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#1
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| I'm thinking of going to Sipadan in early April. Does anyone have any advice regarding the following: - Would like to make sure April is a good time to go. - Thinking of staying at Seaventures, the converted oil rig that Dave Morgan who posts on this site keeps talking about. Anyone else been there and your thoughts? I read somewhere that their scuba diving operations were not the best in regards to safety and dive briefings. Is that true? Thanks in advance for those that reply!!! Happy Diving! -Scubak |
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#2
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| "scubak" <happycatfish7@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:91c81800.0403081034.2974f7f1@posting.google.c om... > I'm thinking of going to Sipadan in early April. Does anyone have any > advice regarding the following: > > - Would like to make sure April is a good time to go. Great time to go. (snip) |
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#3
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| > - Would like to make sure April is a good time to go. It's always good time to go > - Thinking of staying at Seaventures, the converted oil rig that Dave > Morgan who posts on this site keeps talking about. Anyone else been > there and your thoughts? I read somewhere that their scuba diving > operations were not the best in regards to safety and dive briefings. > Is that true? Well, the oil rig is not anchored at SIpadan, but Mabul. There're 3 islands forming a triangle: Sipadan, MAbul , Kapalai (which is actually a reef with a wooden divecentre on top of it). I've been to all of them, but lived on Sipadan. It is the most beautiful place to stay. A paradise island. MAbul is much bigger, but having not a lot of trees - "bald" I'd say. Kapalai is just a reef, so you live on a wooden platform. If you decide to stay on Sipadan, you can make boat dives around two other islands as well. Its 20-40 min by boat (depending on weather). It's worth to go, because there is different reef and life there. The most breathtaking is Sipadan of course If you decide to go to S., I'd advice to stay at Sipadan Dive Centre or Borneo Divers - both the oldest and best situated (at the drop off - the only place you make beach dives). They will offer you 3 boat dives per day and unlimited beach dives. You get meal/snack 5 times a day, drinks all the time (all included in a package) Practically you can make 5-6 dives a day. The best dive-site is Barracuda Point (check it: www.bubblemaker.pl). On the night dive you must go to the entrance of Turtle Cave and see flashing fish. Absolutely No.1 ! I wish you a pleasant trip Filip |
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#4
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| "Filip Nowicki" <fnowicki@wip.pl> wrote in message news:c2ml4r$77o$1@atlantis.news.tpi.pl... (snip)> Practically you can make 5-6 dives a day. > The best dive-site is Barracuda Point (check it: www.bubblemaker.pl). > On the night dive you must go to the entrance of Turtle Cave and see > flashing fish. Absolutely No.1 ! > > I wish you a pleasant trip > Filip Thanks for the info Filip! If I stay on Sipadan the whole time will I still get a chance to see Mandarin fish? Also, does Borneo Divers resort have any airconditioned rooms? TIA |
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#5
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| > Thanks for the info Filip! If I stay on Sipadan the whole time will I still > get a chance to see Mandarin fish? > > Also, does Borneo Divers resort have any airconditioned rooms? Of course you will see it. And about thousand of other different creatures. And don't forget Sipadan is one of 2-3 places on Earth where green turtles are born. You will see 10-20 of them on each dive and the same with white tip sharks. And please prepare yourself for searching for nudibranches. There is a lot of them, but you need to be patient - they're so small. As I told you - going to other islands is just a matter of half an hour. We did it one day. Morning boat dive was around Sipadan, and then at 11.am we went to Mabul, had a snack and some rest and at 2pm we were at Kapalai and then got back for the afternoon beach-dive on Sipadan again. Easy. You can also stay 4-5 days on Sipadan and 2-3 days on Mabul or Kapalai. Both Borneo Divers and Sipadan Dive Centre have airconditioned huts. It has everything you need, although it is not a 5 star hotel. But you really just spend night in it. best, Filip |
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#6
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| Thanks for the advice and loved the pictures, Filip...! "chilly" <slarson@shaw.canada> wrote in message news:<HZT3c.769453$ts4.39414@pd7tw3no>... > "Filip Nowicki" <fnowicki@wip.pl> wrote in message > news:c2ml4r$77o$1@atlantis.news.tpi.pl... > (snip)> Practically you can make 5-6 dives a day. > > The best dive-site is Barracuda Point (check it: www.bubblemaker.pl). > > On the night dive you must go to the entrance of Turtle Cave and see > > flashing fish. Absolutely No.1 ! > > > > I wish you a pleasant trip > > Filip > > Thanks for the info Filip! If I stay on Sipadan the whole time will I still > get a chance to see Mandarin fish? > > Also, does Borneo Divers resort have any airconditioned rooms? > > TIA |
