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#1
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| My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. It's not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have 4-5 days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving along the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats along the way. The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few dives where we expected silt). The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My husband & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and we were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a huge bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat of some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum drinks (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink beer and can't comment on its quality. The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There are several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and then wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I understand. The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive buddy. He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what must have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently go over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found one--we saw many stargazers. There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and mantas. Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of nudibranchs, more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that was practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs of all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly fish in more patterns than I could identify. Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. We heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the concussion briefly took my breath away. I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I got a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. The surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from the deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the surface, then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to deep water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. Where was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, because they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black manta (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my snorkel. He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his way, back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was interesting to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on the next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it took forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from a cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to the side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life starting on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which gave the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the forked walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, but it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple of vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far from banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Becky "seastar" <carmen@christensen.ca> wrote in message news:1150492992.728033.190040@f6g2000cwb.googlegro ups.com... > I am looking for some suggestions/recommendations on liveaboards for > Komodo. Looking for something mid range for about 5-7 days. Is it best > to use a liveaboard or do land based out of Flores. I have heard > ReefSeekers mentioned a few times. Any comments on them or other places > to use? > > Thanks!! > |
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#2
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| My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. It's not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have 4-5 days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving along the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats along the way. The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few dives where we expected silt). The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My husband & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and we were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a huge bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat of some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum drinks (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink beer and can't comment on its quality. The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There are several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and then wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I understand. The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive buddy. He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what must have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently go over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found one--we saw many stargazers. There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and mantas. Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of nudibranchs, more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that was practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs of all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly fish in more patterns than I could identify. Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. We heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the concussion briefly took my breath away. I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I got a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. The surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from the deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the surface, then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to deep water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. Where was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, because they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black manta (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my snorkel. He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his way, back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was interesting to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on the next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it took forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from a cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to the side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life starting on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which gave the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the forked walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, but it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple of vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far from banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Becky "seastar" <carmen@christensen.ca> wrote in message news:1150492992.728033.190040@f6g2000cwb.googlegro ups.com... > I am looking for some suggestions/recommendations on liveaboards for > Komodo. Looking for something mid range for about 5-7 days. Is it best > to use a liveaboard or do land based out of Flores. I have heard > ReefSeekers mentioned a few times. Any comments on them or other places > to use? > > Thanks!! > |
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#3
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| My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. It's not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have 4-5 days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving along the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats along the way. The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few dives where we expected silt). The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My husband & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and we were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a huge bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat of some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum drinks (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink beer and can't comment on its quality. The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There are several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and then wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I understand. The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive buddy. He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what must have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently go over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found one--we saw many stargazers. There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and mantas. Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of nudibranchs, more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that was practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs of all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly fish in more patterns than I could identify. Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. We heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the concussion briefly took my breath away. I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I got a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. The surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from the deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the surface, then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to deep water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. Where was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, because they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black manta (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my snorkel. He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his way, back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was interesting to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on the next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it took forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from a cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to the side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life starting on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which gave the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the forked walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, but it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple of vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far from banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Becky "seastar" <carmen@christensen.ca> wrote in message news:1150492992.728033.190040@f6g2000cwb.googlegro ups.com... > I am looking for some suggestions/recommendations on liveaboards for > Komodo. Looking for something mid range for about 5-7 days. Is it best > to use a liveaboard or do land based out of Flores. I have heard > ReefSeekers mentioned a few times. Any comments on them or other places > to use? > > Thanks!! > |
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#4
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Thanks for getting me even more excited about mine. We leave in 12 days for an 11-night trip on Kararu's new Voyager. |
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#5
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Thanks for getting me even more excited about mine. We leave in 12 days for an 11-night trip on Kararu's new Voyager. |
