For all of you Nor'easterners, Roatan is a pretty good deal. Thanks to a new Continental route, Roatan is now about as easy to get to as anywhere else in the Caribbean. The costs are reasonable too. Here are my main comments:
1) the sand flies are only bad if you think you can prevail without cactus juice (don't let this scare you)
2) Anthony's Key Resort: solid on dive operations (brand new tanks, big boats) and food, accommodations are kind of bare
3) the wrecks are too new and should be avoided
4) these are some of the best sites: Melissa's Reef, Key Hole, Mary's Place, Pillar Coral, and Pablo's Place
5) make sure you ask to dive a few near shore shallows to get the smaller stuff
6) stars of the reef: indigo hamlets, blackcap basslets, tiger groupers, toadfish (you probably won't see them, but the night diving is a chorus of croaking)
7) for the intrepid, there is the option of some deep, deep submersible diving (stanleysubmarines.com)
8) bleaching is evident, but not yet catastrophic
9) as in many other places, algal growth is a looming threat here leading me to speculate that the Diadema is still struggling (the many lobsters, durgons, and wrasses can't be helping the comeback either); shouldn't the reef managers be trying to bolster urchin populations somehow by perhaps captive breeding and release programs or by re-patriating a few lobsters into less overgrown areas (don't know how possible this is, but I'd like to find out more); not many sea stars out there helping out either (what happened to all of the sea stars?)
10) Roatan is also one of the few places where Arawak Indian genes may still be alive and kickin' (check the history)
Well to wrap this up, there are still some good things to be seen and done in Roatan.
1) the sand flies are only bad if you think you can prevail without cactus juice (don't let this scare you)
2) Anthony's Key Resort: solid on dive operations (brand new tanks, big boats) and food, accommodations are kind of bare
3) the wrecks are too new and should be avoided
4) these are some of the best sites: Melissa's Reef, Key Hole, Mary's Place, Pillar Coral, and Pablo's Place
5) make sure you ask to dive a few near shore shallows to get the smaller stuff
6) stars of the reef: indigo hamlets, blackcap basslets, tiger groupers, toadfish (you probably won't see them, but the night diving is a chorus of croaking)
7) for the intrepid, there is the option of some deep, deep submersible diving (stanleysubmarines.com)
8) bleaching is evident, but not yet catastrophic
9) as in many other places, algal growth is a looming threat here leading me to speculate that the Diadema is still struggling (the many lobsters, durgons, and wrasses can't be helping the comeback either); shouldn't the reef managers be trying to bolster urchin populations somehow by perhaps captive breeding and release programs or by re-patriating a few lobsters into less overgrown areas (don't know how possible this is, but I'd like to find out more); not many sea stars out there helping out either (what happened to all of the sea stars?)
10) Roatan is also one of the few places where Arawak Indian genes may still be alive and kickin' (check the history)
Well to wrap this up, there are still some good things to be seen and done in Roatan.