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#7
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| "scubak" <happycatfish7@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:91c81800.0403110528.50b33fce@posting.google.c om... > Thanks for the advice and loved the pictures, Filip... Me too! Thanks and those pictures are just beautiful. > |
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#8
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| I just came back from Sipadan/Mabul a week ago. We stayed at Sipadan Water Village (SWV) which is really on the island of Mabul. The Seaventures rig was right off-shore from our hotel. I wouldn't like to stay there because the "shore" dive under the rig has a square profile of 45-55 feet. There's not much to see on the pilings on your way up (although we did find a frogfish halfway up once). On the other hand, the diving at 50 ft was superb! I did 5 dives there over the course of 10 days--great place to take pictures! Frogfish in many colors and sizes, crocodile fish piled on top of each other (really), plenty of nudibranchs, scorpionfish, schools of grunts & coronetfish, cleaner shrimp, old construction debris for things to hide in, and more. If there's a current, you can't "shore" dive because you might have to be picked up downcurrent. You could plan to come up a line (if they have one, which I didn't see, but I stayed at one end of the rig), but would you want to swim back from Sipadan if that didn't work out? This trip, we made several dives there without appreciable current. On our previous trip to SWV, however, there was a ripping current above 20 feet, so we did our safety stop flying through the water away from the rig and our hotel. You definitely couldn't swim to shore from this dive site. There is no snorkeling on Seaventures, unless you go somewhere by boat. That's a deal breaker for me, because I love to snorkel in between dives. SWV is a great place to stay. We've been there twice. The shore diving and service are outstanding! Although the rooms don't have air conditioning, they are huge and well appointed and private. The SWV resort is built over a lagoon, so you can walk out on your private porch and look down at the reef. When the tides aren't too low, you can snorkel under your hotel room. It's really neat during the extra low tides at full moon: the coral reef under the resort is partially out of the water. The leathery soft corals close themselves up to keep from drying out. There's another resort on the island that's on land. They seemed to have little AC units on each room. We didn't have trouble with bugs in our cotttage or at the restaurant, and didn't have to use bug spray (in contrast, a woman we met at Sipadan's Drop Off Cafe who was staying on Sipadan was covered in fly and mosquito bites!). On twilight/night shore dives & snorkels at SWV this trip, I saw: mating mandarinfish; a tiny (1") white octopus on the sand; a 1.5 ft long long-snout pipefish; banded and regular pipefish including pregnant males (I quit counting at 12); robust host pipefish (shaped like a blade of grass); a stargazer; big squid; flounder and sole; painted frogfish; many shrimp; eels; sea snakes; red hairy lobster; sea pens (coral) with tiny crabs and shrimp all over them; box crabs; and more. Slightly annoying things about SWV's night dives: you have to go with a guide and you have to be back by 8 PM (so the emergency boat driver can go home). The cost of guided night dives was included in our package but they usually charge extra. On day dives on Mabul (at the resort and farther out by boat, we saw sailfin blennys; mushroom coral pipefish; ornate ghost pipefish; pygmy seahorses; regular seahorses; colorful Coleman shrimp on a fire urchin; snake & moray eels; cleaner stations with fish & shrimp cleaning groupers; devilfish (a kind of scorpion fish with claws); lion fish; many types of shrimp gobies; smallish groupers; schools of coronetfish; turtles; lobsters; many parrotfish & wrasse; crinoid shrimp and squat lobsters; and lots more. There were many anemone fish of all types. Clownfish seem to have been renamed in a universal language: Nemo! On day dives at Sipadan (at least one or two each day), we saw a school of 100 or so bumphead parrotfish, which milled around like sheep while we took many photos; mating green sea turtles (which is a story all of its own); green and hawksbill turtles doing regular turtle stuff; a shark cleaning station with over a dozen white tip reef sharks; schools of jacks; lots of nudibranchs; pygmy seahorses; many types of triggerfish, parrotfish, and wrasse; big heaps of crinoids; and the usual reef fishes & corals. We also went to nearby Kapalai several times, which is (as other posters have reported) just a sandbar with a hotel on stilts above it. Sort of like SWV without the island... The dives near the hotel were good, but murky. The dives out a ways but still on the