What happened to Cozumel?

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i did not have time to read the responses yet.....but aside from agreeing the diving is not always what people make it out to be, i must say that i cannot believe anyone who has even the most basic nitrox training (let alone any type of tech training) would ever dive nitrox without personally seeing the results of an analyzer test.
did your wife dive without a computer? no depth gauge? no tables? etc etc so you shared your computer? pls let me know if i misunderstood.
whoever that dive shop is should be named and avoided at all costs based on what you have written. again, pls let me know if i have misunderstood something here.
i did not have time to read the responses yet.....but aside from agreeing the diving is not always what people make it out to be, i must say that i cannot believe anyone who has even the most basic nitrox training (let alone any type of tech training) would ever dive nitrox without personally seeing the results of an analyzer test.
did your wife dive without a computer? no depth gauge? no tables? etc etc so you shared your computer? pls let me know if i misunderstood.
whoever that dive shop is should be named and avoided at all costs based on what you have written. again, pls let me know if i have misunderstood something here.
the second day we were able to borrow an analyzer from another boat after we demanded it. I agree with everything you said though. She dove one dive without a computer and they produced another she could use as a depth gauge for the second dive. Thats much more excusable to me although still not ideal. The max depth we had at the site they choose was under 60’. It would have been nearly impossible to hit a deco limit with 32% on that dive with the tanks we were diving. Especially considering the profile of most dives I’ve done in Cozumel. If mine failed we would have shot a bag and ended the dive. Cozumel is some of the easiest diving I have ever done and guesstimating a 20’ stop would not have been that difficult, especially after shooting a bag. Repetitive days of multiple dives would have changed this mindset of course but we had not dove the day before and I was 90% certain we were cancelling the next day at that point so it was our last morning of diving.
 
You should name the dive operator. Save someone from having a similar experience and allow the dive op a chance to improve

I agree though; the diving quality in Cozumel is declining and the prices are only going up
 
You should name the dive operator. Save someone from having a similar experience and allow the dive op a chance to improve

I agree though; the diving quality in Cozumel is declining and the prices are only going up
$760 for 4 dives for 2 of us was wild to me! When I brought these issues to them they blamed the weather and also offered no discount other than not charging me a cancellation fee… I’ll consider naming the op but I don’t want to get into a pissing match here honestly.

Is diving on the other side of the island any better as it’s done so much less frequently? I don’t think we’ll be going back to cozumel again but driving around the island for a day it appears there’s no money actually going into improving the island? A lot of the restaurants we frequented are either gone or in terrible condition. Where are people staying that dive here?
 
We first dove Cozumel in 2008 and it was one of our first destination dive trips. I remember the reefs teeming with life. It was either that trip or a subsequent one that we found BlueXTsea and Pedro and looked forward to visiting them as frequently as we could. Fast forward to having kids and moving to a state that isn’t known for its diving and time got away from us. The majority of diving I’ve done in the last 10 years has been of the PSD variety with only two trips down here in the last 12 years with the next most recent being 5 years ago. We planned our current trip about 6 months ago with grandparents along for the ride as babysitters. hearing that Pedro retired we went looking for a new dive shop. I’m not here to badmouth them so they won’t be named but after reading great reviews both here and other places we went with someone that advertised small boats that had been in operation for a long time.

This was also our first time diving jacket BCD’s… in forever. We traded out the majority of our personal gear for a travel crib in order to keep the airlines happy with baggage weight. The first day of diving went fine enough- my BCD inflator was broken and the DM swapped me his setup. It was 2 sizes too big but not really a big deal. The bigger issue was the boat not having a gas analyzer. We were diving 32%. My wife’s computer failed on our second dive of the day and she requested a rental computer for the next day of diving. I might have higher standards than most but I don’t think it’s out of line. None of the other divers requested to check their tanks of course.

The boat was to pick us up at 7:40 and by 8am there was no boat and no text. I texted the dive shop and they said they would be there at 8:15. At 8:45 we left the pier and started to head back to our room to put our gear away. We were halfway across the beach when we saw our boat pulling up to the dock. We got on the boat in an attempt to salvage our morning. No analyzer, no dive computer. Thats a pretty big problem. Definitely not up to any GUE standards and the “expert halo” alarms were going off in my head.

