Cayman Aggressor in April: Advice needed.

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jaccomando

Guest
Messages
5
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0
Location
Houston, TX (just South actually)
# of dives
50 - 99
I have been on weekend liveaboards out of Freeport, TX to the Flower Gardens twice so I survived the short weekend trips.

I’m looking to your experience for advice on how/what to pack, what extras to bring, what you wish you had brought, and more importantly what NOT to bring on this week long trip.

I have already confirmed that they can store my Pelican cases that I use to fly. (I transfer my gear to a roller mesh bag.) I have all my own gear and I’m reading a lot about bringing a spare everything. I don’t have a lot of spare/extra stuff so I’m looking to prioritize.

Any advice is appreciated as I continue to read the other posts.

John
 
Tee shirts, shorts, 3 swim suits, dive gear, ball cap. You really don't need a lot of clothes, I bring 3 swim suits because I hate putting and a wet clammy and cold swim suit. You do so many dives one never a chance to dry. If you are bringing a camera, bring an extra main body oring and extra batteries. The boats can usually fix most gear related issues, you don't need a spare everything. If you have 2 prescription masks bring both. The Cayman Aggressor is a great boat, I tried to book a charter for April/May with no joy, so back to the Belize Aggressor I go. Have a great trip and enjoy Little Cayman.

Jim
 
You'll need:
4 t-shirts, preferably with subtle "bragging rights" logo or something
5 swim suits
a dozen clothes pins for hanging up suits outside
Batteries for dive lights, & a spare dive computer battery
Major failures, the boat has spare regs/fins etc
Fleece pants + hooded sweatshirt
Cheap Wal-Mart $10 polarized sunglasses to leave on the camera table between dives
2 masks that fit you
A wetsuit beanie cap
Dive insurance
A Nitrox cert if you don't have one
Tip in cash

You won't need:Towels (they have a zillion and consider it a point of pride to make sure you have a fresh dry towel draped over you before you get aboard)
Any kind of mesh day bag (you have a locker at your tank/BC)
Oxygen analyzer (they have their own)

Nice to have
A big bottle of hair shampoo (and hair conditioner for the ladies) for the back deck - our groups always seem to abandon the suite showers, and by the second day we all just take showers on the back swim deck in between the first & second dives of the day. More than once we've exhausted the boat's supply of shampoo, and now we just bring our own.

Have fun! The Cayman Aggressor is still our favorite.


All the best, James
 
I’m looking to your experience for advice on how/what to pack, what extras to bring, what you wish you had brought, and more importantly what NOT to bring on this week long trip.

I've posted the info below on a previous thread specific to the two most common liveaboard questions:
  • "What should I bring on a liveaboard?"
  • "What's the deal with tipping on a liveaboard?"
Pack what you think you should bring into your suitcase. Then remove half of what you packed. Then remove half of what's left. Now look at what's left... you still have too much stuff.

:eyebrow:

The most important thing to bring on a liveaboard is a sense of humor and a generally good, positive attitude. If you're not familiar with boats - much less living on one - here's a few FACTS about boats:

  • everything on a boat breaks
  • everything on a boat leaks
  • everything on a boat gets wet
  • nothing on a boat every really dries
  • everything on a boat smells like a boat; where things break, get wet, and never really dry
  • anything that doesn't smell like a boat smells like people who live on a boat
  • everything mechanical on a boat is very loud (until it breaks; then it becomes very quiet)
  • everything non-mechanical on a boat creaks and/or rattles (until it breaks in; then it gets very quiet; that's usually the day before it breaks)
  • everything on a boat is small
  • if something is not small, it's not on the boat
  • if something is not available on the island/mainland, it's not on the boat
  • if something is not on the boat, it's not on the boat
  • if you need something specific but didn't bring it, it's not on the boat
  • even things that are usually on the boat are often not on the boat
  • most things that happen on a boat happen simply "because it's a boat"
A thousand major/minor/uncomfortable/disgusting/annoying/inconvenient things can go wrong on a boat over the course of a year. Statistically, that means that 20 of them will happen the week you're on board. You won't notice 15 of them. Will any of the the other 5 things ruin your trip? Honestly - other than a condition which presents a clear and imminent safety or health issue - whether or not something ruins your trip is entirely up to you. I choose to focus on the things like diving that make my trip enjoyable; folks who choose to focus on things that will ruin their trip can always find something that will.

