PRE-PLANNING
CARIBBEAN FISHING & DIVING TRIPS
by
Larry Larsen, Bass
& Caribbean Travel Editor
Anglers who don't dive miss the
approaches you only develop with underwater time. So consider a dive
excursion with, or in place of your next, Caribbean trip.
Traveling to the Caribbean is not much
more difficult than journeying to another state. Just two or three hours
will put you in the most remote regions. If you're flying to the
Bahamas, you'll hardly have time to finish a soft drink before the plane
starts descending.
Most places in the islands specialize in
a certain type of activity. There are few that can meet everyone's
needs, according to M. Timothy O'Keefe, long-time diver and author of
the book Fish & Dive
The Caribbean. He recommends that you match your desires with
what can realistically be offered.
"Don't expect people to go out of
their way to cater to your whims," he explains. "You'll be
only one of many vacationers, and dive charters are geared to satisfying
the largest numbers, not the single few." 
Editorial note: You can also
combine fishing and diving if you plan properly.
Wrecks collect fish, so they attract
both divers and anglers.
If underwater photography is your primary
interest, obviously you'll need to select a spot with good visibility
and abundant sea life. If wrecks are your thing, you're more apt to end
up in an area swept by winds and turbulent waters, and where photography
will be more difficult. If spear fishing is foremost on your agenda, you
can just about forget foreign travel and plan on staying at home. Most
popular dive destinations ban spearing, since the fish life is one of
the primary reasons people visit.
Other points to consider: Do you and
other accompanying members of your family have the experience to be able
to dive the different sites a place has to offer? There's no sense in
choosing a location where you'll frequently encounter currents and be
making deep dives if you or a member of your family is still a novice.
You won't be comfortable and you won't enjoy it.
Do you prefer beach or boat diving? Do
you want to spend more time snorkeling than scuba diving? Some sites
that are great for scuba are lousy for snorkeling because the reefs
start too deep to enjoy them from the surface.
How much do the dives cost? Is it cheaper
to buy them as a package in advance or pay on an individual basis? But
if you do sign up for a package in advance, you're limited to the
services of one dive operation, which prevents you from striking out on
your own unless the operator will give you a refund for unused dives.
Consider, too, the kind of hotel you want
to stay at. Should it be one which is exclusively a dive resort, or
would you be happier at a general hotel that offers diving via an
arrangement with a dive operation situated off the premises?
If you want to spend your free time with
people who have the same interests and who will be happy to swap tales
of their own adventures for yours, you'll probably have a great time at
a dive resort. However, if diving is only one of your reasons for
visiting a particular place, you might prefer a more general hotel where
you'll have a wider variety of subjects to talk about with other guests
at breakfast and dinner. But you might also find it more difficult to
make friends because of the greater diversity of interests.
Along this same line, would you be
happier if you traveled with a group of people you already knew instead
of joining a bunch of strangers? If a large dose of familiarity is what
you require in an unknown locale, you'll probably feel most comfortable
joining a trip offered by the dive shop you frequent at home. That way
you know in advance who's going to be present and how compatible the
group will be.
Naturally, the best way to learn about a
place is talk to someone who's been there. If you're unable to find such
a person through your local dive club or dive store, write to the resort
and ask them to send some names of previous guests. Then give these
former vacationers a call and ask what you need to know. Most people are
very helpful as long as your questions are brief and to the point.
Also, read about your destination before
departure in order to become thoroughly familiar with an area. Consult
not only dive publications for descriptions of the underwater terrain
but invest in general travel guides which will give you detailed points
about a place, its people and their customs. The more you know in
advance, the more you know what to plan for.
When packing time finally arrives, take
all your own gear except for tank and weights, which are normally
provided. Rental equipment is not likely to be as new or well maintained
as your own. Even if it is, it won't provide the same confidence, or
psychological advantage, your own familiar equipment does.
Here's what your equipment list should
include: regulator with pressure gauge; mask, fins and snorkel; extra
mask and fin straps; buoyancy compensator; wetsuit (which may help you
even in the tropics against coral, etc.); knife; dive watch; bottom
timer; underwater light for night diving; gloves; decompression tables;
a basic scuba manual for review.
The suitcase you use to transport your
dive gear should have stout locks and hard sides in order to withstand
abuse. Soft luggage often won't provide the kind of protection required
to thwart clumsy baggage handlers.
Next to your dive equipment, the most
important items to carry are remedies for various dive and
travel-related ills. For sinus blockage or sticky ears, Sudafeds are
widely used since they don't make you drowsy. Also pack some ear wax
remover, swimmer's ear medication, sunscreen, Adolph's meat tenderizer
for coral scrapes, diarrhea medicine and a simple first aid kit. It's
surprising how often you're forced to serve as your own pharmacy because
none of the supplies are available.
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