Honduras Scuba Diving
Including Roatán, Guanaja, Utila, and Cayos Cochinos
An Undercurrent Insider Report on Honduras Diving
The Consumer Newsletter for Serious Divers Since 1975
Overview of Honduras
All dive resorts are in the bay
islands: Roatan, Utila, Cayos
Cochinos, all home to aggressive
no-see-ums - some people have
serious allergic reactions. Those
without DEET may fi nd their vacations
ruined. The diving features
nice walls, offshore seamounts, and
excellent coral and gorgonians,
although there are few large fi sh.
Whale sharks are common near
Utila roughly February through May
and boats from Roatan are chasing
them too. Some Roatan resorts
have easy beach diving. The rainy
season is October through February,
and can disrupt the diving.
Spanish is spoken on the mainland,
English on the Bay Islands. Classic
Central American jungles and
Mayan ruins inland make great
mainland trips. Malaria protection
is advised.
Honduras Seasonal Dive Planner
During our coldest winter months, northers can blow down and disrupt the diving. The rainy season starts in October
or November and runs into February, but it doesn't usually affect visibility that much. The no-see-ums are usually
the worst during wet weather. The hottest months are March and August.
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South & Central America). |
Honduras Feature Articles and Reader Reports
Attention!
You must be an Undercurrent Online Member to access MOST links in this section.
However
some articles can be accessed by the public --
these links have a button you can click to see the article.
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For Undercurrent Online Members |
Instant Reader Reports - the most recent ones available online |
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For Undercurrent Online Members and some available for Public |
| Dive Articles - Land Based |
| Bahamas, B.V.I., Ontario, Roatan..., the good, bad and ugly in dive resorts, boats and service, 10/08 |
CoCo View Resort, Roatan, Honduras , 8/08 |
| Malaria on Roatan, 8/08 |
| Roatan Thumbs Down: Bananarama sets 45 minute bottom time, 10/05 |
| Don't Forget There's Malaria Out There, Even in Roatan, 10/05 |
| CoCo View Resort, Roatan, Honduras: 10 years later, the same diver
paradise 7/04 |
Available For Public |
| CoCo View Cuts the Cheese and (hopefully) Blows Away Turista (see sidebar, p. 4) 10/03 |
| Coco
View Redux,
5/03 |
| Laguna
Beach Resort, Honduras, in search of whale sharks, 4/03 |
| Bayman
Bay Owners Pursued, after several years of not delivering for divers, 2/03 |
| Thumbs
Down, Coco View, (see sidebar, p. 4) 2/03 |
| What's
Left After Mitch , 1/99 |
| Cayos
Cochinos and Roatan, Coco View and Plantation Beach, 9/98 |
| Roatan, Anthony's Key Resort, Inn of Last Resort, 2/98 |
| Guanaja, Bayman Bay, 3/97 |
| Guanaja, Overview of Resorts, 3/97 |
| Roatan, Bay Island Beach Resort, 8/96 |
| Roatan, Romeo's, 3/96 |
| Cayos
Cochinos, Plantation Beach Resort, 6/95 |
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| Reader Reports - from the Travelin' Divers' Chapbooks |
Editor's Book Picks for Honduras
Including Roatán, Guanaja, Utila, and Cayos Cochinos
The books below are my favorites about diving in this part of the
world All books are available at a significant discount from Amazon.com;
just follow the links. -- BD
World Atlas of Coral Reefs
by Mark D. Spalding, Corinna Ravilious,
Edmund P. Green, United Nations World Conservation Monitoring Center.
If there is one book that belongs in every traveling diver's library, this is
it. The superb World Atlas of Coral Reefs has everything you want to know
about the reefs from Costa Rica and Cuba to the Coral Sea and Cayman. The information
is specific and up to date. The photos, maps and layout superb. And the price,
for this 424 page, full color, hard bound volume, is a steal at $31.50
The Atlas was released in September by the United Nations World
Conservation Monitoring Center to document and conserve the world's coral reefs.