But, as an optimist, keep in mind that you also get to take the good with the bad...
  • everything GOOD that happens on a live-aboard happens "because it's a boat"
  • you're never more than an hour or so from the next dive, the next meal, the next nap, or your first drink - because it's a boat
  • you set your gear up once and don't worry about it again - because it's a boat
  • you're right over the dive site - because it's a boat
  • two hours later you're right over the next dive site - because it's a boat
  • it's a twenty foot walk from your last bite of desert after dinner to your night dive - because it's a boat
  • it's a ten foot walk from your night dive to a hot shower - because it's a boat
  • it's a twenty foot walk from the hot shower to a cold beer - because it's a boat
  • it's a twenty foot walk from the cold beer to your bed - because it's a boat
  • when you wake up the next morning to the smell of coffee and waffles...you're right over the next great dive site - because it's a boat
GoodViz2.jpg


Tipping? I can only provide my American perspective. But first, if you're reading this and you a.) are not American, b.) disagree in principle with the societal convention of tipping in certain cultures, or c.) are otherwise too cheap to tip --- don't bother reading on if you're simply going to dog-pile this thread with general "I don't believe in tipping...crew should be paid...not my fault...I don't need their help...I already paid enough for the trip...no one tips me when I do my job" type of responses. There's plenty of threads elsewhere for that. When it comes to liveaboard diving: "If you can afford the trip, you can afford to tip."

To put liveaboard tipping in context, break it down this way: Imagine the same dive trip but not living aboard. You're dining out three meals a day for 6 days, having a drink or two at a bar every day for 6 days, you're doing a 2-tank morning charter, a 2-tank afternoon charter, and a night dive charter every day for 6 days. With even conservative tipping on boat dives and budget-minded meals, you'd be looking at handing out more than $300 in gratuities over the course of the week. Well, the crew on the liveaboard are "the servers" for all the things listed above. Some have proposed a figure of "10% of trip cost" which is a good start; perhaps going to 15% to avoid being chintzy on lower priced charters.

Now further consider that the crew also works 16hrs a day doing everything else that needs to get done on a boat. Including tidying your cabin daily, making your bed daily, cleaning your toilet daily, etc. Good crews on good boats - luckily have never experienced a bad one - will wait on you hand and foot above water and below while you're awake. When you fall asleep they're working a few more hours to make sure tomorrow is even better. Then, when they go to bed, it's four of them in a cabin smaller than yours, under/behind/adjacent to the engine room and generators, that they live in for several months at a stretch, with effectively everything they own during that time. (Seriously, it would be illegal to house convicted felons in the same fashion. They deserve a good tip merely for mustering a smile once during any given day.) From what I understand, on the typical liveaboard the base salary they receive for that week's work is on the order of US$100-$150 a week. To be very clear...they work for tips.

For a week-long trip I budget for $300+ pretty much regardless of the cost of the charter. The + usually takes the form of a couple of extra $20's slipped into the hands of a few individuals who's efforts made my trip particularly enjoyable. I also tend to leave for home shy a backup light or two, maybe a guide with a rusted out illegible SPG finds my backup in his bin after I've headed to the airport, and there's one fabulous guide who has an Atomic Frameless mask now instead of the genuine piece-of-**** he was diving with when I got on board.

Ultimately, the advice of "tips are at your discretion, whatever you feel is appropriate is the right amount" is the right advice. I simply tend to believe that you should give some real consideration to what's "appropriate" before deciding on the amount. I tip a lot. I've never over-tipped.
 
My list.

One sweatshirt because it might get cold one night, a tshirt for every day of the trip. One pair of shorts. 5 bathing suits because I like to put on a dry suit after each dive and use it for shorts until the next dive. 3 wetsuits because I hate getting into a wet wetsuit, I end up being much warmer throughout the trip - and I use them for camera gear padding. Short extension cord with lots of plugs because there are never enough on board to plug everything in. Extra mask because the spares on board won't fit. Spare o-ring for the camera housing, spare card and battery for the camera because there is no way they have these on board. A couple of usb sticks to share pictures.

Some like flip flops for feet, I take my shoes off getting on board and don't use them again until I get off.

Don't carry spare dive gear as most liveaboards can provide pretty much anything unless you are a "special" size.

Waterproof tape to fix just about any cut, blister or rub.

Whatever meds you might need - sea sick pills and sleeping pills in case the boat is really loud or really rough (I don't get seasick if I am asleep). Ear plugs if you are sharing a cabin.

Chocolate because I like it even though you will have lots of snack food.

Completely agree bring the right attitude. Things will go wrong that can't be fixed - it's a boat.
 
looks like everyone has covered it for you....I like to wear socks in the salon during evening meals....the a/c is usually plenty cold ;-)....and like others have said a sweatshirt or light hoodie in the evenings up on deck or even in the salon after a long day of diving feels good.....I usually also bring and extra 1 or 2 plastic hangers they usually have enough but if you have more than a couple of wetsuits/skins/rash guard drying it helps so you don't look like a hanger hog :-)) have fun....
 
decongestant. I don't recommend diving on it, but if you get sick, this can maker the difference on resting and feeling better sooner.

ear drying solution - ear infections can slow or prevent equalization.
 

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