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#6
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > Thanks for letting me relive my trip! Thanks for getting me even more excited about mine. We leave in 12 days for an 11-night trip on Kararu's new Voyager. |
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#7
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. > It's > not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have > 4-5 > days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We > sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving > along > the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 > days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats > along the way. > > The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather > cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 > mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the > 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few > dives where we expected silt). > > The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed > over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My > husband > & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and > we > were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a > huge > bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat > routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat > of > some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum > drinks > (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink > beer and can't comment on its quality. > > The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the > beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, > rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There > are > several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, > depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. > They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to > "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew > members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and > then > wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. > > The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was > always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & > bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and > it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner > on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I > understand. > > The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 > years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue > fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, > was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from > Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead > divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding > bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive > buddy. > He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. > I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, > so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, > banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, > watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin > steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to > return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding > not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what > must > have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that > buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently > go > over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found > one--we saw many stargazers. > > There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird > creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and > mantas. > Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the > divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of > nudibranchs, > more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that > was > practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs > of > all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) > shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly > fish in more patterns than I could identify. > > Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. > We > heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the > concussion > briefly took my breath away. > > I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the > morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I > got > a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were > in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. > The > surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water > toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from > the > deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the > surface, > then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to > deep > water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. > Where > was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of > the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the > surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, > because > they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping > under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black > manta > (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world > turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was > keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta > underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my > snorkel. > He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his > way, > back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. > > We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was > interesting > to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got > everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on > the > next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it > took > forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were > fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from > a > cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to > the > side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope > of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then > cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life > starting > on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The > other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called > Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. > Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which > gave > the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. > > We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons > are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the > forked > walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you > want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo > dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium > denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, > but > it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple > of > vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far > from > banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... > Super dive report. |
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#8
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. > It's > not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have > 4-5 > days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We > sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving > along > the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 > days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats > along the way. > > The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather > cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 > mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the > 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few > dives where we expected silt). > > The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed > over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My > husband > & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and > we > were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a > huge > bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat > routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat > of > some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum > drinks > (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink > beer and can't comment on its quality. > > The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the > beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, > rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There > are > several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, > depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. > They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to > "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew > members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and > then > wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. > > The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was > always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & > bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and > it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner > on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I > understand. > > The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 > years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue > fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, > was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from > Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead > divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding > bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive > buddy. > He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. > I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, > so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, > banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, > watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin > steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to > return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding > not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what > must > have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that > buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently > go > over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found > one--we saw many stargazers. > > There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird > creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and > mantas. > Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the > divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of > nudibranchs, > more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that > was > practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs > of > all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) > shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly > fish in more patterns than I could identify. > > Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. > We > heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the > concussion > briefly took my breath away. > > I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the > morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I > got > a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were > in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. > The > surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water > toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from > the > deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the > surface, > then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to > deep > water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. > Where > was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of > the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the > surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, > because > they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping > under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black > manta > (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world > turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was > keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta > underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my > snorkel. > He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his > way, > back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. > > We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was > interesting > to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got > everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on > the > next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it > took > forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were > fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from > a > cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to > the > side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope > of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then > cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life > starting > on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The > other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called > Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. > Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which > gave > the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. > > We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons > are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the > forked > walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you > want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo > dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium > denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, > but > it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple > of > vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far > from > banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... > Super dive report. |
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#9
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| "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > My husband and I did the Peter Hughes Komodo Dancer in April of 2003. > It's > not exactly "mid-range" but we had an excellent time. If you only have > 4-5 > days, that boat might not work out for you because it sails from Bali. We > sailed eastward on the north side of Lombok and over to Komodo, diving > along > the way. We did a 10 day trip, and got to stay in Komodo area for 3 or 4 > days. I enjoyed diving off of several islands in many different habitats > along the way. > > The water was warm and clear until we got to Komodo when it because rather > cold (70-73 F). We'd been warned about the temp change, so we brought 5/7 > mm wet suits, plus hood and gloves for that area. The viz was never the > 100+ ft we once saw in the Maldives, but it was pretty good (except a few > dives where we expected silt). > > The food was good. There was a lot of seafood, which everyone exclaimed > over. I don't normally eat seafood, but what I tried was tasty. My > husband > & I ate a lot of chicken and beef, which they made especially for us, and > we > were never hungry. Lots of fresh fruit. A common afternoon snack was a > huge > bowl of hot cashew nuts -- yum!! We followed the usual dive boat > routine--eat, dive, sleep (repeat), The cook was always producing a treat > of > some kind for us. And when diving was done, we had yummy fruit & rum > drinks > (included in the cruise price). There was a local beer, but I don't drink > beer and can't comment on its quality. > > The captain didn't speak English and was very shy. He came out at the > beginning and end of the trip, but otherwise hid away. He did seem shy, > rather than just avoiding us. The crew tutored us in Indonesian. There > are > several phrases for hello, based on time of day. And several for goodbye, > depending on which of you is leaving and whether you're coming back soon. > They made us practice (well, only the people who wanted to > "bagus" means "really good". We had many "bagus" dives. One of the crew > members gave an excellent back & shoulder massage after most dives, and > then > wrapped you in a steaming hot towel. > > The cabins were nice. I thought the beds were very comfy, and there was > always hot water to shower with. Our cabin had a double bed and was nice & > bright. The pewter komodo dragon statue they gave us was a nice touch, and > it was sitting on a handmade indigo and white ikat (tie dyed cloth) runner > on the bed for decoration. The indigo ikat is a specialty of Lombok, I > understand. > > The dive staff was OK. I don't know if they're still with the boat after 3 > years. The boat was short one divemaster because one was out with dengue > fever, so we went out with 3. Yan, the Indonesian divemaster from Lombok, > was very good at finding small things. The other divemaster, Gillian from > Scotland, was fun. I buddied with her on some great night dives. The lead > divemaster ("cruise director") (Gary, from England) was good at finding > bigger things and identifying them for you, but not so hot as a dive > buddy. > He left me behind on a night dive when he was theoretically my only buddy. > I was slightly underweighted for my 5/7 suit and had trouble staying down, > so I decided to bail. I couldn't get his attention (tried flashing lights, > banging) so I did a safety stop hanging upside down, holding onto a rock, > watching him disappear into the dark with the other divers. The cabin > steward plied me with hot chocolate and tequila while I waited for him to > return, so I let him (Gary) live, but he got quite a scolding > not buddy with him again. He did spend a couple of night dives in what > must > have been a really boring search for Stargazers--an ambush predator that > buries itself up to its evil grin in sand and waits. Gary would patiently > go > over huge patches of sand until he (or one of the divers with him) found > one--we saw many stargazers. > > There was an outstanding array of colorful fish, healthy coral, and weird > creatures. Nothing too big though, except the occasional sharks and > mantas. > Also some fairly large Napoleon wrasse, which kept their distance from the > divers. I saw many fish I'd never seen before, a vast array of > nudibranchs, > more starfish than I expected. We did one night dive on a pinnacle that > was > practically covered in basket stars! Squids, cuttlefish, octopus. Crabs > of > all kinds, cleaner shrimp in many patterns & sizes, marble (Saron so.) > shrimp, mantis shrimps. Lots of lobsters. Large angelfishes and butterfly > fish in more patterns than I could identify. > > Sad to say, there was dynamite fishing outside the Komodo National Park. > We > heard and felt explosions on 3 dives. One felt very nearby---the > concussion > briefly took my breath away. > > I had my best manta encounter near Komodo. I was feeling very tired the > morning of the manta dive, so I decided to snorkel instead of diving. I > got > a better experience than my husband, who went on the dive. The divers were > in about 25 ft of water around a pinnacle that rose above the surface. > The > surface current (minor) was pushing the plankton and "stuff" in the water > toward the pinnacle, where it accumulated. The mantas swooped in from > the > deep water over the heads of the divers, made a feeding pass at the > surface, > then submerged again and went over the heads of the divers back out to > deep > water. They did this in a big loop, with a constant stream of mantas. > Where > was I during all this? On the surface, near the pinnacle, at the apex of > the feeding run! The mantas didn't seem bothered by my presence on the > surface. Perhaps they thought I made a good backstop for plankton, > because > they often swam right at me, veering away at the last moment or dipping > under me. I could look down their throats. On one pass, a solid black > manta > (15 ft across, perhaps more) swam under me from behind. When the world > turned black under me, I took my hands out of my armpits (where I was > keeping them warm) as I went limp with amazement. I touched the manta > underneath me (who knew he was so close?). "Eek!" I gurgled into my > snorkel. > He arched his back (possibly his way of saying "Eek!") and went on his > way, > back down over the heads of the divers. The stream of mantas continued. > > We did one dive on a relatively new volcanic cone island. It was > interesting > to watch the bare rock starting to be colonized. The volcanic silt got > everywhere, including all the cameras! Most people's cameras flooded on > the > next dive (apparently, silt is hard to clean out of a camera--I know it > took > forever to get out of my hair and gear). But the dives on that site were > fun. The first involved following the divemaster (Gary, a bit woozy from > a > cold he was developing), as he led us thru 15 ft viz from open water to > the > side of the volcano. OK, maybe that part wasn't fun. We reached the slope > of the volcano a little deeper than he'd planned (below 100 ft) and then > cruised back up the steep and bare black slope to look at the life > starting > on a silt cliff, which occasionally rained silt down on top of us. The > other dive was on the protected side of the island at an area they called > Hot Rocks, where the black sand/silt on the bottom was warm to the touch. > Hot air bubbled out of it into the clear but oddly colored water, which > gave > the impression that you were diving in warm ginger ale. > > We visited the Komodo National Park to see the komodo dragons. The dragons > are huge, but not very aggressive (although the park ranger with the > forked > walking/dragon stick doesn't let you stray too far, just in case). If you > want to buy things at the park (black pearls, carvings of, duh, komodo > dragons), prepare to bargain seriously and take small and medium > denomination Indonesian rupia. Some of them would take American money, > but > it's hard to bargain in dollars and they didn't all have change. A couple > of > vendors asked us to exchange US currency for them, because they are far > from > banks. They offer a really bad exchange rate... > Super dive report. |
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#10
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| Greg Mossman wrote: > "Becky" <brenners84-dive@yahoo.com> wrote in message > news:9Tplg.53853$Lm5.778@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m... > > >>Thanks for letting me relive my trip! > > > Thanks for getting me even more excited about mine. We leave in 12 days for > an 11-night trip on Kararu's new Voyager. > > Greg - hope there are no Tsunamis, hurricanes/typhoons, monsoons, earthquakes! Enjoy |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| komodo indonesie | Fred Scholte | (Dutch) | 2 | 04-12-2007 03:56 PM |
| Komodo | Rowin | (Dutch) | 4 | 04-12-2007 03:42 PM |
| palu Komodo | Claude & Manu | (French) | 2 | 04-12-2007 01:53 PM |
| Diving Komodo , Flores & Alor | dawhale | Indonesia | 1 | 03-26-2007 10:17 PM |
| Liveaboard diving with Dive Komodo | Mel Comisarow | Indonesia | 0 | 03-26-2007 06:39 PM |