As for us, the Cayman's had a chance, and it passed. There are lots of places to dive in this world.
I should make a separate report rather than tack this onto a 2-year old thread, but this will bring some closure. After being shut out from Grand Cayman by the Covid experience, we are in Grand Cayman as I type. We have completed two days of diving so far, and so far we are sorely disappointed.I might be willing to give Grand Cayman another chance. Easier with just a couple people than a group. I have had many great dives off of Grand Cayman, I would like to see if they are still there.
As I dived yesterday, I found myself thinking of my recent trip visiting the ruins of Mycenae in Greece. As I looked at those ruins, I wondered what it would have been like to visit what must have been a spectacular city 3,200 years ago, when the buildings were intact and colorfully painted, with a thriving population filling its streets. I thought the same thing about Grand Cayman's reefs, and I wondered what it would have been like to visit what must have once been a spectacular reef, when the coral was still alive with brilliant color, with a thousands of fish swarming the area. These last few days have indeed been much like visiting the bare, ruined rocks of Mycenae. I can only imagine how great the reef must have been once upon a time.
One thing we had not anticipated was the policies of the dive operation with which we are contracted--DiveTech. Pre-covid, they were a bigger outfit. Today, they have one boat, and it never goes to any site more than a 5-minute ride from the West Bay dock. That means what we have seen the last two days are what we will see for the rest of the week.
Next week we will be in Little Cayman.