Archive for the 'Mexico' Category

October 20th 2010
Guided scooter cave dive

Posted under Cave diving & Mexico

My good friend Marc from ColdBloodDivers gave me a link to this cool guided scooter cave diving tour.

It looks amazing.

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October 18th 2010
Go Cavern Diving – Steve Bogaerts & HP Hartmann

Posted under Cave diving & Mexico

Found this great cavern diving video on YouTube.

Thanks Marc from ColdBloodDivers for the tip.

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One day I will certainly go to Mexico to lean Cave Diving.

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June 18th 2009
Cenote

Posted under Fun & Mexico & Photography

Found this cool image of a Mexican cenote:

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I would love to go diving there some day, or in any other cenote.

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March 19th 2008
Playa del Carmen, part 3 – Cenotes (cavern dives)

Posted under Holidays & Mexico

I have grown a huge like for caverns, the surfaces covered in sediment, the stangeness, the emptyness, and shear beuaty attracts me.

Previously I have had the opportunity to dive the Dos Ojos centote, but this day we set out to dive Kukulkan and Chac-Mool both cenotes in the Chac-Mool system. Again both dives were done as caverndives, and our guide made sure we had a good understanding of the nature and technicalities of cavern diving before we begang the dive.

Both caverns were sufficiently deep to have halocline (meeting of fresh and salt water). The halocline is similar to the termocline (meeting of warm and cold saltwater), but when the halocline layer gets mixed the visibility gets severly blured (much more than in termocline). At some point I wonered that it would be easy to become disorientated in the halocline if it was not possible to use the cavern line as a reference. The halocline is hovever also absolutly amazing; It was beuatiful to see the cloud of mixed water from the finn-kick of the diver in front me; The way the layers shone when not mixed and the funny experience of beeing able to turn your head so that half your mask was in the halocline and half was out was just some of the cool moments I had duing the dives.

Both caverns beuaty also related to the places where the light penetrated, the effects was beuatiful, from the laser light in Kukulkan to the leaves on the surface in the Chac-Mool. It was hard to concentrate both on taking it all in, do photos and make sure my boyancy was correct ;-)

Angelita

I had seen a video of divers entering the sulfid layer og Angelita, so diving this hole was top on my list of things to do while in Playa del Carmen. The dive was planed and we left early in order to be some of the first divers at the site. I was bobeling with excitement as we sat in the car being given a thoughrow instruction by the dive guide.

The dive itself fully indfriede my expectations. As we entered the still and blank surface and the wather gave way for our decent in the somewhat murky wathers (visibility app. 8m), we decended and at 20 m the visibility became better. The water smelled of the rootten leaves and wood. We stopped just above the sulfitlayer in the hole, and nothing I had envisoned could meassure up to what I saw; It was simply breathtaking. We formed a circle of divers above the sulfit layer, and as sky-divers fell we through the layer into the dark below. Back above the layer we played around and watched our guide jump from a treetrunk into the sulfit layer. In the end we slowly accented while swiming round. We came out and quickly decided, that it had been such a good dive, truely wonderful and amazing. Not a least because we where the first divers that day; The sulfitlayer was so clearly marked, and the visibility was better than on most days.

We went on toward Gran cenote. This one was quite special since it contained small stalemites/staleklites eveywhere. The swimthrougs were smaller and there wher plenty of dark areas around. In addition this cenote also had a nice halocline. This was surely a cavers I was glad to have dived, in addition to the beuaty the cavern also included some narower parts where you needed to focus a bit in order to swim throught without toutching.

More cenotes…

While in Playa del Carmed, I have done almost all the diving possible, and after a few days of rough sea (no sea-diving), I had done all the most often dived cenotes. The divecenter was hovever very accomodating and assured me that they would find something new for me to dive the next day. I was therefore both gratefull and happy when the diving was arranged so that we could dive the caverns Tajmahal and Chikin-HA

The Chikin-HA cenote was at an adventure site not far outside Playa del Carmen, here people could go and do snorkeling / biking / slide anlong a line and generally spend the day. None of this hovever interfered with the possibility for divers to get into the cenote.