island shelf were outstanding, esp. the ones named 2nd Bouy & Don King Yama by the SWV folks. Some of our best dives were here. We saw skeleton shrimp (tiny little amphipods, really); ornate ghost pipefish; several frogfish, 1 inch to 18 inches in length; pygmy seahorses; octopus & cuttlefish; nudibranchs; cleaner shrimp; a map pufferfish let us photograph him up close while he was being cleaned at a shrimp station, and followed us around later in the dive to see what we were up to (which is definitely not normal pufferfish behavior); a small turtle that wanted to play with everyone; wire coral shrimp & crabs; leaf scorpionfish in several colors; and lots of other cool stuff. The weather was good the whole time (10 days). As I recall, it rained twice (once really hard) at night; once for a little while in the afternoon; and was warm and partly cloudy the rest of the time. The wind was calm for 2 days (we had flat water, which was great) and breezy most of the rest of the time (made the water a bit choppy, but not too bad). The last afternoon we were there, an extra low tide at noon combined with some strong winds (which made it pleasantly cool during the day) to produce 4 ft surge. They couldn't tie the boats up at the dock to leave for the afternoon dive, so they swam the gear and divers out to the boat. That was exciting to watch, but I was glad I wasn't diving, that's for sure. On the leeward side of the island (we walked over there), the water was low, but calm and flat for the dives. The swells were smaller when they came back from the dive, so they could dock. Alex, who's worked at the dive operation and resort for years, said that it was the roughest water he'd ever seen at the resort. The dive briefings were good. They have a great permanent map of the shore dives from the resort and draw pictures of the reef for others. Our group of 13 was all photographers, and our guides usually did a good job of showing everyone things, although a couple of times the laggards got to hunt critters for themselves if they didn't keep up on a drift. If you told the guide you were going to follow, he or she waited for you. If you asked to see a particular creature, they tried to find it for you. The guides all seem to have a network of critter sightings, so they can usually find things. The only two things I wanted to see that no one saw were the flamboyant cuttlefish and blue-ringed octopus (they said a blue ring had been seen by snorkelers under the dive shop a couple of weeks before we came, but I didn't find one). Most of the guides had underwater etch-a-sketch devices they used to write down what they were showing you. You can do as many shore dives as you want between 6 am and dark; the only rule is that you have to have a 1 hour surface interval before a boat dive (and, of course, the night dive rule I mentioned earlier). I understand that the 1 hour rule is enforced, although I didn't see it happen (but neither did I try to do a boat dives soon after a shore dive). There are dive shop folks around all the time to answer questions and help you with your gear. If you're taking a self-guided shore dive during the day, you write your dive number on a board and then mark off when you return, so they know if they need to come look for you if you don't return. If you forget to mark yourself off, they hunt around the resort for you before sending out the search parties. I've never seen them fail to find the "lost" diver on shore, so I don't know what their search efforts are like. SWV has the best shore diving arrangement I've ever seen. Each diver has a lockable gear locker, a fat hanger for your wetsuit, and a place to hang your BC & regulator. The tanks are 5-10 feet from where you assemble your gear; which is maybe another 10 feet from the end of the dock you dive from. If you want help hauling your gear that distance, it was easy to get (except one time, I confess, when everyone seemed to be on siesta at 3:30 PM). When the water gets choppy or the surge is up (or you just look like you need help), they come out onto the dock to help you out of the water and take your gear up. The dock has multiple levels, to accomodate the various tide levels. For boat dives, they take your BC & reg and hook it up on the boat. You carry your other stuff (they'll help) to the boat. They bring everything back after the dive. The boats don't have a camera platform or camera tank, so you end up holding your camera or placing it on the deck during the short trips to the dive sites. We put ourour cameras on the deck of the boat and didn't have any trouble13, although I admit that we didn't have any strangers on our boats--there were exactly 2 boats' worth of divers in our group, so we were on boats by ourselves. On Mabul & Kapalai dives, you go back to the resort for your surface interval. On the 2-tank dives at Sipadan, we went to the Drop Off Cafe for our surface interval. They had a fresh water hose at the cafe to rinse off cameras and tables where you can work on your camera between dives. Back at the resort, there were several tanks just for cameras, plus many more for BCs and other dive gear. They provided snacks between dives. Snacks were