues cost lots of money.

I ponder as does Damselfish- the OP use of "coral gardens" is a bit vague. The South is shallow, Sunlit and florid vertical walls with many macro critters. The North is deeper, darker, much more stark, and more frequency of larger Pelagic specimens.

If that is the definition, whichever type of u/w experience you might desire- there are much cheaper ways to do this in the Bay Islands rather than on a ship.
 
I am planning a trip to Honduras and know nothing about the area. From what I have read it seems Roatan is very well known. My preference is to dive with a small group of like minded photographers and experienced dive enthusiasts who enjoy current / drift dives and avoid dive sites named Coral Garden. I am trained as a PADI Instructor have just over 1000 dives since 2000 in the Caribbean, Indonesia, Micronesia, Philippines, & Australia, and would love to hear comments and recommendations for liveaboard or land based action. Thanks in advance for your tips. Best fishes:)

Just curious as to why you are so enthusiastic about drift diving? I enjoy both drift and moored reef dives depending on whatever is most suitable for the location. I am wondering what makes you think that Roatan would be a great destination for drift divers? It has never had that reputation as far as I know. What do you like so much about drift diving, do you find it more fun or exciting than moored reef dives?

My limited experiences (4 weeks) in Roatan do not suggest that it is a great destination for drift divers. And my few trips to nearby Belize (including a liveaboard) were again not geared toward drift diving. So you may be looking in the wrong part of the world if drift diving is your aim.

If you want to drift dive in the Caribbean then I suggest Cozumel. And Baja in the Sea of Cortez also has great drift diving. So does the Red Sea on the other side of the world.

I don't worry too much about the names that dive ops give to sites. If you ever go to Bonaire (not a drift diving destination) you will find that many of the sites were named after Captain Don's various girlfriends over the years; and it is clear that Andrea must have been a very special girl!
 
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I liked Anthony's Key.

Not much for drift diving but plenty of opportunity for photography.

AKR? Unless one is part of their own group and makes arrangements to do dives of their liking, one is likely to be put on a boat of divers of mixed skill levels and interests and spend at least some dives at the proverbial "Coral Gardens" site.
 
Yep, AKR. 3 dives a day and 2 night dives. Been there 4 times with a group, I always enjoyed it. Mixed level groups don't bother me. I still enjoy the dive. We always got to dive our tanks while we were there. They always asked if there was someplace we wanted to go. They run the cruise ship crowd too. They are always separate from the guests boats. YMMV.


AKR? Unless one is part of their own group and makes arrangements to do dives of their liking, one is likely to be put on a boat of divers of mixed skill levels and interests and spend at least some dives at the proverbial "Coral Gardens" site.
 

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