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Then, we'd all like to be with youNot quite, but I'll hit a thousand there my next trip...guess I'll be buying the rounds that night....

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Then, we'd all like to be with youNot quite, but I'll hit a thousand there my next trip...guess I'll be buying the rounds that night....
Now I've got to decide where I want to do my 1000th Bonaire dive....hmm.Then, we'd all like to be with you![]()
I only have 9 trips, 280 dives on Bonaire. I would probably go for a good dive with my wife +/- other family on the good old house reef at Bari, I know it like the back of my hand, and love every dive.Now I've got to decide where I want to do my 1000th Bonaire dive....hmm.
How about Something Special? Seems like a natural...Now I've got to decide where I want to do my 1000th Bonaire dive....hmm.
East Coast? Drift from a to b? Same spot as you did your first?Now I've got to decide where I want to do my 1000th Bonaire dive....hmm.
So, tanks are the one single thing that doesn’t get stolen from cars parked at shore dive sites. It took me a couple of days looking at that answer before I noodled out why that is the case. Makes perfect sense.Your first reason is never a reason. People nearly always have a second tank in the back of their pickups, either for the next dive, or from the previous dive, or as a spare.
My wife does not dive, but my youngest does and he will dive with me this trip.That's great to hear about the tanks! Most reports on YT suggest precautions against petty theft, but none that I saw mentioned how to manage tanks. I'm now thinking this will be my first dive trip OOC. My wife doesn't dive so I'll need to see what Bonaire has to offer her.
Shopping limited (she can get souvenirs), capital is quaint and nice to walk around, lots of iron shore but you can find some sandy beach, eating out can be fun (though a bit pricey), kite boarding, wind surfing, snorkeling, kayaking in mangroves, visit caves, drive around the island getting out taking photos of scenic nature (especially in Washington-Slagbaai Park to the north), looking and and photographing wild birds, a visit to the Donkey Sanctuary, probably more...My wife doesn't dive so I'll need to see what Bonaire has to offer her.
thanks for your feedbackShopping limited (she can get souvenirs), capital is quaint and nice to walk around, lots of iron shore but you can find some sandy beach, eating out can be fun (though a bit pricey), kite boarding, wind surfing, snorkeling, kayaking in mangroves, visit caves, drive around the island getting out taking photos of scenic nature (especially in Washington-Slagbaai Park to the north), looking and and photographing wild birds, a visit to the Donkey Sanctuary, probably more...
Curacao is more where I think of a mixed group with some non-divers being accommodated, though Bonaire could do it. In some ways I think Bonaire is simply logistically for a shore diving focused trip, but Curacao has more topside stuff to see (albeit more spread out, as it's a larger island).
Curacao Trip Research Notes
Curacao Trip Report with SB Surge Jan. 2019