Clearly written with divers in mind, it's an invaluable resource for global
travelers. Here's what you'll find.
- 94 maps, including global maps of biodiversity and reef
stresses, regional maps showing 3-D bathymetry and high resolution maps showing
reefs, mangroves, population centers, dive centers and protected areas.
- 280 color photographs, showing reefs, wildlife, people and
places, Including 84 photographs taken from space by Shuttle astronauts.
- Text explaining the formation, structure and ecology of
coral reefs; their various uses and abuses at the hands of humans; and the
techniques used in coral reef mapping.
- Detailed texts describing the distribution and status of
coral reefs in every country.
- Data tables listing information on biodiversity, human
use, and protected areas. These include statistics on coral reef area, biodiversity,
fish consumption, and threats.
For example, you can learn about pollution damage to the reefs
at Providenciales and the lack of human impact, as well. Or, where extensive
bleaching took place in Honduras 1998. You'll read that Milne Bay in Papua New
Guineas has the most extensive reef system in that country and where, in Fiji,
the bumphead parrotfish and tridachna clams will not be found, thanks to overfishing.
Order
now.
Diving Cozumel ... Cayman
Islands ... Belize
... Bahamas
... Bay
Islands ... Bonaire
... Bermuda
... British
Virgin Islands ... Hawaii
... Micronesia
by Speck, Garoutte, Middleton, Cancelmo, Strohofer,
Lewbel, Martin, Douglass, Verdure, Rosenberg, Hanauer...
No
matter where you are headed, the Aqua Quest Books covering your destination are
the only way to supplement Undercurrent's hardhitting critical information.
Each of these books describes specific dive sites, depths and location, shore
diving entries, the critters you'll see, local history and customs, places of
interests. Take one as you travel or buy one after you return for the memories.
Scores of excellent colorful pictures and maps supplement each of these 7x10 paperback
128 page books.
Paul Humann ID Books by
Paul Humann, Ned Deloach: The three set fish, creature
and coral ID books by Paul Humann are the unparalleled sources for information
on Caribbean sea life and identification. This month Paul and his partner
Ned deLoach released updated and expanded editions of each, with scores of new
critters, even better photos, and information unavailable anywhere else. Why,
the Reef Fish Identification book, at more than 500 pages, is
20 percent larger than the previous volume, which came out in 1994. Whenever
I travel to the Caribbean, I tote all three books and spend my down hours figuring
out what I saw and where to look to find rare creatures. Paul's splendid Reef
Creature book (420 pages), covers sponges, nudibranchs, octopus, crustaceans,
Christmas tree worms and plenty more. His Coral ID book (276 pages) helps
you identify all the hard and soft corals, spawning, and even the growth on
top of corals, as well as algae and other plant life. Beginners may want to
ID only fish, but I'd recommend that all three books be part of every diver's
library. And, if you have an old set, by all means replace it. You'll be delighted
at the additions and improvements. Each book normally retails for $40, but are
discounted when you order here. And the boxed
3-volume set is available now at a bigger discount, $81.60
(June, 2004). You'll get the best prices
Amazon.com has to offer, speedy delivery, and the knowledge that a large hunk
of our profit will go to the Coral Reef Alliance, which is working to keep our
reefs alive and well. All are spiral bound, 6x9
Watching Fishes: Understanding Coral Reef Fish Behavior
by Roberta Wilson, James Q. Wilson.
Your buddies can probably name
the reef fish, but read this volume and you can explain what those critters are
actually doing -- and why. This fascinating book describes why and how fish change
color, how they smell and socialize, the difference between day and night behavior,
even how damsels cultivate algae patches -- which is why they attach you when
you fin by. Watching Fishes, Understanding Coral and Reef Fish Behavior is written
for divers, not scientists, by Roberta and James Q. Wilson. They describe in lively
nonfiction prose the behavior of basslets to blennies, clownfish to crinoids,
damsels to drumfish. Perfect for between-dive reference. Paperback, 6x9, 274 pages.
You might find some other books of interest in our Editor's
Book Picks section.
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