- Messages
- 20,703
- Reaction score
- 20,278
- Location
- Philadelphia and Boynton Beach
- # of dives
- 1000 - 2499
This thread reminds me of a dispute on the elementary school playground
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
They have every right to an opinion. And like people scared of Bonaire, they can simply not come to the U.S. and have no worries.
I . . . However, your choices don't make everyone else's dumb for having a different outlook and a different indifference of crime than you do, especially when your perspective is so skewered in the opposite direction since you live in a high crime area and take draconian steps to combat it. Many of the rest of us come from low crime homes and have different expectations of security and victimization, especially when we are spending thousands of hard earned dollars for getting away from it all for relaxation and enjoyment.
Our trucks were also hit at Oil Slick..got some cheap coolers and a few beers and some old sandles.. certainly not enough to stop us from returning or even not to dive Oil Slick again. One person with us lost a bit more, but we warned her beforehand and she didn't believe us...There have been 34 pages of posts made here about crime on Bonaire over the month of March.
A couple of take aways:
It seems an isolated or individual rental property is more prone to B&E than established resorts.
I have no clear sense whether there is a variation of the theft rate among dive sites. It might be valuable to know this information.
My sense and observation is that the northern dive sites are more prone to theft. I think this is because they are on the way to Rincon and that these sites offer more cover from which thieves can shelter, observe and strike. This is especially so at Oil Slick. I have stayed at Caribbean Club and noticed a lot of trails overlooking Oil Slick's parking area. I even recall one group being robbed despite one of their party remaining on shore there.
The southern sites are farther away from the common local travel routes and there is less cover.
Does anyone have anything to share? Please mention the dive site(s) you have suffered thefts at.
I wonder about this. It's difficult to quantify how many visitors to Bonaire come from "low crime" areas versus "high crime" areas and therefore what their expectations might be. There is a whole continuum from low to high. Sure, to Dusty and me, who live in high-crime places, Bonaire looks safe enough, to mmmbelows, who lives in a low-crime place, Bonaire looks dangerous, and Pedroinspain lives in bliss "on the edge of the Med." But we are just a tiny few data points. Lots of Europeans from some of the big cities visit Bonaire. If you live in Brussels or Paris, or if you're a Brit or European who has been scared off the Red Sea, maybe Bonaire looks pretty safe right now. Probably some South Americans visit Bonaire, too. Maybe there are more divers than you realize who live in parts of the world where bars on the windows and broken car windows are the norm?
It's also worth noting that Dutch law is very much different than USA law regarding home invasions and protection of private property etc. A homeowner can't just whack a thief with a baseball bat or machete if he catches one ransacking his house in the middle of the night. The homeowner must prove in court that his life was in imminent danger and that violence was the only way to protect himself.