This will be short, as I am returning to work today, and haven't much time.
Colleen and I spent last week on St Thomas, US VI, staying on the east end near Red Hook. For the first time I braved a rental car on an island with left hand driving, and THAT was a trip, in itself! None of the problems that I expected on the roads, but get into a parking lot or driveway situation, and the right hand driving instinct kept rearing it's head. Tormented a few other drivers, making that adjustment!
Saw a few drivers have much worse problems than I did, so I don't feel so bad.
We dived with Red Hook Divers, which was formed by and is owned by the original staff of the old Chris Sawyer dive shop, who I dived with in '95. All great people, and fun to dive with. All instructors, no DM's on any dives. Watching captain Perry snake the boat backward into a difficult berth at the end of the dive is fun; tight spot! If, or when I return to St Thomas I will definitely dive with these people again!
Water was in the 82-83d range on all dives. Dives were all fairly shallow, in the 45 to 60 ft max range, and we had some really fun, long dives, except for my losing my DC500 off my arm on the first dive of the week, at the "calf" dive site.:shocked2:
Week got lots better, when we were able to return to calf on Wed and one of the guys diving with me spotted my SeaLife camera hung up by it's lanyard on a coral head. I usually snap it to a D ring, but had slip the lanyard past my elbow, and cinched it. Wont make the mistake again!
Wednesday night, one other diver and I got to do an hour long dive on "cow", with one of the owners, and we did some fun swim threw's, and encountered 2 LARGE turtles, one bawks bill, and one green. Night dives with just one or two other divers are my favorite dives of all, and this one ranked up there. Tremendous number of lobsters, many true giants, basket stars, slipper lobsters, and eels, and tons of small life.
During the week Colleen and I did 1 one tank, 3 two tank dives, and I did the one tank night dive with the Red Hook team, and on one day we took the ferry over to St John, and went to one of the less well known bays for a great day of snorkeling. Really great snorkeling: huge fans, turtles, eels, schools of squid, lots of small critters, etc, and few other people.
Photos posted threwout the week here:
http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/lesser-antilles/324015-st-thomas-st-john-dive-snorkel-pics.html
Colleen and I spent last week on St Thomas, US VI, staying on the east end near Red Hook. For the first time I braved a rental car on an island with left hand driving, and THAT was a trip, in itself! None of the problems that I expected on the roads, but get into a parking lot or driveway situation, and the right hand driving instinct kept rearing it's head. Tormented a few other drivers, making that adjustment!

We dived with Red Hook Divers, which was formed by and is owned by the original staff of the old Chris Sawyer dive shop, who I dived with in '95. All great people, and fun to dive with. All instructors, no DM's on any dives. Watching captain Perry snake the boat backward into a difficult berth at the end of the dive is fun; tight spot! If, or when I return to St Thomas I will definitely dive with these people again!
Water was in the 82-83d range on all dives. Dives were all fairly shallow, in the 45 to 60 ft max range, and we had some really fun, long dives, except for my losing my DC500 off my arm on the first dive of the week, at the "calf" dive site.:shocked2:

Wednesday night, one other diver and I got to do an hour long dive on "cow", with one of the owners, and we did some fun swim threw's, and encountered 2 LARGE turtles, one bawks bill, and one green. Night dives with just one or two other divers are my favorite dives of all, and this one ranked up there. Tremendous number of lobsters, many true giants, basket stars, slipper lobsters, and eels, and tons of small life.
During the week Colleen and I did 1 one tank, 3 two tank dives, and I did the one tank night dive with the Red Hook team, and on one day we took the ferry over to St John, and went to one of the less well known bays for a great day of snorkeling. Really great snorkeling: huge fans, turtles, eels, schools of squid, lots of small critters, etc, and few other people.
Photos posted threwout the week here:
http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/lesser-antilles/324015-st-thomas-st-john-dive-snorkel-pics.html