kneptoon
Contributor
The second week of our trip was spent at Wananavu Resort diving the Bligh Waters with Kai Viti divers. Wananavu was more of the ethnic Fiji type resort with very nicely done bures. The grounds are immaculate and the experience grander than Garden Island Resort, with a rotation of weddings and honeymooners. This is also a finely managed resort, with more of the resort type amenities. These resorts are quite different and I preferred some aspects of each to the other. Kai Viti divers are also an on site dive operation. The Fijians are great to dive with. Georgie and his crew were always professsional and accomodating. Or diving took place during (at that time) 2 months windy weather. Everyday, wind. The trip to the Bligh Waters is an hour boat ride, and it was a rough ride. The dives are worth the ride. Once on the reef we did 3 tank dives a day. The dives consisted of diving large coral bommies that rose from around 100ft to just below the surface. Each bommie seemed to have a prolific amount of a color of soft coral, and they are named accordingly. Purple Haze is covered with white/purple soft coral, Mellow Yellow with yellow. These are 2 of my all time favorite dives. The diving was spectacular. We saw many schooling fish and large pelagics, sharks, turtles, wahoo, tuna and mackerel. Again these dives were current dependent. No current, no plankton, ..... Unfortunately, due to the constant wind, visibility was at best 70-80ft for our 2 weeks, . The inside reef dives nearer to Wananavu were at best 40ft. I also could have used more than my 3mm suit. Though, of course there were divers just in swimming suits. Many divers augmented with hoods or vests and said it really helped. The Bligh Waters were really worth the trip out but they are weather dependent. There are days when it is too rough to make the trip. (once while we were there) That leaves the inside reefs to dive and these did not compare to Rainbow Reef. I felt we were lucky to get 25 dives in 11 days. I would still like to see it all again with pristine visibility