E-mail: Travlgrrl@aol.com or Call Toll-Free 1-800-842-4753

Scuba diving in the Caribbean with Alyson Adventures

It's easy to get to know the other travelers in our small, friendly, gay and lesbian groups.

An active, outdoors vacation with Alyson Adventures.

On our Caribbean scuba diving trips we've met sea turtles, colorful fish, vivid purple sponges, a shy seahorse, and a lazy shark. And that was only below the waves.

 


An Octopus's Garden: Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Scuba diving on a gay-friendly Caribbean island!

January 12-19, 2008 OR January 17-24, 2009

Dive into the tropical waters of a gay-friendly island paradise, and discover the colorful world beneath the waves. Far from the usual vacation spots, the Dutch island of Saba, in the Caribbean, is known to scuba divers worldwide for its spectacular underwater landscapes.

Join us at a comfortable guesthouse on this lush island. Beginners will learn safe scuba diving techniques in a pool and in the clear Caribbean waters. PADI and NAUI certified scuba divers get 12 boat dives, over five days, with nitrox available for a small extra charge. We'll have time, too, for wandering the gingerbread villages of Windwardside and The Bottom, and to explore the island's extinct volcano and rainforest..

Highlights:

  • Dive in a pristine underwater marine park, amidst hot springs, lava tunnels, and pinnacles that soar up from the black depths below.
  • Swim with a school of small angelfish, then a giant grouper, rays, and sea turtles.
  • If you are a novice diver, take diving lessons in a beautiful tropical pool.
  • Take a day off from diving for a hike to the banana trees and wild orchids that populate the rain forest atop 2864-ft. Mt. Scenery.
  • Discover the island's creative cuisines, mixing European, Chinese, Indonesian, and West Indian Creole styles.

Is it the right vacation for you? This trip is designed for both beginners and certified divers. Beginners should be good swimmers, comfortable in the water, in good physical and aerobic health; please consult with a doctor before signing up. Your first lessons will be in a pool; you'll then graduate to the open sea. If you've always wanted to learn scuba, here's your chance!

Past travellers comment on this trip: "I've done more than 200 dives in various places in the Caribbean and Saba, by far, is the cleanest and the best. It truly is The Unspoiled Queen."— G.O., Howard, Fla.

"We've traveled many places, under many circumstances, and the trips we've taken with Alyson Adventures have always been among the least stressful and most comfortable - true vacations."— Angelo Aguanno, Palm Springs, Calif.

Dates and Price:

  • January 12-19, 2008: $1,690.00 : A trip for gay men and lesbians.
  • January 17-24, 2009: $1,690.00: A trip for gay men and lesbians.

E-mail: Travlgrrl@aol.com 


Prices are per-person, based on double occupancy. Tours often fill up months before departure. We regularly update our travel schedule to show the status of this and other trips.

Travelling Alone?
So are most of the people who travel with us. You do not need to pay extra to travel by yourself. Prices are per-person, and the single supplement applies only if you'd like a room by yourself.

Location: Based on the Caribbean island of Saba.

Price includes: Comfortable accommodations at a gay-friendly guesthouse; All breakfasts (continental), five lunches; Five dinners; Twelve dives (2 or 3 dives a day over five days) for certified divers, weather permitting; or Lessons (two days in the pool, then two days of actual diving in the Caribbean) for beginners; Post-dive island sightseeing and optional short hikes; Complimentary cocktail every day; A hike up the island's Mt. Scenery; Airport transfers on tour days.

Not included: Airfare to Saba; 1 lunch; 2 dinners; Divemaster and crew gratuities; Equipment (available for rental, or bring your own; no charge for air tanks and weight belt); Marine park fee (currently $3 per dive -- $36 for a 12-dive week) (Nitrox is available for a small extra charge.)

FULL ITINERARY:

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

 


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If you've always wanted to scuba dive, here's a chance to learn, in the company of a small, friendly gay and lesbian group. And if you're already certified, you'll enjoy the chance to scuba dive off the small, gay-friendly Caribbean island of Saba with that same group. After this vacation, you'll feel as if you've just come back from another planet. You'll discover a world of colorful coral and bright sponges, fish of all shapes and hues.

The account below is based on a typical week. The most spectacular and popular dive sites, such as Eye of the Needle and Tent Reef, will be a part of every week's plans. Other dive sites visited, the sequence in which we visit them, and underwater life seen, will sometimes vary based on weather and other considerations. 

