RonFrank
Contributor
Flying into Cancun works well as long as you leave time on either side to get their with time to spare.
I'd plan you Cenote trip at the beginning, or end of the trip so once you get to the mainland, you are done traveling back and forth. However this is just a suggestion. A Cenote trip is certainly very doable in the middle of a week of diving.
Drift diving is easy.... until it is not. IOW's stay near the DM, pay attention to where other divers are going, and you will be fine. If you get too far away from the group, it can be difficult to get back to them in heavy current. Another thing to watch for is if the DM goes behind a coral mount or shelf to point out something. If you just keep cruising, you my find yourself alone, so pay attention, and if you do find yourself in front of the group go to the bottom, and sit in the sand, or grab a hunk of dead coral. Staying behind the DM is a good plan.
The reality is that drifts are not all equal. There are some site that really rip, and others that don't so much. Let the DiveOP know of your experience, and they will likely schedule dives that match your experience.
If you suck air, a lot of ops are going to send you up prior to the dive ending. Don't worry too much about that. Just do a very gradual ascent, and you can watch what is going on below until you hit the surface. Once on top, the boat will come pick you up.
Have fun, and safe diving.
I'd plan you Cenote trip at the beginning, or end of the trip so once you get to the mainland, you are done traveling back and forth. However this is just a suggestion. A Cenote trip is certainly very doable in the middle of a week of diving.
Drift diving is easy.... until it is not. IOW's stay near the DM, pay attention to where other divers are going, and you will be fine. If you get too far away from the group, it can be difficult to get back to them in heavy current. Another thing to watch for is if the DM goes behind a coral mount or shelf to point out something. If you just keep cruising, you my find yourself alone, so pay attention, and if you do find yourself in front of the group go to the bottom, and sit in the sand, or grab a hunk of dead coral. Staying behind the DM is a good plan.
The reality is that drifts are not all equal. There are some site that really rip, and others that don't so much. Let the DiveOP know of your experience, and they will likely schedule dives that match your experience.
If you suck air, a lot of ops are going to send you up prior to the dive ending. Don't worry too much about that. Just do a very gradual ascent, and you can watch what is going on below until you hit the surface. Once on top, the boat will come pick you up.
Have fun, and safe diving.