usually baked goods (one day we had mayonnaise sandwiches on really good home baked bread. That was a little weird, but tasty!), but sometimes fried bananas or meat pies. There was always cold water to be had, plus coffee, tea, and hot chocolate (well, you make it yourself with Milo cocoa powder, creamer, sugar, and hot water). On surface intervals at Sipadan, they brought food and the Drop Off Cafe provided the coffee, tea, and cocoa. I had an excellent snorkel one day with a huge school of jacks at the drop off and under the cafe pier. If you're looking for a travel agent that understands divers and does a great job with exotic trips, including Sipadan/Mabul/Kapalai, try Vickie Coker at Travel Masters (http://www.travel-masters.net/). Travel Masters is in Austin, Texas, but they plans trips for people all over. You can get e-mail address and a toll-free number on the web site. Vickie has personally been to Sipadan & Mabul many times and knows the people and ropes. I don't work there and I don't get anything if you contact them. I just book trips with them, travel in some of their group trips, and buy gear at their dive store, Scubaland Adventures (http://www.scubaland.com/). Enjoy your trip! "scubak" <happycatfish7@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:91c81800.0403081034.2974f7f1@posting.google.c om... > I'm thinking of going to Sipadan in early April. Does anyone have any > advice regarding the following: > > - Would like to make sure April is a good time to go. > - Thinking of staying at Seaventures, the converted oil rig that Dave > Morgan who posts on this site keeps talking about. Anyone else been > there and your thoughts? I read somewhere that their scuba diving > operations were not the best in regards to safety and dive briefings. > Is that true? > > Thanks in advance for those that reply!!! > > Happy Diving! > -Scubak > |
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#9
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| Wow Becky, You saw pygmy seahorses there??? I was looking and looking and all the divemasters there were under so much pressure to find one. One consolation, I saw the flamboyant cuttlefish hahhahha...it's at the Kapalai house reef.....Magnificent! Well, I went SWV in Oct03 and after reading what you wrote, it really made me miss it even more. I had a great time there too and saw most of the creatures you mentioned down there plus a large school of false orcas trailing our boats on the way bak to SWV after a Sipadan dive. Had Jimmy as my night guide and he is darn good in spotting all the hidden/camouflage creatures. Could you tell me where (dive location at least) you found those pygmy sea-horses? I know there is an element of luck involved but would certainly like to try finding them again should I return to SWV this year. How Now? BrownCow. "Becky" <jbecky@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:z%87c.1071$3I2.638@newssvr24.news.prodigy.com ... > I just came back from Sipadan/Mabul a week ago. > > We stayed at Sipadan Water Village (SWV) which is really on the island of > Mabul. The Seaventures rig was right off-shore from our hotel. I wouldn't > like to stay there because the "shore" dive under the rig has a square > profile of 45-55 feet. There's not much to see on the pilings on your way > up (although we did find a frogfish halfway up once). On the other hand, > the diving at 50 ft was superb! I did 5 dives there over the course of 10 > days--great place to take pictures! Frogfish in many colors and sizes, > crocodile fish piled on top of each other (really), plenty of nudibranchs, > scorpionfish, schools of grunts & coronetfish, cleaner shrimp, old > construction debris for things to hide in, and more. If there's a current, > you can't "shore" dive because you might have to be picked up downcurrent. > You could plan to come up a line (if they have one, which I didn't see, but > I stayed at one end of the rig), but would you want to swim back from > Sipadan if that didn't work out? This trip, we made several dives there > without appreciable current. On our previous trip to SWV, however, there was > a ripping current above 20 feet, so we did our safety stop flying through > the water away from the rig and our hotel. You definitely couldn't swim to > shore from this dive site. > > There is no snorkeling on Seaventures, unless you go somewhere by boat. > That's a deal breaker for me, because I love to snorkel in between dives. > > SWV is a great place to stay. We've been there twice. The shore diving and > service are outstanding! Although the rooms don't have air conditioning, > they are huge and well appointed and private. The SWV resort is built over a > lagoon, so you can walk out on your private porch and look down at the reef. > When the tides aren't too low, you can snorkel under your hotel room. It's > really neat during the extra low tides at full moon: the coral reef under > the resort is partially out of the water. The leathery soft corals close > themselves up to keep from drying out. There's another resort on the island > that's on land. They seemed to have little AC units on each room. We didn't > have trouble with bugs in our cotttage