Just got back, I'll be making a post in regard to the Plaza as some have PM me for.
Quickly for now -
Toucan Divers, is a good dive op. Nothing mind blowing, but friendly staff, good equipment, helpful, accommodating, a thumbs up, they do an adequate job at what they do. It's cattle boats with 1:12 DM to diver ratios which aren't really my thing but Bonaire is a bit different place I guess, since it's a self-service shore dive mecca where you do your own thing unguided anyways, the whole boat dive thing I believe reflects that, so is fine for what it is, and I suppose should be judged with a whole different set of bench mark anyways.
Plaza Resort - if all you did was stay in the newly remodeled room and never left it you'd think you were in a 4-5 star hotel, unfortunately the rest of the place is 2-3 stars at best. Unkempt, neglected grounds show the ownership is in full milking mode of this place, doing the very least they can get by with. The feeling of the neglect of the place is cumulative in all the small things, for instance the old signage is everywhere for the old casino, restaurant etc... take it down, get new updated signage... or just leave it and save the money and forget about the appearance it presents.
Any resort with this massive of a foot print requires a full-time maintenance and gardening operation just to keep up with it. The Plaza instead is going the band-aid route.
Resort Staff - this place rates up there with some of the most wildly variable customer service I have ever witnessed. From sullen faced, hating life, you're bothering me, bad eggs all the way to very nice, very accommodating, caring, customer service oriented staff members and everything in-between. In-consistency in the staff is the biggest consistency. I witness and experienced things that would have gotten you fired in many other resorts on the spot.
Maybe it's a Dutch thing, but the room service was difficult at best and dirty plates sat outside your door in the heat for 24 hours before pick up, this is after the iguana’s have scattered the dirty dishes outside your room and you step over them all day long and call repeatedly for them to be picked up, which they simply will not do.
Relaxing on the beach you are approached daily by the activities director who doubles as the beach patrol, demanding you show a beach pass that guests are apparently required to keep on their persons at all times. It's a slip of paper given upon check in. Apparently they allow non-guests access to the beach and collect 10 gilders when they discover them on it. It’s a bit off-putting at best, rude at it's worst, to be approached for your ‘papers’ on a daily basis to prove you belong there, and it's not a simple situation, the girl stands there demanding your papers, which nobody has with them. You go through the daily routine of no I don't have it, or what is it you're asking for? I'm in room so and so and she stands there as guest after guest goes through the same routine.
The practice of driving automobiles around the walkways is a bit disturbing, but what is really alarming is the different staff members in the golf carts going at full bore on the resort walk ways.
The beach bar is a nice hang out, they do a happy hour from 5-6 with reduced beer and wine only. Nice place to relax, bar tenders were pleasant.
If you get a newly remodeled room and all you do is sleep there, take a shower, grab a few drinks at the bar and dive, dive dive most of the Plaza's short-comings will go un-noticed.
The diving
Using the Plaza as our base for shore diving worked well with it's central location, it made things a bit easier with the issues of not being able to pack anything in your rental car you didn't take with you underwater risking it getting stolen, so you could zip back to the Plaza on your way from the south sites to the north sites and pop in to get something.
They always had tanks available at the house reef in two locations and fills were consistent 3000-3200 psi. Loading up in the morning was easy at the dive shop as the tanks and lockers are right next to where you can back up for easy loading.
The dives we did:
18th palms
Joanne’s Sunchi (boat dive)
Rock Pile (boat dive)
Bonaventure (boat dive)
18th palms (night dive)
Hilma Hooker
Salt Pier
Captain Don’s Reef (boat dive)
Salt Pier (night dive) A better day dive then night dive for some reason.
Karpata
Bari Reef
1000 Steps
Invisibles
Soft Coral Garden
Willemstoren Lighthouse
Red Slave
Jerry’s Reef (boat dive)
We saw many turtles a few sea horses, an octopus during the day in three feet of water off the beach at Bari, a few eagle rays and all the rest of the usual suspects on the reefs. I’d have to say that the Willemstoren Lighthouse dive was my favorite of all the dives, they should rename it 'Fan Forest' or something similar. It was a fantastic dive and the fans, coral and soft coral growth, size and coverage is simply astounding, add to that the over-sized sea life, the schools of black durgeons, a loggerhead turtle and the awesome rush of flying underwater using the current to skim and zoom in and out, up and down and around everything on your way back from your turn around point and it’s a dive I will remember for a long, long time.
If we return I think I would like to spend a bit more of our time on the more 'advanced' sites that round the south end of the island, as they were far from intimidating and yielded some real pleasant experiences.
Overall, you have to make the best of it at the Plaza, they aren't going to knock your socks off currently, unless ownership changes hands or changes mentality. It's a great location, a huge, but neglected property, the staff is very inconsitant and customer service is very inconsistant outside of the dive shop. Don't expect maid service every day and expect to make a lot of treks all the way across to the front desk for anything you want as the answer you get after you're done arm-wrestling them for anything is to come to the front desk. Maybe it's a Dutch thing, I don't know.