We did not dive with Nekton, nor have we personally heard from any of the divers who dove St. Croix via Nekton. Our diving on St. Croix has taken a huge break over the past 12 months. Between November 2004 and Sept. 1, 2007 we each logged well over 400 dives in St. Croix. We joined the local dive club, CRABBS, and I was the most prolific diver in that club for two years running. We had two dive buddies who dove quite a bit with us too. Robert is still there, and has surely taken the baton.
We have thousands of photos, and over 50 videos posted of our diving there. We truly enjoyed every single dive. Indeed there are walls, reefs, wrecks, a junk yard and a fair amount of aquatic life. We did not really experience a significant quantity of large fish and critters. The locals have quite a problem in that they are fishing themselves out of fish. Not an uncommon problem in the Caribbean. During the 2006 season there was quite a bit of coral bleaching. It seems that once the temps reached 87, it was too warm for the coral. Contrary to the pundits which profess that once bleached, coral dies, that was not our observations. Many, many coral heads which were almost entirely bleached white, came back to be very colorful and healthy.
One thing you may notice, which seems more prevalent diving off St. Croix is the size and quantity of the barrel sponges. Out west there are many very large sponges.
We often encountered Hawksbill turtles, Caribbean Spiny Lobster, Green moray eels. Although we were never able to spot a single Frog fish, we did encounter several bat fish on a regular basis at the Pier. Also, prior to the Nekton, there were generally a half dozen or more Sea Horses encountered on EACH dive at the Frederiksted Pier. By the way, Robert sees several Frog fish in his dives now at the Pier.
One of the very best things we appreciated about St. Croix, and our favorite dive shop, was that we had each dive site to ourselves! Now that is not always the case, the three dive shops diving the famous Salt River Wall, will often dump their boat loads of divers almost on top of each other. It was not uncommon to return to their dive boat with an extra diver or two. Other than CRABBS dives, we pretty much avoided those operations. They just are not our style of diving. The MARES Rep put it best about St. Croix diving: "On a bad day in Cozumel there are a thousand divers in the water, On a GREAT day in St.Croix there are a hundred divers in the water"
Finally, I might add, there was quite a bit of angst when Nekton announced they were going to make a stop at the St. Croix dive sites. Live aboards do not have a very good reputation about the aquatic-friendly nature of their divers. There was fear that they would run off the very sensitive aquatic life under the Frederiksted Pier, and the Wrecks. Although we still converse with our dive buddies there, they have said nothing of the ill-effects of Nekton's visit.
We love the diving on St. Croix, and will be returning when the opportunity presents itself.
Keith
We have thousands of photos, and over 50 videos posted of our diving there. We truly enjoyed every single dive. Indeed there are walls, reefs, wrecks, a junk yard and a fair amount of aquatic life. We did not really experience a significant quantity of large fish and critters. The locals have quite a problem in that they are fishing themselves out of fish. Not an uncommon problem in the Caribbean. During the 2006 season there was quite a bit of coral bleaching. It seems that once the temps reached 87, it was too warm for the coral. Contrary to the pundits which profess that once bleached, coral dies, that was not our observations. Many, many coral heads which were almost entirely bleached white, came back to be very colorful and healthy.
One thing you may notice, which seems more prevalent diving off St. Croix is the size and quantity of the barrel sponges. Out west there are many very large sponges.
We often encountered Hawksbill turtles, Caribbean Spiny Lobster, Green moray eels. Although we were never able to spot a single Frog fish, we did encounter several bat fish on a regular basis at the Pier. Also, prior to the Nekton, there were generally a half dozen or more Sea Horses encountered on EACH dive at the Frederiksted Pier. By the way, Robert sees several Frog fish in his dives now at the Pier.
One of the very best things we appreciated about St. Croix, and our favorite dive shop, was that we had each dive site to ourselves! Now that is not always the case, the three dive shops diving the famous Salt River Wall, will often dump their boat loads of divers almost on top of each other. It was not uncommon to return to their dive boat with an extra diver or two. Other than CRABBS dives, we pretty much avoided those operations. They just are not our style of diving. The MARES Rep put it best about St. Croix diving: "On a bad day in Cozumel there are a thousand divers in the water, On a GREAT day in St.Croix there are a hundred divers in the water"
Finally, I might add, there was quite a bit of angst when Nekton announced they were going to make a stop at the St. Croix dive sites. Live aboards do not have a very good reputation about the aquatic-friendly nature of their divers. There was fear that they would run off the very sensitive aquatic life under the Frederiksted Pier, and the Wrecks. Although we still converse with our dive buddies there, they have said nothing of the ill-effects of Nekton's visit.
We love the diving on St. Croix, and will be returning when the opportunity presents itself.
Keith