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Instant Reader Report
on
Loloata Island Resort / [same] in
Papua New Guinea /
[N/A] on
2003/06
by
Lori Brown , MD, USA
Report Number 030719173647911
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Reporter
Dive Experience
251-500 dives
 
Where else diving
 Sulawesi, Irian Jaya, Cozumel, Bonaire, Fiji, Jamaica  

Dive Conditions

Weather
sunny  
Seas
choppy, currents  
Water Temp
80   to 85    ° Fahrenheit  
Wetsuit Thickness
3
Water Visibility
40   to 70    Feet  
 
Dive Policy
Dive own profile
yes  
 
Enforced diving restrictions  
[Unspecified]  
What I saw
Sharks
1 or 2 
Mantas
None 
Dolphins
None 
Whale Sharks
None 
Turtles
None 
Whales
None 
Ratings 1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Corals
  ***
Tropical Fish
***  
Small Critters
  ****
Large Fish
*  
Large Pelagics
  *
 
 
Underwater Photography  1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Subject Matter
***  
Boat Facilities
***
Overall rating for UWP's  
***  
Shore Facilities  
****  
Comments
Provided a counter in the dive shop with electrical outlet No accomodation
on boat for cameras to soak.    
Ratings and Overall Comments  1 (worst)- 5 (best):
Accommodations
****
Service
****
Food
****
 
 
Dive Operation
***  
Shore Diving  
***  

Overall Rating

Beginners
****   
Advanced
***    
Comments  
Lori Brown, Chris Green, and Justin Brown Green

Loloata Island Resort,  Papua New Guinea

	We stopped at Loloata on the first leg of a trip around Papua New Guinea
in June, 2003.  Loloata Island is conveniently located near Port Moresby
so is a good place to adjust to the 14 hour time difference (between PNG
and East Coast U.S.). The rooms are small but comfortable and clean and we
arranged for an air conditioned room. The weather was hot during the day
but it rained nearly every afternoon and cooled down a bit at night. 
There were a few mosquitos but not enough to drive one mad, we were all on
malaria prophylaxis and using insect repellant as well.   
	There were plenty of interesting guests.  Evidently, the close location
to Port Moresby draws not just divers but conferences to the island. 
During the 6 days we were there, we met a PNG historian from Queensland
University, a physicist who claimed to be the father of the PNG equivalent
of the National Institutes of Standards and Technology,  a large group of
German NGO workers, and a group of missionaries all wearing Isuzu baseball
caps.  In addition to the numerous interesting guests, there was a host of
interesting locals including a horde of tiny wallabies, crested pigeons,
large spiders, and captive tree kangaroos.   
	Meals are served buffet style at long tables.  Food was good and
plentiful and included lobster with light sauce, pasta with shrimp and
ginger, ham, and plenty of vegetables (some of them unidentifiable). One
night dinner was followed by entertainment by a group of local kids doing
traditional dances.  It was, well... really cute! 
	The dive shop was run by Adam Powell assisted by dive masters Nienke and
Yosi.  Our son, age 12, was recently certified junior open water so could
not dive below 40 feet.  We were concerned that he might not be able to
dive if they were too deep or conditions difficult.  But Nienke stayed
with him at an appropriate depth on every dive so that his being there did
not interfere with other divers.  Meanwhile, we were able to enjoy deeper
diving while our son had a wonderful (and safe) time. Adam was safety
conscious and each time there was a new diver on the boat, he did an
orientation of the safety features on board.   	
	We didn’t see many large fish (sharks) but small fish were plentiful and
the reef stunning. There were huge stands of blue tipped acropora filled
with pairs of butterfly fish, long-nose file fish, and the usual
assortment of damsels.  There were beautiful sea fans and even the
occasional pygmy seahorse.  I may have to resort to a bifocal mask next
time to see them better! There was a huge anemone that covered about 5 ft
by 5 ft and was hopping with a half-dozen different species of anemone
fish.  One of my favorite sites, that we returned to repeatedly, was a
mucky dive at Lion Island.  Here we spotted a tube anemone with a shrimp
dancing around it, a tiny crab on the underside of an upside down jelly
fish, a pavo razor fish flitting about looking like a little leaf, and a
horned sea star with a crab on it. 
	The dive staff kept telling us about the legendary lacy scorpion fish
(Rhinopias aphanes), a fish that only lives near Loloata Island. Each day,
they would tell us that we might see one today.  By our last dive, we were
rolling our eyes and laughing when they went through the lacy scorpion
fish story with the new divers for the day.  Low and behold, on the last 5
minutes of the last dive, Nienka spotted a lacy scorpion fish in the coral
rubble at Quayle’s Reef.  A fitting end for a relaxed week of diving.  
	Just a brief word about the diving conditions.  Visibility was usually
limited and there were a few dives on which currents became very strong. 
We ended one dive with just 300 psi after swimming against a very strong
current.  The current changed within the first 15 minutes of the dive and
the rest of the dive was spent trying to get back to the boat.  We were
diving with Yosi at the time, looking for pygmy seahorses at about 90 ft.
She handled the situation very professionally.  We managed a safety stop
by hanging onto dead coral. 
	All in all, the dive staff was friendly and helpful, the diving was good,
and a good time was had by all.
	

 
	 

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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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