leadweight
Contributor
Live From West End
After a week of calm seas, the weather collapsed last night. Today all of the boats have been moved away from West End. It is raining and the surf is up. We will probably take the day off after 6 days of good diving.
Pura Vida:
Some say Pura Vida is a bit on the pricey side at $66 for a double. It is well located in the center of West End and has a good Italian Restaurant and its own dive shop. If you book here for a week an extra $100 will get you breakfast for 2 and airport transfers. Its probably not worth getting the upgrade IMO, as the cabs are only supposed to be $10 each way, although they will try to get more.
There are a lot of Europeans staying and diving here. Mostly Italians, but this week there is a group of 12 from the Czech Republic, and French Canadian lady with a great sense of humor.
The dive shop is run by a very pleasant Swedish woman named Helen. She has a 6 month old daughter who is with her all day at the shop. The baby totally steals the show. If you do 10 or more dives with your own gear the price is an incredibly low $15 per dive. However, at that price level service is minimal. You will be moving your own gear around and things can get a bit crowded on the first dive of the day. The atmosphere is relaxed with short or no briefings. The dive guides, for the most part do not act like the underwater police. If you want full service, try Native Sons.
Eats & Drinks
The Italian restaurant at Pura Vida is good and portions are large, but breakfast is unremarkable. Pasta dishes start at L150 (L19=US$1). I also had a really nice whole snapper for L220. At lunch they have sandwiches and burgers for about L100, fries are extra. Next door the West End Coffee Shop where sandwiches made on home baked rolls are L70. The Cannibal has fish burritos for L155 and they are fairly large. There is a very good Asian restaurant The Bistro featuring red curry. It gets a bit pricey as the portions are typically Thai sized. The Sundowner has a happy hour from 4 to 7 with L25 local beers and rum or vodka for L30. The Bamboo Cafe gets recommenced a lot by locals as the girls that run it have a lot of friends. The food was tasty, but the portions were impossibly small. Avoid the Cajun place upstairs at the intersection. Service there is a disaster. A place that serves rotisserie chicken is a block south of Pura Vida. Its good and the prices were comparatively low.
We are moving to Posada something-or-other today as our reservation at Pura Vida was only for one week. We might try Native Sons as they are next door. There is an Argentinian restaurant that we have yet to check out over at Posada.
Ron Scubadiver/Leadweight
After a week of calm seas, the weather collapsed last night. Today all of the boats have been moved away from West End. It is raining and the surf is up. We will probably take the day off after 6 days of good diving.
Pura Vida:
Some say Pura Vida is a bit on the pricey side at $66 for a double. It is well located in the center of West End and has a good Italian Restaurant and its own dive shop. If you book here for a week an extra $100 will get you breakfast for 2 and airport transfers. Its probably not worth getting the upgrade IMO, as the cabs are only supposed to be $10 each way, although they will try to get more.
There are a lot of Europeans staying and diving here. Mostly Italians, but this week there is a group of 12 from the Czech Republic, and French Canadian lady with a great sense of humor.
The dive shop is run by a very pleasant Swedish woman named Helen. She has a 6 month old daughter who is with her all day at the shop. The baby totally steals the show. If you do 10 or more dives with your own gear the price is an incredibly low $15 per dive. However, at that price level service is minimal. You will be moving your own gear around and things can get a bit crowded on the first dive of the day. The atmosphere is relaxed with short or no briefings. The dive guides, for the most part do not act like the underwater police. If you want full service, try Native Sons.
Eats & Drinks
The Italian restaurant at Pura Vida is good and portions are large, but breakfast is unremarkable. Pasta dishes start at L150 (L19=US$1). I also had a really nice whole snapper for L220. At lunch they have sandwiches and burgers for about L100, fries are extra. Next door the West End Coffee Shop where sandwiches made on home baked rolls are L70. The Cannibal has fish burritos for L155 and they are fairly large. There is a very good Asian restaurant The Bistro featuring red curry. It gets a bit pricey as the portions are typically Thai sized. The Sundowner has a happy hour from 4 to 7 with L25 local beers and rum or vodka for L30. The Bamboo Cafe gets recommenced a lot by locals as the girls that run it have a lot of friends. The food was tasty, but the portions were impossibly small. Avoid the Cajun place upstairs at the intersection. Service there is a disaster. A place that serves rotisserie chicken is a block south of Pura Vida. Its good and the prices were comparatively low.
We are moving to Posada something-or-other today as our reservation at Pura Vida was only for one week. We might try Native Sons as they are next door. There is an Argentinian restaurant that we have yet to check out over at Posada.
Ron Scubadiver/Leadweight