caruso
Banned
We scheduled dives with Conch Republic Divers in Key Largo, Southpoint Divers in Key West, Looe Key Dive Center in Looe Key, and Captain Hooks Dive Center in Marathon, planning to cover all 9 large wrecks during our 6 day dive vacation.
The trip was planned and the dives scheduled several months before, which makes some of the issues we experienced even more disappointing and extremely frustrating. The youngest member of our 5 diver group was getting his AOW in Key Largo, so we did a combination of reefs and wrecks as required. The visibility was poor to fair on most dives and the current was moderate to ripping- in excess of 3-5 knots. Our dive plan on the Spiegel Grove was to penetrate the level just above the landing bay and swim through a corridor on the starboard side, come out before the bow, cross to the other side, go up one level and come out at the landing bay on the port side, then swim across to the opposite crane and ascend the mooring line. When we got to the deck of the Spiegel Grove the current was so strong in visibility less than 10' all we could do was stay in the immediate area, and only make progress against the current by using hand over hand. When we weren't moving we were blowing like flags in the wind. One diver went thru her gas very quickly and we were forced to ascend the mooring line on the opposite crane from the one we came down and do a hard fast surface swim towards the boat when we surfaced. There was virtually no marine life. The Eagle was somewhat better, little to no current in fair visibility, with hardly any fish. Someone said they saw the resident grouper by the propeller. The quality of these 2 wreck dives paled in comparison to the high visibility, no current dives with much more marine life we had seen on these wrecks about a year earlier.
We had dives scheduled that afternoon on the Duane & Bibb, but Conch Republic Divers canceled because the current was too strong. I asked owner Brenda if we could do a drift dive on the Duane- it's a great dive, you start at one end, drift along, into, and around the wreck timing the dive so you reach the other end of the wreck as you approach your gas or no deco limits, then ascending on the other mooring line and the boat picks you up. Conch Republic said "You'd be in the small boat, it's only got one crew member, we can't do a drift, sorry". I've always been satisfied with Conch Republic but because of this experience I'd switch to a dive operator that would do a drift on this wreck if the current prohibits a regular boat dive. Does anyone know of one? The last time we did a drift dive on the Duane was with DiverCity in Tavernier, unfortunately they're long gone as are many small operators in Key Largo.
The instructor who did the AOW for our young dive member also trained 2 other divers at the same time. After they completed their 5 AOW dives, on the 6th dive they were diving alone, and I noticed the guy dragging his octo, leaving a long line in the sand, and his female dive companion was banging her spg from one rock or reef to the next haphazardly over corals and anything else that was directly below her. Neither of their gauges or his octo were clipped off. Back on the boat I gently suggested they tighten up their rigs using a retractor, because all that sand inside his octo won't do it any good and it's not all that good for the reef. They were both very appreciative of my advice, thanked me again as they were leaving. Why the heck didn't the instructor of their AOW course mention this to them?
Friday and Saturday morning we were scheduled to dive in Key West with Southpoint Divers, on the USNS Vandenburg & Cayman Salvager and the following day a second trip to the Vandenburg with the second dive on Joe's Tug. Note that when I made these reservations the boat was completely open so I was given my choice of dive sites and I specifically requested those wrecks because I had never dived them and wanted to do all 9 Florida Keys wrecks, known officially as the "Florida Keys Wreck Trek".
We hired a dive guide for the first dive on the Vandenberg. I had done this wreck the year before (with a guide) and visibility was 5-10', and couldn't see much of anything. I figured that once again, due to the large size of this wreck it wouldn't be all that easy to navigate on our own especially in poor visibility and we'd be rather limited in what we could see, and we wanted to go in and out of the various rooms. Southpoint charges $150 to put a dive guide in the water regardless of the number of divers, since we had 5, it added $30 to the cost which was $130 for 2 dives including Nitrox tanks for a total of $160 for a 2 tank dive, much more expensive than dives from Looe Key up through Key Largo. Zack in the dive shop said things are much more expensive in Key West, and their rent is triple what is paid elsewhere.
The first dive on the Vandenberg found us pulling ourselves along the transverse line from about 20' behind the stern to the mooring ball, about 120' long in total, in current that easily exceeded 3 knots and threatened to rip the mask off a divers face if they turned sideways and caused a freeflow in more than one diver's octopus, and forced water into the exhaust of my regulator if I turned to look behind me. To let go of the line would result in the diver immediately being swept well beyond the boat. The dive on Vandenberg was in low visibility conditions, probably 10-15 feet in dim murky water. We went in and out of several rooms, saw some interesting structures including the radar dish, but didn't see much in the way of marine life. The second dive took us to Cayman Salvager that sits at about 100'.
