- Messages
- 10,951
- Reaction score
- 4,147
- # of dives
- None - Not Certified
Bay Island Diver:Roatanman - You do amaze me !
Then you'll love this: :boings:
Since you have called my experince base into question, yes there probably is a broad difference between my 52 weeks of diving and your 120 weeks on Roatan.
I mis-spoke. I have not really dived 52 weeks on Roatan.
It was more like Roatan, Utila, Guanaja, Cayos, Cisne, Helena, Moratt, Barbaretta... all of the Bay Islands. Cow & Calf, Fort Key, Alligator Nose, Diamond Rock, Spyglass, plus too, all of the sites printed on the t-shirts the shops sell. Some of it, maybe 30 to 37 logged hours was being towed behind a boat on a dive plane surveying the potential dive sites. Some of it was spending countless hours inside Mary's Place while it was closed doing reef surveys and counts. But that's irrelevant, because few commercial ops are going to these other far-flung sites yet.
I have owned properties on the island of Roatan. I have worked for the government of Roatan.
What side of the island that will develop- you bet it's my opinion. It means nothing as to the character or the quality of the diving, just where I believe that resorts will develop. As a matter of fact, it is where resorts have begun developing, certainly versus the North side. Just a real-estate fact, nothing to get rattled about, bargains are had elsewhere if anyone is looking.
I like that list of ops that will take you around during the Northers, and that's a tribute to your observational skills. I will comment further on "If you have a cutomers wanting to dive you are going to take them if you have any business sense!". This is a truism, but it only applies if they have the financial base and physical equipment to perform this task. Thus- not all dive ops are created equal. I don't think anyone but the elite would drag a boat around if it wasn't full to capacity, certainly not for one or two.
This means that we should select our dive-ops with care.
Here's the original querry: We're looking into going to Roatan in June or July.
Can you all please let me know what you can about general ocean conditions then?
Is is a calm time of year or rough? Does it not matter since it's never very rough?
Is one part of the island calmer than the other? (Coco vs. AKR)
Anything else I should consider for that time of year, or when considering these two resorts as my likely destination? Thanks, I know these subjects have been discussed before....
We all may have elaborated as to other months and differences, but what they heck, that's what the internet is all about!
To which I add and restate for emphasis:
Roatan is like an elephant being examined and described by blind men. You remember the story, right? One says, "It is like a rope" as he feels the tail. Another shouts, "It is as a tree trunk" as he hugs the leg. Yet another proclaims that an elephant "Is most like a snake!" as he handles the trunk.
This is an elephant I have ridden.
Roatan and the Bay Islands are the last frontier (almost) in the Caribbean. Certainly they are on the cusp of development (read: destruction), so to any and all- come on down and see it before we go Cozumel on you. I go to a lot of week long dive trips every year, but I always find time to take two+ weeks in Roatan.
Something for everybody!