Ironborn
Contributor
Introduction
My first year of local diving as a relatively new South Florida resident yielded remarkable experiences that have enriched my life as a diver, changed my perspectives and priorities, and rewarded my decision to move here for non-diving reasons. Diving in South Florida as a local has, in my opinion, given me a deeper appreciation for what the region has to offer than I could have acquired as a visitor. South Florida offers a far greater breadth and variety of underwater environments and experiences than I realized before I came here. I have developed a marked preference for the less well-publicized and more locals-oriented dive scene along the coast of the mainland Tri-County area over the more heavily advertised and tourist-oriented dive scene of the Keys. I have come to appreciate that South Florida has richer marine life, but often more challenging conditions, than the easier but often sparser Caribbean environments with which I was most familiar. Access to local diving as a Florida resident has also enabled me to dive more at a time when those that travel internationally in order to dive face often prohibitively difficult travel restrictions. Diving in shorter and more frequent bursts on weekends, rather than on a few occasional 1-2 week trips overseas, has kept my skills sharper and improved them.
What follows is my perspective on the local diving and operators in Monroe, Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties. It is based on 138 local dives in the past year, including 30 in Jupiter, 26 in Boynton Beach, 25 in Pompano Beach, 24 in Key Largo, 17 in West Palm Beach, and 16 in Miami. I hope that this report will be useful to both other new South Florida residents as well as visitors planning to dive here. I also look forward to comparing notes with other, longer-term local divers. The hyperlinks are for supporting images from my Instagram profile or the websites of local dive operators.
Moving Here
Edited by Moderator
I should emphasize that I had minimal exposure to Florida prior to moving here, and I had never been diving in South Florida at all until after moving here in October 2020. I had some apprehensions about the dramatic change of culture, environment, and weather, despite my compelling reasons to move. The prospect of being able to dive locally, at a time when the international travel climate was (and still is) quite restrictive, helped me overcome those reservations. In retrospect, the opportunity to dive locally has been the most rewarding aspect of my relocation, aside from the political, legal, safety, and fiscal issues that had prompted me to move in the first place. As a Yankee, I still feel out of place down here after a year, and the oppressive heat and humidity of my first Florida summer bothered me far more than New York winters. My embrace of local diving and the local diving community has been the only non-political thing that has kept me from feeling like a “fish out of water,” if you will pardon the pun. It has been been a key factor in enabling me to adjust and assimilate to Florida (to the extent that I have) and to discover and appreciate what the state is like beyond the cosmopolitan bubble of Miami.
(to be continued in the next post on this thread)
My first year of local diving as a relatively new South Florida resident yielded remarkable experiences that have enriched my life as a diver, changed my perspectives and priorities, and rewarded my decision to move here for non-diving reasons. Diving in South Florida as a local has, in my opinion, given me a deeper appreciation for what the region has to offer than I could have acquired as a visitor. South Florida offers a far greater breadth and variety of underwater environments and experiences than I realized before I came here. I have developed a marked preference for the less well-publicized and more locals-oriented dive scene along the coast of the mainland Tri-County area over the more heavily advertised and tourist-oriented dive scene of the Keys. I have come to appreciate that South Florida has richer marine life, but often more challenging conditions, than the easier but often sparser Caribbean environments with which I was most familiar. Access to local diving as a Florida resident has also enabled me to dive more at a time when those that travel internationally in order to dive face often prohibitively difficult travel restrictions. Diving in shorter and more frequent bursts on weekends, rather than on a few occasional 1-2 week trips overseas, has kept my skills sharper and improved them.
What follows is my perspective on the local diving and operators in Monroe, Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties. It is based on 138 local dives in the past year, including 30 in Jupiter, 26 in Boynton Beach, 25 in Pompano Beach, 24 in Key Largo, 17 in West Palm Beach, and 16 in Miami. I hope that this report will be useful to both other new South Florida residents as well as visitors planning to dive here. I also look forward to comparing notes with other, longer-term local divers. The hyperlinks are for supporting images from my Instagram profile or the websites of local dive operators.
Moving Here
Edited by Moderator
I should emphasize that I had minimal exposure to Florida prior to moving here, and I had never been diving in South Florida at all until after moving here in October 2020. I had some apprehensions about the dramatic change of culture, environment, and weather, despite my compelling reasons to move. The prospect of being able to dive locally, at a time when the international travel climate was (and still is) quite restrictive, helped me overcome those reservations. In retrospect, the opportunity to dive locally has been the most rewarding aspect of my relocation, aside from the political, legal, safety, and fiscal issues that had prompted me to move in the first place. As a Yankee, I still feel out of place down here after a year, and the oppressive heat and humidity of my first Florida summer bothered me far more than New York winters. My embrace of local diving and the local diving community has been the only non-political thing that has kept me from feeling like a “fish out of water,” if you will pardon the pun. It has been been a key factor in enabling me to adjust and assimilate to Florida (to the extent that I have) and to discover and appreciate what the state is like beyond the cosmopolitan bubble of Miami.
(to be continued in the next post on this thread)