Catito
Contributor
Photos are posted.All of the sites are orange or red but for the two I mentioned. Wonder why you are so Invested in stating that the reefs are not dead. Photos to follow.
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
Photos are posted.All of the sites are orange or red but for the two I mentioned. Wonder why you are so Invested in stating that the reefs are not dead. Photos to follow.
Photos from Karpata and 1000 steps. I am not driven to destroy Bonaire’s reefs’ reputation. I am saddened by what I see and I am just sharing what I see. Again, if I had received accurate information, I would not have taken a dive trip to Bonaire given the state of the reefs. Of course, anyone can visit and decide (once here) if they find the reefs to be healthy. In my opinion, the devastation is alarming.Bonaire's reefs are stressed for sure, but they are not completely dead. Far from it. For what it's worth, I dove Bonaire last October and Cozumel in November and found Cozumel's reefs to be in far worse shape than I saw in Bonaire. And I wouldn't tell people to cancel their trips to either location. Salt Pier is mostly about the sponges and schools of various reef fish. In terms of the reef, it's always going to look pretty beat up compared to healthy sections because it's an industrial site. Where are you staying and what is the house reef? Many of the house reefs are also in areas that see a lot of traffic and get beat up (18 Palms is a prime example).
Why don't you finish your dive trip while keeping as open of a mind as possible before you start telling people to cancel their trips?
Little Cayman was much the same in late September - sad to see!Just finished my second day. So far the reefs are still as fishy but there is no denying the damage done by disease and warming seas. For the sites we have dove thus far, the shallows look pretty good as you would expect since they are less about the hard coral and more gordonians, fans and such. But as you go over the edge the loss is notable. The stoney corals on these sites have been hit heavily. Very few corals that don’t show any signs of disease if not outright gone with algae growth already obvious. Today I did not see a single living flower coral and other health appearing hard corals were rare.
We plan to get an early start tomorrow and head further south.
As for any enforcement for rinsing? No, it hasn’t even been mentioned by any dive staff. I think everyone knows Bonaire is well past that having any impact if indeed they had any real hope even at the beginning.
Thank you. Please tell us which reefs still look good so we can go there while we are still here. Yes, I am comparing the reefs to my last visit (5 years ago).I have just returned from a week at Bonaire.
Though I´ve seen dead corals, the situation seems not to be not as catastrophic as mentioned by the OP.
This was my first visit to Bonaire, so I cannot compare with past times, but I cannot say that EVERY SITE was dead.
We´ve visited 13 different sites from green to red, from south to north and they all looked good so far.
We stayed at Buddy Dive Resort. In the reception briefing we were told to rinse our gear with chlorinated water if we intended to go from a red site to an orange or green site. Dive sites maps with colours were in several places in the Resort.
Besides we've seen those coral nurse stands at the shallows of Buddy Reef. They are worried by the status of the reefs and they are doing something to improve.
Dying reefs is a fact, as ocean warming and acidification, but they are still alive.
Ok, so basically the same as when I was there last May. Thanks.I was on the island in the beginning of the month and it is recommended to do so when changing dive sites. Also it is suggested - in case you are planning to dive different spots per day - to start your day where there is less SCTLD according to the map and eventually progress to the areas where there is more of an issue, not the other way around. That's obviously also aimed at trying to reduce spreading the disease.
When entering the national park in the north of Bonaire any swimming and snorkeling equipment has to be cleaned with bleach as well. They have a cleaning station set up at the entrance. Scuba diving was not permitted up there during my stay.
Did you try any of the southern sites today? The other posters are spot on about the shallows on the southern dives. These were always my favorite dives and now even more so. While still affected, there was some fairly good areas of hard corals between 20 to 35 feet as well. The pencil coral seemed to be largely intact at Red Beryl even though it seems they are susceptible. The Staghorn is resistant and it shows. And of course the Firecoral has no idea there is anything going on.Thank you. Please tell us which reefs still look good so we can go there while we are still here. Yes, I am comparing the reefs to my last visit (5 years ago).