 

 

1: Meeting Day
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The adventure begins when you spot the airstrip on which your pilot intends to land. The residents of this volcanic island found a plot of level land just large enough to hold the world's smallest international airport. Fortunately, the pilot has made this landing many times before, and rolls to a halt with half the runway still to spare. Five minutes after touching down, you've already cleared Saba immigration, collected your luggage, and are on a winding road toward our hotel. Small airports have their advantages!

Our home for seven nights is a friendly hotel overlooking the turquoise Caribbean waters, where you'll soon be diving. At our brief orientation, you meet others who will be diving with you this week.

Explore the small town of Windwardside this afternoon: After watching glassblower Jo Bean craft colorful fish, you'll have no trouble coming up with gift ideas to take back home. Then we've planned a reception with gay islanders, followed by a Saban barbeque dinner.

If your previous Caribbean visits have always been to large resort islands, you're in for a wonderful surprise when you reach Saba. This tiny (population 1,200) Dutch island is the complete antithesis of a typical resort. Everyone seems to know everyone else. Crime is so negligible, many guesthouse doors don't even have locks. You'll meet some of the island's other gay visitors and residents, and soon you'll feel like you're at home as you walk through Windwardside. Except the weather is better.

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: Meeting Day

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: Song of the Whale

 

2: Song of the Whale
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Awake to the crowing of a distant rooster, then choose between an omelet, fresh fruit and cheese, or other hearty breakfasts. Certified divers will head out to a dive site known as Coregut, just a 20-minute boat ride away.

 

This is a spectacular wall dive, featuring Giant Brain Coral, and a large outcropping of Elkhorn Coral. Colorful Parrotfish, the size of a small child, often hang out here, as do brilliant blue-and-yellow Queen Angelfish.

Stop breathing for a moment, as you hover 50 feet below the surface. The slow, haunting music of whale songs floats in from the distance. Occasionally whales and dolphins are spotted here; more often, we are aware of their presence only from their songs.

Our second dive is at Big Rock Market. Bright purple tube sponges sway gracefully from a bed of coral. A Trunkfish, with its distinctive triangular profile, hovers nearby. Several Fairy Basslets, brilliant purple and yellow, dart about the coral. Two giant boulders display coral and sponges of nearly every color: yellow, orange, blue, red, and purple. A lobster pokes its spiny head from beneath one boulder.

We'll be back in Windwardside about 2:00, allowing time to admire the gingerbread homes of this charming island. Don't be surprised if you meet other gay and lesbian visitors, on Saba for holidays, who know they can find friends here.

Those not yet certified will do classroom work this morning. In the afternoon, learn basic skills in the hotel pool. Today you'll have the thrill of breathing underwater for the first time in your life. Practice the all-important scuba diving skill known as buoyancy control -- adjusting the air in your inflatable vest so that you can hover motionless at any depth you choose, ascending or descending with only a light kick. This will be a full day, ending about 4:00 or 5:00 -- in time for you to join others for complimentary drinks on the terrace.

And now, we'll find out what the chef has planned for dinner!

 

 

3: An Octopus's Garden
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Today, certified divers start at Third Encounter Plateau. This plateau marks the top of an undersea mountain, dropping off 1,000 feet on the sides. Yet, like other dive sites here, it's only a fifteen-minute boat ride from the dock.

 

Eighty feet below the surface, a four-foot Nurse Shark rests on the sandy bottom, below a coral overhang. In the distance, a black-tip shark glides silently through the still waters.

These two species of shark are common around Saba. Forget what you've seen in movies and on television about sharks: You can feel quite safe, particularly around these species, as long as you don't provoke them. And provoking them is something that nobody seems inclined to do.

We take our lunch break at Diamond Rock, a formation that greatly resembles a Spanish galleon, sails unfurled, perched on the sea. Snorkeling is excellent here. An octopus lopes over coral-encrusted boulders on the way to a garden of undulating sponges, then hovers silently, its eyes toward us, curiously watches us as we watch it.

Our afternoon dive is on Tent Reef, deservedly Saba's most popular scuba and snorkel destination. At depths of just 15 to 50 feet, Tent Reef offers an abundant variety of coral, fish, and other sea life.

A Southern Sting Ray lies on the bottom, covered with sand except for two protruding eyes. With a flap of its wings, the ray glides away as we approach. A Spotted Moray Eel pushes its head from a cave, its mouth seesawing open and shut. This isn't hunger, or laughter; merely the way eels breathe.

