Hi, my fiancé and I are looking for some site advice for scuba diving
in Aruba. We are headed down at the end of May. We have relatively
new divers having about 5 dives each under our belts and only have our
Open Water certifications at this point. We are getting married down
there and plan on doing 2 2-tank dives while there. There seems to be
about 20 sites to choose from and we want to do the best ones. I have
read the posts from back in 2003 and 2004 and they were helpful.
Maybe there is information that is more current.
We are interested in three different things so I was hoping to get
some advice as to which sites others have really enjoyed.
Here are our three ideas:
- Wreck dive: I understand that 400' freighter is cool as are
the planes and the tug boat.
- - Wildlife dive: She would really like to see some sea turtles
and they, as well as some sharks, should be nesting at that time, I
think.
- - Coral dive: It also appears that there is lots of cool
coral to see of all sizes and shapes.
I'm just getting into underwater photography as well so opinions there
are helpful. I understand Pedernalis is good because of it's
shallowness (good light) but I'm think I can snorkel that with some
photo success. We are only OW rated so the 90' dives probably aren't
for us. Also, we plan on doing a few of snorkel trips so I'd
appreciate advice on those sites in lieu of diving the shallow ones.
We have never done a shore dive, only boat dives. I'm a little leery
of her stamina to shore dive to a site and then enjoy it fully. More
practice swimming with fins is probably needed.
Thanks in advance for the advice.
Darrell
darrells@adelphia.net - 10 May 2006 01:55 GMT
If you will all permit me to follow-up myself:
I have read the more current posts. I forgot I only got the frist 500
headers when I started this.
I'm pretty clear on what operation to use or not use.
Thanks again.
Dan Bracuk - 10 May 2006 03:33 GMT
darrells@adelphia.net pounded away at his keyboard resulting in:
:If you will all permit me to follow-up myself:
:
:I have read the more current posts. I forgot I only got the frist 500
:headers when I started this.
:
:I'm pretty clear on what operation to use or not use.
I was in Aruba once. My favourite site was the Sonesto Airplanes.
Dan Bracuk
If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure.
Robert - 10 May 2006 08:43 GMT
When I was in Aruba a couple of years back, I dived with Pelican
Sports, they are further round the coast than the center dive shops
(some to be avoided), they have fair prices and good staff.
Another nice thing with these people is there is a small beachside bar
a couple of hundred yards further down the beach, the food is superb,
and they don't mind if you wander in wearing wetsuit, knives et al,
and VERY cheap
Another really good restuarant in the city is Que Pasa, Dutch owned
and staffed, their lobster is exquisite and very well priced.
Madame Josephines is a MUST, go by taxi, you will NOT be dissapointed
in the cuisine and the ambience.
I stayed at Divi Village, the resort wasn't bad at all.
Oh if you want a list of the dive sites and what is there email me, I
took about 10 or 12 dives there
Regards
Rob
>Hi, my fiancé and I are looking for some site advice for scuba diving
>in Aruba. We are headed down at the end of May. We have relatively
[quoted text clipped - 29 lines]
>Thanks in advance for the advice.
>Darrell
nb318@hotmail.com - 12 May 2006 00:07 GMT
Do you mean Madame Janettes?? Super dining..Que Pasa as well and
Gasparito...
Annie
www.bonairecaribbean.com
Robert - 12 May 2006 01:53 GMT
>Do you mean Madame Janettes?? Super dining..Que Pasa as well and
>Gasparito...
>
>Annie
>www.bonairecaribbean.com
Yes Madame Jeanettes, was OldTimesDisease hitting for a moment
Vulcan Bomber (101 Squadron)
Greg Mossman - 11 May 2006 07:23 GMT
> Hi, my fiancé and I are looking for some site advice for scuba diving
> in Aruba. We are headed down at the end of May. We have relatively
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> read the posts from back in 2003 and 2004 and they were helpful.
> Maybe there is information that is more current.
Ah heck, for a wedding gift I'll even throw in some general scuba advice,
especially since I know nothing about Aruba other than the fact that it's
next to the (allegedly) far more dive-worthy Bonaire.
> - - Wildlife dive: She would really like to see some sea turtles
> and they, as well as some sharks, should be nesting at that time, I
> think.
Although some wildlife might be practically guaranteed in certain areas of
the world at certain times, please understand that in most places the larger
animals (pelagics) come and go as they please. Your 30-60 minute view into
their world might happen across something very cool and it might not.
I'd guess that you're more likely to see a turtle than a shark. Good luck.
That said, there are dive operations that run "shark dives" where the sharks
are attracted by baiting or chumming, but I have no idea if there's anything
of the sort in Aruba.
> - - Coral dive: It also appears that there is lots of cool
> coral to see of all sizes and shapes.
That is far more likely since corals don't move as much as turtles and
sharks. Basically any Caribbean dive you do that's not a wreck dive will be
a coral dive. Unless it's a sand dive, but dive operators don't usually
take people on sand dives on purpose.
Please don't touch the coral. Also, please don't touch the turtles. And,
if you see someone trying to ride a turtle, kick him in the head with your
fin. You can always claim it was an accident if he turns out to be bigger
than you.
> I'm just getting into underwater photography as well so opinions there
> are helpful.
Good. My opinion is that you don't get into underwater photography yet.
You're still learning how to dive. Underwater photography requires good
buoyancy control and an awareness of one's surroundings that most new divers
don't have yet. Because a lot of the underwater realm is quite fragile and
delicate, a lot of underwater photographers are blamed for causing harm
based on the actions of a few. Please don't add to the problem by being yet
one more brand new diver with a camera kicking corals this way and that.
Besides, you'll miss all the turtles and sharks swimming by while you're
focused on taking pictures of fish.
> I'm a little leery
> of her stamina to shore dive to a site and then enjoy it fully. More
> practice swimming with fins is probably needed.
Most shore dives don't require much more swimming than you'd be doing in a
boat dive, since, except for wrecks, you're rarely going to be sitting in
one place during a dive. And I've dove plenty of wrecks that, due to
currents, required more stamina than plenty of shore diving I've done. Most
of the work during a typical shore dive is spent getting the gear to and
from the water since it's pretty rare that you can step right from the car
and into the sea like you would from a boat. Some Bonaire sites are pretty
close, though, and maybe some Aruba sites are similar.
Reef Fish - 22 May 2006 05:01 GMT
> Hi, my fiancé and I are looking for some site advice for scuba diving
> in Aruba. We are headed down at the end of May. We have relatively
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> read the posts from back in 2003 and 2004 and they were helpful.
> Maybe there is information that is more current.
Then you probably have already read some of posts about
SEA (South East Aruba Diving) which I recommended, based on
my own experience and the recommendation of others.
I haven't heard anything bad about that operation, so I assume it's
still good.
It's a bit off the hotel zone and dives some good sites in that part of
the island usually not dived by the other shops.
> Here are our three ideas:
> - Wreck dive: I understand that 400' freighter is cool
That must be the Wreck of the Antilla everyone dives.
Better and more secluded wrecks include Jane Sea Wreck
(max 80 fsw) and Sonesta Airplanes (max 60 fsw).
> We are only OW rated so the 90' dives probably aren't
> for us.
So the Jane Sea and Sonesta should work.
I wasn't particularly impressed by any of the dives in Aruba. Been
there, done that is about all I can say.
-- Bob.