The trip was planned and the dives scheduled several months before, which makes some of the issues we experienced even more disappointing and extremely frustrating. The youngest member of our 5 diver group was getting his AOW in Key Largo, so we did a combination of reefs and wrecks as required. The visibility was poor to fair on most dives and the current was moderate to ripping- in excess of 3-5 knots. Our dive plan on the Spiegel Grove was to penetrate the level just above the landing bay and swim through a corridor on the starboard side, come out before the bow, cross to the other side, go up one level and come out at the landing bay on the port side, then swim across to the opposite crane and ascend the mooring line. When we got to the deck of the Spiegel Grove the current was so strong in visibility less than 10' all we could do was stay in the immediate area, and only make progress against the current by using hand over hand. When we weren't moving we were blowing like flags in the wind. One diver went thru her gas very quickly and we were forced to ascend the mooring line on the opposite crane from the one we came down and do a hard fast surface swim towards the boat when we surfaced. There was virtually no marine life. The Eagle was somewhat better, little to no current in fair visibility, with hardly any fish. Someone said they saw the resident grouper by the propeller. The quality of these 2 wreck dives paled in comparison to the high visibility, no current dives with much more marine life we had seen on these wrecks about a year earlier.
We had dives scheduled that afternoon on the Duane & Bibb, but Conch Republic Divers canceled because the current was too strong. I asked owner Brenda if we could do a drift dive on the Duane- it's a great dive, you start at one end, drift along, into, and around the wreck timing the dive so you reach the other end of the wreck as you approach your gas or no deco limits, then ascending on the other mooring line and the boat picks you up. Conch Republic said "You'd be in the small boat, it's only got one crew member, we can't do a drift, sorry". I've always been satisfied with Conch Republic but because of this experience I'd switch to a dive operator that would do a drift on this wreck if the current prohibits a regular boat dive. Does anyone know of one? The last time we did a drift dive on the Duane was with DiverCity in Tavernier, unfortunately they're long gone as are many small operators in Key Largo.
The instructor who did the AOW for our young dive member also trained 2 other divers at the same time. After they completed their 5 AOW dives, on the 6th dive they were diving alone, and I noticed the guy dragging his octo, leaving a long line in the sand, and his female dive companion was banging her spg from one rock or reef to the next haphazardly over corals and anything else that was directly below her. Neither of their gauges or his octo were clipped off. Back on the boat I gently suggested they tighten up their rigs using a retractor, because all that sand inside his octo won't do it any good and it's not all that good for the reef. They were both very appreciative of my advice, thanked me again as they were leaving. Why the heck didn't the instructor of their AOW course mention this to them?
Friday and Saturday morning we were scheduled to dive in Key West with Southpoint Divers, on the USNS Vandenburg & Cayman Salvager and the following day a second trip to the Vandenburg with the second dive on Joe's Tug. Note that when I made these reservations the boat was completely open so I was given my choice of dive sites and I specifically requested those wrecks because I had never dived them and wanted to do all 9 Florida Keys wrecks, known officially as the "Florida Keys Wreck Trek".
We hired a dive guide for the first dive on the Vandenberg. I had done this wreck the year before (with a guide) and visibility was 5-10', and couldn't see much of anything. I figured that once again, due to the large size of this wreck it wouldn't be all that easy to navigate on our own especially in poor visibility and we'd be rather limited in what we could see, and we wanted to go in and out of the various rooms. Southpoint charges $150 to put a dive guide in the water regardless of the number of divers, since we had 5, it added $30 to the cost which was $130 for 2 dives including Nitrox tanks for a total of $160 for a 2 tank dive, much more expensive than dives from Looe Key up through Key Largo. Zack in the dive shop said things are much more expensive in Key West, and their rent is triple what is paid elsewhere.
The first dive on the Vandenberg found us pulling ourselves along the transverse line from about 20' behind the stern to the mooring ball, about 120' long in total, in current that easily exceeded 3 knots and threatened to rip the mask off a divers face if they turned sideways and caused a freeflow in more than one diver's octopus, and forced water into the exhaust of my regulator if I turned to look behind me. To let go of the line would result in the diver immediately being swept well beyond the boat. The dive on Vandenberg was in low visibility conditions, probably 10-15 feet in dim murky water. We went in and out of several rooms, saw some interesting structures including the radar dish, but didn't see much in the way of marine life. The second dive took us to Cayman Salvager that sits at about 100'.