Our scuba diving students will finish their second day of class and pool practice today. You've learned to use your dive charts to plan a safe dive. In the water, you've practiced handling minor problems, such as how to clear a flooded facemask; and how to share air with a buddy in a real emergency.

When diving and lessons are done, a van tour gives us time to appreciate this unique island. Legend has it that Captain Morgan, the buccaneer, deposited hostages here, confident they couldn't escape. (Or, perhaps, that they wouldn't wish to!) Dutch, Swedish, and Scottish settlers joined them. Today, Saba is a Dutch territory with a high standard of living, and a crime rate so low as to be virtually immeasurable.

A winding road -- or is it a roller-coaster? -- connects the villages of Hell's Gate, Windwardside, and The Bottom. All homes, old and new, reflect a common tradition: Red roofs, white sides, and green shutters. Sabans are particularly proud of their road, which they built over two decades in the mid-1900s, after Swiss engineers assured them it would be impossible.

Following the tour, relax at the pool with a Cabin Boy. Then plan dinner: If your sense of adventure extends to the dinner table, try stewed octopus. For others, a broiled lobster, T-bone steak, or vegetarian entree may be just the thing. Afterward, we'll enjoy the twinkling of a star-lit sky.

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: An Octopus's Garden

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: Lava Tubes and a Seahorse

 

4: Lava Tubes and a Seahorse
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An alert pelican watches as we board the dive boat, ready to help out with any unwanted fish. Not far from yesterday's first dive lies Outer Limits. Here we follow a narrow underwater ridge. As you swim amidst a school of Creole Wrasses, look over the edge of the ridge to see the wall plunge straight down, dissolving into the black depths. An elongated trumpet fish floats by, looking like a refugee from a Dr. Seuss story.

 

Certified divers get three dives today; those becoming certified will join in for the second and third.

Much of the colorful coral around Saba has grown on giant boulders that tumbled from the cliffs, as waves pounded the shore over many millennia. This is evident at a dive site known as Porites Point, where enormous rocks are fused together by centuries of coral growth. A spiny lobster peers out from under one boulder shelf. Don't be alarmed if you spot one or two barracuda hovering in the depths -- like other sea life, if you leave them alone, they'll return the favor.

An abundance of new sights and experiences await us at the site known as Hot Springs. The same volcanic activity that created Saba also vents hot water through a few diffuse cracks in the ocean floor. The hot water disperses too quickly to be felt, but when you bury your hand in the sand, the warmth is unmistakable.

Our divemaster knows a shy seahorse that lives near this spot, and we pay a visit. No one can predict what you'll see on any given dive, but happily, the little critter is home today.

Next we reach a field of garden eels. These small animals burrow tail-first into the sand, their upper bodies protruding like so many oversized bean sprouts, undulating in the water as they feed on plankton. When a scuba diver, stingray, or large fish passes above, the garden eels retract back into their homes, then pop back out when the potential danger is past, in a patient game of hide-and-seek.

With a population of just a few thousand, Saba is not known for as a gay cultural center. But we'll feel right at home after today's dive, as the guests of a gay couple who have made this island their winter home.

 

 

 

5: A Skyscraper Under The Sea
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One of the underwater world's most fantastic sights awaits you this morning. We begin at Third Encounter, which we visited two days ago. Giant Brain Coral, Star Coral, and Sea Fans cover the rocks.

 

As you swim away from this plateau, the black void yawning beneath you, a giant spire slowly takes shape ahead. This is the Eye of the Needle, an underwater skyscraper rising straight up from the abyss below, covered with coral and sponges like a gem-encrusted scabbard. Fish ignore the new visitors, as they weave amongst the coral. An eel watches, unperturbed, as we float past.

The Needle is Saba's most celebrated underwater feature, often inspiring local artists. The magic of this sight cannot be captured by photograph, but no diver will ever forget their first encounter with the Eye of the Needle.

By definition, recreational scuba diving involves staying at such depths that you can always ascend directly to the surface in an emergency. But we always take a three-minute safety stop at 15 feet during our ascent, as an added precaution against decompression sickness. During today's safety stop, a school of several hundred silvery Sennets swims toward us, every fish turning in unison, as if performing a massive water ballet. Suddenly a larger Bar Jack lunges into their midst, looking for dinner. Still moving in unison, pursuer and pursued zigzag off into the hazy depths.

Our second dive is at Ladder Labyrinth, named for the maze of ridges along the sea bottom. Crabs and shrimp are common sights here, as are Angelfish and Coneys. A Hawksbill Turtle flippers through the water. We're likely to spot this endangered species several times during the week. Hopefully the protection of the Saba Marine Park, supported by our dive fees, will help its numbers to grow.