or at the restaurant, and didn't have > to use bug spray (in contrast, a woman we met at Sipadan's Drop Off Cafe who > was staying on Sipadan was covered in fly and mosquito bites!). > > On twilight/night shore dives & snorkels at SWV this trip, I saw: mating > mandarinfish; a tiny (1") white octopus on the sand; a 1.5 ft long > long-snout pipefish; banded and regular pipefish including pregnant males (I > quit counting at 12); robust host pipefish (shaped like a blade of grass); a > stargazer; big squid; flounder and sole; painted frogfish; many shrimp; > eels; sea snakes; red hairy lobster; sea pens (coral) with tiny crabs and > shrimp all over them; box crabs; and more. Slightly annoying things about > SWV's night dives: you have to go with a guide and you have to be back by 8 > PM (so the emergency boat driver can go home). The cost of guided night > dives was included in our package but they usually charge extra. > > On day dives on Mabul (at the resort and farther out by boat, we saw sailfin > blennys; mushroom coral pipefish; ornate ghost pipefish; pygmy seahorses; > regular seahorses; colorful Coleman shrimp on a fire urchin; snake & moray > eels; cleaner stations with fish & shrimp cleaning groupers; devilfish (a > kind of scorpion fish with claws); lion fish; many types of shrimp gobies; > smallish groupers; schools of coronetfish; turtles; lobsters; many > parrotfish & wrasse; crinoid shrimp and squat lobsters; and lots more. There > were many anemone fish of all types. Clownfish seem to have been renamed in > a universal language: Nemo! > > On day dives at Sipadan (at least one or two each day), we saw a school of > 100 or so bumphead parrotfish, which milled around like sheep while we took > many photos; mating green sea turtles (which is a story all of its own); > green and hawksbill turtles doing regular turtle stuff; a shark cleaning > station with over a dozen white tip reef sharks; schools of jacks; lots of > nudibranchs; pygmy seahorses; many types of triggerfish, parrotfish, and > wrasse; big heaps of crinoids; and the usual reef fishes & corals. > > We also went to nearby Kapalai several times, which is (as other posters > have reported) just a sandbar with a hotel on stilts above it. Sort of like > SWV without the island... The dives near the hotel were good, but murky. > The dives out a ways but still on the island shelf were outstanding, esp. > the ones named 2nd Bouy & Don King Yama by the SWV folks. Some of our best > dives were here. We saw skeleton shrimp (tiny little amphipods, really); > ornate ghost pipefish; several frogfish, 1 inch to 18 inches in length; > pygmy seahorses; octopus & cuttlefish; nudibranchs; cleaner shrimp; a map > pufferfish let us photograph him up close while he was being cleaned at a > shrimp station, and followed us around later in the dive to see what we were > up to (which is definitely not normal pufferfish behavior); a small turtle > that wanted to play with everyone; wire coral shrimp & crabs; leaf > scorpionfish in several colors; and lots of other cool stuff. > > The weather was good the whole time (10 days). As I recall, it rained twice > (once really hard) at night; once for a little while in the afternoon; and > was warm and partly cloudy the rest of the time. The wind was calm for 2 > days (we had flat water, which was great) and breezy most of the rest of the > time (made the water a bit choppy, but not too bad). The last afternoon we > were there, an extra low tide at noon combined with some strong winds (which > made it pleasantly cool during the day) to produce 4 ft surge. They > couldn't tie the boats up at the dock to leave for the afternoon dive, so > they swam the gear and divers out to the boat. That was exciting to watch, > but I was glad I wasn't diving, that's for sure. On the leeward side of the > island (we walked over there), the water was low, but calm and flat for the > dives. The swells were smaller when they came back from the dive, so they > could dock. Alex, who's worked at the dive operation and resort for years, > said that it was the roughest water he'd ever seen at the resort. > > The dive briefings were good. They have a great permanent map of the shore > dives from the resort and draw pictures of the reef for others. Our group > of 13 was all photographers, and our guides usually did a good job of > showing everyone things, although a couple of times the laggards got to hunt > critters for themselves if they didn't keep up on a drift. If you told the > guide you were going to follow, he or she waited for you. If you asked to > see a particular creature, they tried to find it for you. The guides all > seem to have a network of critter sightings, so they can usually find > things. The only two things I wanted to see that no one saw were the > flamboyant cuttlefish and blue-ringed octopus (they said a blue ring had > been seen by snorkelers under the dive shop a couple of weeks before we > came, but I didn't find one). Most of the guides had underwater > etch-a-sketch devices they used to write down what they were showing you. > > You can do as many shore dives as you want between 6 am and dark; the only > rule is that you have to