Trip Report Great diving in Puerto Vallarta

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

mattfish

ScubaBoard Supporter
ScubaBoard Supporter
Messages
285
Reaction score
393
Location
Atlanta
# of dives
100 - 199
I was visiting Puerto Vallarta for a week and decided to add some dives around Banderas Bay to my time there.

We dove with Vallarta Adventures as they had a site schedule that worked best with the rest of my activities.

The sites:
  • Marietas Islands (July 29)
  • Los Arcos (July 30)
  • El Morro & Los Anegados (July 31)
Water temps at all sites was 85-88 ° F. I was a bit too warm in a 3mm suit.

I'll start by saying that the diving was a really nice surprise. I have heard people say that the diving in PV isn't that good, but I found it to be top-notch at all three locations.

Marietas Islands had decent visibility at about 50 feet. There was a lot of fish life, and the sites were an interesting mix of rocky outcrops broken up by sandy-bottom channels. We spotted several variations of Guinea fowl puffer, a ton of really big balloon fish and porcupine fish, and a spotted sharptail eel along with several morays. We also saw the absolute biggest scorpion fish I've ever seen. I didn't know that go so big. It had to be pushing 28 inches. The highlight was seeing a whitetip shark.

Los Arcos had pretty poor visibility at 15-20 feet, but it was absolutely packed with life! I couldn't go more than a minute without seeing a moray eel. We also found 6 octopus and a few nudibranchs as well. We also saw a green turtle and a couple of eagle rays which kept their distance. There were so many morays that I stopped taking pictures of them all. And there were all they types as well: we saw zebra morays, green morays, jeweled morays, and a tiger moray.

The last day of diving was the best. It was a doubleheader starting at El Morro, with the second dive at a site called Los Anegados. The visibility at both sites was 100+ feet. El Morro was just gorgeous. We did a swim through of the chimney, which is a cavern that starts with a huge opening at 100 feet and curves and ascends with a beautiful exit at 55 feet. The topography was stunning, and amount of life on the rocks rivaled any tropical reef (though it was not all corals). There was all sorts of encrusting sponges, some hard coral heads, yellow cup coral, and lots of soft coral and fans. Los Anegados was an aquarium. I saw schools of snapper and grunts that were so big and thick you could loose your buddy between them. There were also lots of angel and butterfly fish with some really dazzling juveniles.

All told, I was super impressed with the diving in PV.

Vallarta Adventures was a bit of a mix though.
First and most important: the crew and dive masters were absolutely perfect. Friendly, knowledgeable, skilled, and well-versed with all the sites.
Unfortunately, Vallarta Adventures operates all of their stuff (they do land based things too) out of "Puerto Magico" the cruise ship terminal. This meant walking through a mall of shops to get checked in for the day, then having to go through the port police and x-ray security checks every day to board the boats. My advice here would be to try to join them from Nuevo Nayarit, which is technically the next town up from PV, but still close. There were folks on our boat who boarded up there and didn't have to deal with the cruise port like we did.
The other downside is that the boats seem to be set up for cruiser people without their own gear. All the tanks are in a tight group in the back of the boat and you can't set up your own gear. I had to re-do my BP&W in a rush before getting kitted up and splashing a couple times because it wasn't set up how I like it. There was also no time allotted for a proper buddy check which I like to do for every dive. It was sort of like lining up along the side, they pull your tank with bcd/reg attached and have you go back to put it on and be ready to go.

While I genuinely loved the staff, I'm not sure I'd dive with Vallarta Adventures again. I'd probably pick a different operation like PVOcean Tours or something. I will definitely come back to Puerto Vallarta for more diving.

I'll post some pics and a video once I get home and can begin editing
 
Nice review.

Vallarta Adventures was a bit of a mix though
Curious if a part of the mixed bag was that snorkelers were also on the boat and able to snorkel while you dove? Were your first 2 dives single dives?

I used Vallarta Adventures when we stayed in Nuevo Vallarta - it was the only option in the area although there was a guy who taught scuba at our resort - I could tell in talking to him, he didn't really have a boat to take people out. I was the only diver on a boat going to Las Caletas for a beach day. Basically did a shore dive to 105' in 70º water - I used my gear and their 5mm wetsuit and slip on fins. Not very good visibility, but saw a lot of eels, puffers, incuding balloon fish, and starfish. Only did the 1 dive, as had I gone to the places you dove, it would have been a boat of mostly snorkelers...and long boat rides.
 
It's been quite a few years, but we did a day of diving off PV and had a mixed experience. Glad yours was better overall.

The boat rides were lonnnng... and the music was booming and the return trip was fueled more by alcohol than diesel. It felt like a booze cruise. Our little group, which included some young teens, huddled by ourselves at the stern trying to save our ears and sanity.

There had been a recent storm which apparently broke up a ton of jellyfish into a layer of small pieces just below the surface. You had to pass through this on descent and ascent, which felt like continuous electric shocks all over your skin. Survivable but very unpleasant. Think of it like a "sting-o-clime".

And yes, the water was exceedingly warm. When playing in the surf you'd get OUT to cool off. Diving was slightly better at depth but a wetsuit was out of the question.

We've never been back for diving. This trip report gives me some hope for the future!
 
Vallarta Adventures does have the big "booze cruise" sight-seeing/snorkel boats (double decker catamaran and trimaran), and they were packed. For all three of our days we were on a boat dedicated to scuba diving. We had a max of 10 divers, 2-3 DMs, the captain, and a mate. El Morro was the most full boat.

One diver mentioned that he was on the catamaran for the ride over to a different dive site but was dropped off and did the dive separately.

Each day of diving was a two-tank trip. We dove both islands at Marietas, two sites at Los Arcos, and then El Morro and Los Anegados.
 

Back
Top Bottom