The dive sites they chose were largely devoid of life other than seeing a dolphin (super cool!). We were on the boat with two other divers that turned out to be brand new. At one point I held a GUE tech 1 cert and have well over 500 dives. I try and maintain that same standard on all of my dives although diving with a long hose setup and a jacket BCD was pretty goofy. 🤣

We voiced our concern and cancelled the next day of diving. I was told they would not charge me for a late cancellation and then sent me 3 different invoices before seemingly getting it right.

Aside from the dive operation and dive sites being lackluster so was our resort. We stayed at Allegro- there were people having sex in the hot tub at 4pm and the food (other than the Asian) was terrible.

Someone please tell me Bonaire hasn’t suffered this same fate? That’s our plan next winter and it’ll have been 15 years since our last visit.

Also, I used to be a super active member here in the DIR forum but can’t remember my log-in. We’re hoping to get back into travel diving now that we no longer have the Great Lakes in our backyard so hopefully I will be sticking around and not just making this one post-and-ghost. 😀
i lived there from 2005
to 2008. I dove in multiple occasion in cancun, cozumel, playa del carmen. Beside global warming over fishing was already and issue. Not to mention lots of hurricanes and tropical storms had devastating effects over the reef. I withness hurricane Dean and Wilma after it was all destroy.
 
Nick,
My first trip to Coz was in the late 80's and the reefs were teaming with life, large groupers, lobsters, eels were everywhere, and I was amazed. And then life happened and I didn't go back for 30+ years. The reef life is much less now, but I also have heard folks used to feed the fish, and so the fish were artificially built up.

We stay at El Cantil now, a condo near town, with a pier and a nice pool. My grown children love it. Our dive op (Bottomtime divers) picks us up at the pier every morning (very punctual) and we are back at the condo before 1:00. We eat great food at local restaurants, have made friends of taxi drivers, wait staff, restaurant owners, etc. The diving may not be what it used to be, but you can certainly find a great dive op and improve upon your experience.

This forum has great resources to help you.
 
i lived there from 2005
to 2008. I dove in multiple occasion in cancun, cozumel, playa del carmen. Beside global warming over fishing was already and issue. Not to mention lots of hurricanes and tropical storms had devastating effects over the reef. I withness hurricane Dean and Wilma after it was all destroy.
You forgot about the damage done to the reefs by the onslaught of hoardes of divers on a daily basis who make contact with the reef, sometimes violently, kicking coral with their fins and breaking it off or grabbing onto it because they can't control their buoyancy or don't know how to properly handle a swift current.

And experienced divers and even instructors who see no problem with standing or kneeling in the sand, destroying countless microrganisms and coral that has yet to grow.
 
$760 for 4 dives for 2 of us was wild to me! When I brought these issues to them they blamed the weather and also offered no discount other than not charging me a cancellation fee… I’ll consider naming the op but I don’t want to get into a pissing match here honestly.

Is diving on the other side of the island any better as it’s done so much less frequently? I don’t think we’ll be going back to cozumel again but driving around the island for a day it appears there’s no money actually going into improving the island? A lot of the restaurants we frequented are either gone or in terrible condition. Where are people staying that dive here?
Do you expect a dive op to provide a computer for you? I would not expect that and neither would I want it. I have seen people diving with borrowed computers who had no clue to what the computers were telling them. The worst case was a couple who both blew a mandatory safety stop because they were in deco and didn't know it; when we were all back on the boat the guy noticed I had a similar computer and asked me why the display was flashing. His only concern was that the computers they had borrowed would not work for their afternoon dives. I hope they survived the day.

There is very little diving done on the east side of the island and there are no hotels over there besides maybe the very small Lantana next to Coconuts, which may or may not still be a going concern, and all the restaurants over there close well before dark. There is no grid electricity over there; a few places sometimes have solar modules but most power their sound systems with car batteries that they haul back and forth every day. We don't call it "the wild side" of Cozumel for nothing.
 
You forgot about the damage done to the reefs by the onslaught of hoardes of divers on a daily basis who make contact with the reef, sometimes violently, kicking coral with their fins and breaking it off or grabbing onto it because they can't control their buoyancy or don't know how to properly handle a swift current.
Most divers I have seen diving Cozumel are not at all like that.
 
Most divers I have seen diving Cozumel are not at all like that.
Right. Most of the divers I've seen diving everywhere are not at all like that.

But some are. And that's more than enough.
 

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