have a 1 hour surface interval before a boat dive > (and, of course, the night dive rule I mentioned earlier). I understand that > the 1 hour rule is enforced, although I didn't see it happen (but neither > did I try to do a boat dives soon after a shore dive). There are dive shop > folks around all the time to answer questions and help you with your gear. > If you're taking a self-guided shore dive during the day, you write your > dive number on a board and then mark off when you return, so they know if > they need to come look for you if you don't return. If you forget to mark > yourself off, they hunt around the resort for you before sending out the > search parties. I've never seen them fail to find the "lost" diver on shore, > so I don't know what their search efforts are like. > > SWV has the best shore diving arrangement I've ever seen. Each diver has a > lockable gear locker, a fat hanger for your wetsuit, and a place to hang > your BC & regulator. The tanks are 5-10 feet from where you assemble your > gear; which is maybe another 10 feet from the end of the dock you dive from. > If you want help hauling your gear that distance, it was easy to get (except > one time, I confess, when everyone seemed to be on siesta at 3:30 PM). When > the water gets choppy or the surge is up (or you just look like you need > help), they come out onto the dock to help you out of the water and take > your gear up. The dock has multiple levels, to accomodate the various tide > levels. > For boat dives, they take your BC & reg and hook it up on the boat. You > carry your other stuff (they'll help) to the boat. They bring everything > back after the dive. > > The boats don't have a camera platform or camera tank, so you end up holding > your camera or placing it on the deck during the short trips to the dive > sites. We put ourour cameras on the deck of the boat and didn't have any > trouble13, although I admit that we didn't have any strangers on our > boats--there were exactly 2 boats' worth of divers in our group, so we were > on boats by ourselves. On Mabul & Kapalai dives, you go back to the resort > for your surface interval. On the 2-tank dives at Sipadan, we went to the > Drop Off Cafe for our surface interval. They had a fresh water hose at the > cafe to rinse off cameras and tables where you can work on your camera > between dives. Back at the resort, there were several tanks just for > cameras, plus many more for BCs and other dive gear. > > They provided snacks between dives. Snacks were usually baked goods (one day > we had mayonnaise sandwiches on really good home baked bread. That was a > little weird, but tasty!), but sometimes fried bananas or meat pies. There > was always cold water to be had, plus coffee, tea, and hot chocolate (well, > you make it yourself with Milo cocoa powder, creamer, sugar, and hot water). > On surface intervals at Sipadan, they brought food and the Drop Off Cafe > provided the coffee, tea, and cocoa. I had an excellent snorkel one day > with a huge school of jacks at the drop off and under the cafe pier. > > If you're looking for a travel agent that understands divers and does a > great job with exotic trips, including Sipadan/Mabul/Kapalai, try Vickie > Coker at Travel Masters (http://www.travel-masters.net/). Travel Masters is > in Austin, Texas, but they plans trips for people all over. You can get > e-mail address and a toll-free number on the web site. Vickie has personally > been to Sipadan & Mabul many times and knows the people and ropes. I don't > work there and I don't get anything if you contact them. I just book trips > with them, travel in some of their group trips, and buy gear at their dive > store, Scubaland Adventures (http://www.scubaland.com/). > > Enjoy your trip! > > "scubak" <happycatfish7@hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:91c81800.0403081034.2974f7f1@posting.google.c om... > > I'm thinking of going to Sipadan in early April. Does anyone have any > > advice regarding the following: > > > > - Would like to make sure April is a good time to go. > > - Thinking of staying at Seaventures, the converted oil rig that Dave > > Morgan who posts on this site keeps talking about. Anyone else been > > there and your thoughts? I read somewhere that their scuba diving > > operations were not the best in regards to safety and dive briefings. > > Is that true? > > > > Thanks in advance for those that reply!!! > > > > Happy Diving! > > -Scubak > > > > |
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#10
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| In article <z%87c.1071$3I2.638@newssvr24.news.prodigy.com>, jbecky@sbcglobal.net (Becky) wrote: > I just came back from Sipadan/Mabul a week ago. Excellent dive report. Take out the "goes diving bit" Dave Morgan @ Work in the UK :^) |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Sipadan? | TS | (Swedish) | 1 | 04-12-2007 05:39 PM |
| Sipadan | BB | (Dutch) | 10 | 04-12-2007 04:50 PM |
| Sipadan (with a kid) | Michael Wolf | Vacation ideas | 14 | 03-26-2007 11:29 PM |
| Sipadan | Jani Ruohomaa | (Swedish) | 35 | 05-29-2006 01:35 PM |
| Sipadan | news.bigpond.com | Australia | 12 | 03-12-2006 01:31 AM |