Klein Curacao Trip Report

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Tennessee Slim

Contributor
Messages
125
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0
Location
Mucus City, USA
# of dives
500 - 999
I made my first trip to Klein Curacao today. In a nutshell, I didn’t think it was worth the money or the trouble or the time.

I booked the trip through Ocean Encounters. Regardless of which dive shop books the trip, it’s actually the MY Mermaid that provides the transportation and puts on the feed bag.

It’s a two hour boat trip, one way. On arrival, the crew of The Mermaid provides a light breakfast before your first dive. Then there’s a quite passable BBQ lunch, followed by the afternoon dive. Then it’s back on the boat for the two hour ride home.

The problem as I see it is that the dive operators and the picnickers are vying for the same all-too-scarce resource: the runabout. There are no piers on Klein Curacao so the boat “anchors” offshore. Their runabout ferries passengers to and from the island, divers to their dive site, and provides entertainment to the picknickers in the form of towing them about on the giant inflatable banana. In the end, they want to rush all the divers to some nearby point and have them make their way back to the boat so they can go back to entertaining the picknickers (who outnumber the divers by a substantial margin).

Klein Curacao sits abeam of the prevailing Caribbean current, which streams around either end before joining on the island’s lee side. The plan was to take us up the shore a bit, drop us off and let the current push us back towards the middle of the island. It’s a good plan, provided 1) there’s a current and 2) something lies in the path of that current that’s interesting to look at.

In truth, the first dive (from the north end) wasn’t too bad. There were a few interesting things to look at, but it was far from spectacular. And there was a substantial current. But the second dive (from the south side) was a complete waste of time.

Through no fault of the dive staff, there was no current. This isn’t Cozumel so that sometimes happens. But the shoreline south of the lunch hut was pretty much a textbook definition of desolate. For about a quarter of the dive route, there was reasonably healthy reef. The remainder was split between desolate, storm-ravaged reef or flat, sandy bottom. There’s so little to distinguish the last bit before reaching the mooring, they literally have placed a blue arrow “Keep Right” type sign to aid divers in finding the boat.

I boarded the boat with 1200 psi remaining (which is akin to your teenaged son borrowing Dad’s Vette on Friday night and returning it vacuumed, washed, waxed and with a full tank of gas).

I’m sure there are great dive sites around Klein Curacao (you can’t swing a dead cat around here without hitting a great dive site and two unlicensed restautants). And I’m sure our divemaster knew their whereabouts. I’m just disappointed he didn’t put us on one.

The boat leaves ~7 a.m. and returns ~6 p.m. I reckon I could have slept in, done a 2-tank morning boat dive, had a nice lunch at some beachside restaurant, done an afternoon shore dive, been done by 3 p.m., spent less money and had a much better diving experience. But that’s just me.
 
Through no fault of the dive staff, there was no current. This isn’t Cozumel so that sometimes happens. But the shoreline south of the lunch hut was pretty much a textbook definition of desolate. For about a quarter of the dive route, there was reasonably healthy reef. The remainder was split between desolate, storm-ravaged reef or flat, sandy bottom. There’s so little to distinguish the last bit before reaching the mooring, they literally have placed a blue arrow “Keep Right” type sign to aid divers in finding the boat.

Interesting....I dove Curacao (but didn't go to Klein) in 2001, and have a hard time imagining anything being boring under the waves around that island. You seem disappointed with the sand flats. I sometimes find the most interesting stuff on my dives there. Without sand flats, we don't get to see tilefish, yellow-headed jawfish, peackock flounders, garden eels, stingrays, occasional eagle rays, etc. Not saying you're wrong, but are you sure you were looking for the right stuff?
 
Thanks, Tennessee Slim,

I'm researching Curacao for a possible dive trip this Spring and was considering Klein Cur. It sounds as though it would take me a day to recuperate from an 11 hour trip like that!

Appreciate your helpful insights about Curacao,

alashas honeymoon2's photos- powered by SmugMug
 
Sorry for the thread bump, but will add my two cents about the Mermaid trip to Klein Curacao. Went with a bunch of co-workers on one of the few days we were off. Coffee on the boat was only instant Sanka, and then you always seemed to have to wait for hot water. Breakfast was bread and cold cuts. The didnt have any napkins, just one box of kleenex tissue and that wasnt enough to go around during breakfast. After breakfast, they had their little beach brief where they told you that YOU had to take the lounge chairs and umbrellas to your spot. My girlfriend and I were with another couple, and we grabbed 4 chairs and 2 umbrellas. My friends umbrella was broken and when he went to get another, there werent any more left. He ended up having to jury rig the umbrella himself to make it work. Trust me, you dont want to spend the entire day on Klein Curacao without one. Lunch was pretty good, and there was plenty to go around with enough options to keep everyone satisfied. At the end of the day, they expected all of the paying guests to drag all the chairs/umbrellas off the beach and put them away for them. The crew didnt go out of their way to do but the bare minimum, but it seems as if they made sure tip jars were all over the place. The island was nice, but I dont think the operator of the Mermaid was worth it. If I were to do it another time, I would go with a different boat. The Mermaid has a feedback section on their website, but my detailed post with all of the good bad and ugly never made it past their sensors. :no:
 

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