Those with solid diving experience may opt for a night dive this evening. Many sea animals are nocturnal, and are best seen at nights. Your underwater light will reveal a new world of sealift, in vivid colors. The azure vase sponges never looked so bright.

A night dive is one step in the Advanced Diver course. Previously certified divers who wish to progress to an Advanced level while on Saba can usually complete all the requirements during the week.

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: A Skyscraper Under The Sea

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: Shark Shoal

 

6: Shark Shoal
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It's easy to see how Shark Shoal got its name: The first creature to greet us on the sea floor is a 5-foot nurse shark, lolling on the sandy bottom. Shark Shoal is another of Saba's legendary pinnacle dives; this particular formation rises from a depth of 300 feet to its peak 90 feet below the surface. Black Coral and Giant Tube Sponges cover the pinnacle. In the distance, cruising the depths, a Black-Tip Shark is silhouetted against the pale blue waters. (That's a docile Nurse Shark in the photo. Sorry, we never got close enough to the Black-Tips to snap a photo. We trust you'll cut us a little slack here.)

 

Back on the boat, we relax over lunch and gaze out on azure waters that seem to stretch forever. White clouds drift overhead, and a pterodactyl-like frigate bird glides along the cliff; its distinct, angular form has become a familiar sight this week. Suddenly a Bar Jack leaps out of the water, ten feet into the air. Yesterday's hunter has become the hunted. We'll never know whether this particular fish made good its escape today.

Our afternoon diving begins at Twilight Zone. Although located on the same seamount as Third Encounter, the scenery here is largely different. A dozen types of hard coral decorate the rocks. Large groupers swim about. A Spotted Moray Eel watches, mouth agape, as we glide past.

For certified divers, our package includes 2 or 3 dives a day for each of 5 days. This is a 3-dive day. We'll end the day, and the week, at Torrens Point. On the northwest corner of Saba, this site is marked by the distinctive rock spires protruding from the sea just beyond the island's edge. A short underwater tunnel takes us between boulders and cliff to the north side of Torrens Point, where the shallow water lets us enjoy a long dive. A school of Blue Tangs dances amidst Elkhorn and Brain Coral. Iridescent Parrotfish peck away on a bed of coral. Banded Coral Shrimp enliven an underwater cave.

Torrens Point also offers excellent snorkeling, with a self-guided snorkel trail.

Back on land, a final responsibility awaits us. Earlier guests on Saba invented a drink they named the Cabin Boy, with which many of us have cooled off on past evenings. We, too, need to leave a legacy. We've had a week of inspiration; now let's see what we can do!

 

 

 

7: The Rainforest
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The official diving days are finished, but in all likelihood, several members of our group will be unable to resist the lure of the deep. We ask only that you watch your times: Experts recommend a full 24 hours between repetitive multi-day diving and high-altitude plane flights. (The flight from Saba to St. Martin is low altitude, so if your departure from St. Martin isn't till mid-afternoon, you can comfortably fit in two dives today.)

 

For a new activity, and a new view of Saba, hike to the top of 2850-foot Mt. Scenery, the highest point not only on Saba, but anywhere in the kingdom of the Netherlands. The well-worn trail takes us up 1064 steps, past a small banana plantation and vines of tangerine-hued Black-Eyed Suzies, the national flower of Saba. An emerald-green hummingbird flits at a flower for a sip of nectar.

Half-way up, we're treated to spectacular views of the villages and ocean. A tiny tree frog peers out from a dew-filled leaf, and a lizard scampers up the branch of a banana tree. We can thank these lizards for the absence of mosquitoes on Saba.

The mountaintop is usually enshrouded in clouds, which provide moisture for the "Elfin Forest" at the summit. Graceful mahogany trees twist about, their branches blanketed in moss, ferns, and orchids.

And at the summit? Well, we trust you not to do anything silly up there.

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

Octopus's Garden: The Rainforest

 

 

Scuba diving in the Caribbean

 

8: Departure Day
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By now, you know why we consider Saba to be a very special paradise. If you find it impossible to leave -- well, you won't be the first one. We'll ask the hotel not to remake your room until they know you've truly left.

 

It's hard to say good-bye to new friends with whom you've visited an alien world that few people see. But from past experience, we know that many of you will meet again, on other adventures.

 

E-mail: Travlgrrl@aol.com for more information or call toll-free 1-800-842-4753

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