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Instant Reader Report
on
Blue Reed Divers / [same] in
Barbados /
[N/A] on
2003/04
by
J Kelley , Ma, USA
Report Number 030514111631214
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Send an email to the author of this report

Reporter
Dive Experience
251-500 dives
 
Where else diving
 Many Atlantic and Pacific locations 

Dive Conditions

Weather
sunny  
Seas
calm  
Water Temp
82   to 0    ° Fahrenheit  
Wetsuit Thickness
0
Water Visibility
0   to 50    Feet  
 
Dive Policy
Dive own profile
yes  
 
Enforced diving restrictions  
Don't dive alone  
What I saw
Sharks
None 
Mantas
None 
Dolphins
None 
Whale Sharks
None 
Turtles
> 2 
Whales
None 
Ratings 1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Corals
  ***
Tropical Fish
***  
Small Critters
  ***
Large Fish
**  
Large Pelagics
  *
 
 
Underwater Photography  1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Subject Matter
N/A  
Boat Facilities
N/A
Overall rating for UWP's  
N/A  
Shore Facilities  
N/A  
Comments
There wasn't a dunk tank on board.  
Ratings and Overall Comments  1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Accommodations
***
Service
***
Food
***
 
 
Dive Operation
*****  
Shore Diving  
***  

Overall Rating

Beginners
*****   
Advanced
***    
Comments  
BARBADOS AND
BLUE REEF DIVERS TRIP REPORT

Last fall my best friend, a non-diver, and I went to a charity auction. We
bid on and won two American Airline tickets to anywhere in the Caribbean,
for $550, a great deal.  When we called American to get reservations, in
November for an April vacation, we were told that the only island that was
available for our ticket category and travel dates was Barbados.  Given the
choice of Barbados or Barbados we took Barbados.  It wasn’t on our long
list of choices but a trip to warm air and water is always a delight.

After reading my Undercurrent chapbooks, which pretty much panned Barbados
as a dive destination, I was really thinking about not packing my dive gear
and not diving on Barbados.  Heresy you say?  Well wouldn’t it be wonderful
to just take a light carry on bag rather than lugging that huge, heavy,
unwieldy bag which is jammed with gear?

Then I turned to Rodale’s Scuba Diving Diver to Diver Forum and had a
change of heart.  From the comments there I gleaned that Barbados diving
was average for the Caribbean and while it was not electric it was worth
diving.  Also several divers recommended John Moore who operates Blue Reef
Divers.   This was a fortuitous happenstance as I took this advice and I
have never had a better experience with a dive shop and I have almost 300
dives at many locations in the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans.

We arrived on Barbados a day late because American Airlines over booked
the flight from San Juan to Barbados and we were bumped involuntarily.  It
was April 2003.  The weather was great for the week we were there. It was
sunny, hot and there were occasional clouds and a rain shower or two.  The
seas were calm on the west side of the island where I dove.  The viz was
about 50 feet and the water temp hovered around 82f.  

Mary and John Moore own and operate Blue Reef Divers on the west coast in
Mt Standfast, which is just north of Holetown.  The shop is right on the
beach.  Mary provides free transportation to and from your hotel.  As I
was staying on the South coast of Barbados, this was a fabulous bit of
luck for me.  Even though the ride was 40 to 60 minutes each way,
depending on the rush hour traffic, Mary arrived each morning with a smile
and an affable attitude.  The rides were a treat as I got to see the island
and Mary’s island commentary and conversation were great fun. 

While Mary is in charge of the transportation and managing the dive shop
John handles the diving end of the operation.  John is the dive master
while a lifelong Bajan named Bob steers the boat and changes over your
equipment between dives.  The boat is small so the dive group is limited
to a maximum of six.  This makes for great diving as the group is small. 
And there was plenty of space on the boat for the group size.  

The dive sites were varied and we did a few drift dives with mild current.
 The dive that most people like best is the wreck of the freighter
Stavronika, which at its deepest point is in about 120 to 130ft of water. 
John lead the group through some remarkably small swim throughs that I
wouldn’t have tried on my own but with John’s leadership and knowledge of
the freighter were perfectly safe and fun.   The morning we dove the
Stavronika we left a little early to be the first ones to the site as it
is popular.  There are other wreck sites and we dove another one which was
shallower with lots of fish life although I can’t remember the name of it
just now.  

Overall I found the reefs to be in good health with hard and soft coral
with gorgonians and sponges.  At most dive sites there were plenty of
smaller fish, but larger fish were in shorter supply.  Barbados had more
turtles than I’ve ever seen on any other island.  I did ten dives and saw
large Hawksbill turtles on nine of them.  Usually we saw several turtles
and on one dive I saw five of them.  And no it wasn’t one turtle circling
me five times.  Many of the turtles in Bajan waters are tagged.  I usually
saw at least one spotted eel and there were quite a few multiple sightings.
 There was even one huge green moray at the Stavronika who rivals Chester
at the Habitat Curacao house reef in size.  

John was remarkably personable and very good at striking up conversations
he took a real interest in the people with whom he was diving.  Both John
and Mary are amiable, easy going and good-natured.   I really felt I was
diving with friends. 

Although the diving on Barbados isn’t rip-snorting, it’s fine.  There are
a lot of things to do topside including a tour of rum distilleries and a
brewery. A visit to the wild and less populated east side of the island
was at the top of my friend’s favorite activities.  The island is loaded
with pretty beaches and activities so this might be a good vacation for a
couple where only one of the partners is a diver.  The people were
friendly and easy going and very helpful in getting us to and from our
destinations.  Barbados has a good and cheap transportation system
(although some of the small van rides can be hairy) so we didn’t bother
with a car and driving on the left side of the road.   

You can contact Blue Reef Divers at

Website – bluereef.com
E-mail – bluereef@sunbeach.net
 

Questions?
Send an email to the author of this report

Note: The information here was reported by the author above, but has NOT been reviewed by Undercurrent prior to posting on our website. It is presented here to provide Undercurrent readers with timely information on dive operations worldwide. The material may contain errors, typos, ... Please report any major problems to EditReport@undercurrent.org, referencing the report number above. An edited version of this report will likely appear in the next Travelin' Divers' Chapbook, which will be sent to newsletter subscribers and published online for Online Members.


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