Trip Report: St Lucia

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scubazlot

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From Dec 27th - Jan 3rd, my girlfriend and I went to the Sandals Regency in St Lucia. We are both newly certified divers, having done our 4 check out dives plus 3 more dives on our own in the local quarry before our trip. Here is a brief report:

St Lucia - As the slogan says, "St Lucia, Simply Beautiful". The country itself is very beautiful. Lots of small hills/mountains, dense tropical forests, small and interesting Caribbean towns, etc. The bad part are the roads, they are very small and narrow. With all the mountains and the small roads, I would never want to drive on this island! Sandals picks you up at the airport and the transfer you to and from the resort. It was 30 miles from the airport to the resort but the drive is about 1 hour and 20 minutes with the roads and terrain. On a side note, one morning we hiked the Gros Piton mountain, and though it was a very tough hike, the views made it very worthwhile. In general, the views are great, the people are nice, the local beer "Piton" is tasty, and we really enjoyed our time on the island.

Diving - Sandals is very conservative - 35 minute dives max, usually around when the first diver hits 1000 psi. They offer a 2 tank morning dive and a shallow afternoon dive. However, you have to go on a "Discover SCUBA" dive for your first dive, regardless if you have 2 dives or 200 dives logged. Due to our other interests and activities, we only got a chance to do 2 1 tank dives, Bay of Pigs (this was the "Discover SCUBA" Dive) and Smugglers Cove. I hear the wall diving at the Gros Piton is great, but we could not make those trips. In general, it was our first Caribbean dive, so we do not have a basis for comparison. The coral did not seem overwhelming colorful, but at times there were some really nice colors and formations (excuse my lack of scientific terms!) There were plenty of small fish, and we also saw a lobster and barracuda. Overall we did have a great time diving, and we are now looking at other vacations that will focus more on diving.

My photo gallery has both pictures and a video - both topside and also using a Canon SD550 underwater. The underwater shots are just ok, we are still working on safe diving, not bumping into coral, buoyancy, etc so we could not get very close to some of our objects.

The Resort - My first time at a Sandals (Sandals Regency), and I am iffy if I'd do it again. The "all inclusive" theory is nice, but the food is mediocre at best. Lots of variety in the food, but nothing was all that great. There is very little communication amongst the staff. For instance, it took 30 minutes, and trips to 3 different centers at the resort, to find 2 tennis racquets and a can of tennis balls. It took a few calls to get new towels into the room several times. Twice in 6 days they forgot our wake up call. The beach at this particular resort is rather rocky, and the red flag was waving every day but 1 day, making watersports at the resort impossible to enjoy. Most of our down time was spent laying around the pool, not on the beach. Sandals charges an outrageous price for excursions. We found a very nice local who runs his own sight-seeing business and for a fraction of the price you will see many more sites in an enjoyable setting. If you want his contact information please let me know; I'd be glad to share it. The golf course was an ok executive course and we did have some nice spa services. In all, it was an ok resort and a nice vacation, but very much over priced. We met several other couples on the trip and they all felt the same way.

If you have any more questions about the diving, resort or island feel free to ask.
 
scubazlot,
welcome to this board.
thank you for the trip report.
while diving there did you notice any fish traps?
where will your next trip take you?
regards,
 
Again, this was our first trip, so I am not 100% sure we saw a fish trap, but I think we may have seen one. Look at this picture, perhaps this is a fish trap. At least I thought it was when I snapped the picture. Again, I am a newbie at this, so I cannot say for sure what it was, but it did look odd and out of place in the water.

I joined ScubaBoard after we booked our trip and got certified. In fact, we booked our trip before we decided to become certified divers, so at the time we did not select St Lucia as a diving location.

We have a lot of options for our next trip. We are going to go away again for NYE in December, so we want to find a place for a nice week + long stay. We are thinking maybe the Bahamas or the Cayman Islands. If we find the time and $$ to sneak away for a long weekend this spring we are going to look at one of the ABC Islands.
 
scubazlot,
seems you got a good shot of a trap.
the island has a pop of 60,000+.
one source of protein is fish.
we also saw very long gill net systems.
i liked the part where our dive op charged us extra for diving in a protected marine park.
regards,
 
Alashas - thanks for the compliments! And you have some great BVI pictures as well.

For our first real dive experience I thought we did an ok job with the photographs. Both topside and underwater were taking with my Canon SD 550. No strobes or anything underwater. I hope to upgrade to a DSLR soon for topside, but I will stick to the point and shoot underwater for many more dives until I am more experienced.

If you are interested in St Lucia please feel free to send me a PM to discuss more. I'd be glad to set up with the guy who did our tour of the Pitons - he also does island tours to all the waterfalls, villages, rainforest, etc. I can let you know more about Diving, the different Sandals resorts, etc. It seems like most of St Lucia is some form of all inclusive resorts, some have SCUBA others do not. If you like hiking, I strongly recommend the Piton hike. We hiked the Gros Piton, and that rainbow picture is from the top of the Gros Piton overlooking the Petite Piton.
 
Scubazlot - Glad you had a good time in St Lucia and the photos are lovely. I've heard also that the Gros Piton climb and the village at Fond Gen Libre is good (albeit I haven't done it!!). I've also heard you can climb Petit piton, but thats more for the hard-core mountaineers!!!

It's a shame you didn't manage to do the piton wall dive - that is one of my favourites

As for the fish pots, as far as I know they are noted and moved from the soufriere area as its a protected marine reserve (dont know whether its the case in the north of the island as well) and fishing lines are told to the relevant people so they can be removed (this happened when I dived the Grand Caille site a few weeks back.)

btw, the roads aren't all small and narrow - its only when you get off the beaten track as such and driving over here isn't that bad (once you get used to it!)

Glad you had a good time on this beautiful island and welcome to the boards
 
I'm curious - where are fish traps and gill nets allowed in St. Lucia? When we were there we didn't see them. We were diving near the pitons in the center of the coast - not up near Sandals.
 
I'm curious - where are fish traps and gill nets allowed in St. Lucia? When we were there we didn't see them. We were diving near the pitons in the center of the coast - not up near Sandals.

I'm sure the fish traps are not allowed within the area around Soufriere where the diving is as it comes under the SMMA (Soufriere Marine Management Association). But there are other areas where the fish traps can be laid without causing harm to the corals - I know theres alot of fishing around Laborie, Anse La Raye, Dennery, Micoud and Vieux Fort.

HTH your curiosity :)

Lottie
 
scubazlot,
seems you got a good shot of a trap.
the island has a pop of 60,000+.
one source of protein is fish.
we also saw very long gill net systems.
i liked the part where our dive op charged us extra for diving in a protected marine park.
regards,

Yes many fishermen use fish traps or pots in St. Lucia that is how the majority of smaller fish and lobster is caught. There are discarded pots that have been cut loose. However, the majority of these pots pose no danger to fish since thery are made of bamboo or reeds and break up after a while. Also you can call the marine rangers to report rogue pot and also if there is a discarded pot a hole is cut into the top so no fish get trapped. The Island has a population of 160,000+ people. Gill nets are used but are usually dropped and hauled up immediately. However, in the north of the Island they may be left overnight. And I'm glad you liked the part about being charged 5 US extra to dive in the marine park. Somebody has to pay the marine rangers, marine biologists and also the boats and marine park in general have to be maintained. So 5 US is not a stiff fee to preserve the beauty of our reefs. If you have any further inquiries I am more than happy to answer.


Also I forgot to mention there are many Fishing Priority areas where the fishermen are allowed to place pots and traps. That is how many St. Lucians make a living.
 

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