Both divesites generally seemed to consist more of larger pices of rock, and have darker places than eg. Dos Ojos. But the light shows was also very amazing. In Chikin-HA we dived from one opening to an other, and in the second one the surface (since no-one snorkeled or entried the wather) was really amazing, it looked like ice flakes floating around. In addition there was a stone that looked like a triangel almost falling down.

The Tajmahal dive was done as a 8 around two openings the Tajmahal and the sugar bowl air dromes. We surfaced in the sugarbowl and enjoyed the beuaty of the lians drinking from the surface (not to mentioning the spiders, though not so beuatyfull).

On the way back we wathed the light like a lazer hiting the surface and breaking and I also saw small pieces of rainbow in the wather.

Crystal clear Cenote waterDivers in the CenoteCenotesCenotes

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March 18th 2008
Cozumel – 2 days of diving

Posted under Holidays & Mexico

I had teamed up with an other girl for a few days of diving on the island of Cozumel just of the coast from Playa del Carmen.

Cozumel is the one place I have come acros that has the largest amount of dive shops (perhaps Sharm el Sheik has the same amount); It seemed like every other shop in the island city was a dive shop, an every respectable hotel had their own dive-center (I was told 1500 dives per day was done from this 14×53 km island). We were booked to dive with Deep Blue, but it would have been easy to find a dive center, even without pre-booking. We also easily found accomondation for the night in a hotel downtown close to the dive center.

Cozumel has some deeper dive oppotunities compared to Playa Del Carmen, and we soon where on our way to Colombia to do our first dive. The divesite started of with big coralboulders with swim throughs etc. and the dive ended at the reef wall where we drifted along looking at the fauna. We saw a barracuda, turtles and a spotted eagle ray and decided when we came up that it had been a good dive. The second dive was at Paso del Cedral; the dive started at with a app. 40 m wide strip of sand in between the coral walls the strip seemed to continue to eternity (or at least as long as the eye could see). The current was quite powerfull, which meant you needed to put in quite a lot of effort to go and see the different points of interests the guide pointed out to you on the way. Again I think we was quite lucky, and the dive included crabs, the special fishXXX, small cleaner fish, small/medium/hudge morray eels, turtles and a small shark. When we came up (after a somewat extendet safety stop), everyone agreed that it had been really good. And to top it of we came acros a group of dolphins on our way back to the harbor… All there is to say that some days you apparently get to see it all…

The second day the surface was carmer than the first, so the plan was to go to the well known place of Punta Sur. Unfortunally the visibility was not very good which made it impossible for the captain of our bout and for our dive guide to find the right spot. In situations like this is it hard not to wish for either a marking of the divesites or the use of other means of identification (GPS, ekkolod etc.). In the end it was decided that we did an other dive, and we therefore dived Colombia once more. This time we went trough more small tunels before we began our swim along the wall. It was a nice dive, but it would be impossible for it to live up to the wonders of the previous day. The secon dive was done at Yucab, shallow compared to Colobia, but with a very beuatifull fauna, more fish that I could possibly descibe, and sufficient time to see a lot. We swam around and had time to explore the different boulders of coral, and I was really surprised when I realized, that we had been diving for 40 minutes. I have never seen so big fish (parrotfish, groupers etc) as I have here, also because they came quite close.

All in all 2 very nice days diving Cozumel. I would love to go back and do more diving in this spot. I would hovever like to bring my own buddy, or if that was not possible take great care identifying my buddy for the dive and talk over with the person, just exactly my expectations of a buddy where. I write these last lines because it seemed that some og the dives actually just dived around alone, and that is not the way I would like to dive.

In addition I think you must not be shy to ask for the type of dive breefing you are most comfortable with. Briefings seems to be very short – at least from the two guides we had the opportunity to dive with.

The dive centerAlice going outimage0041.jpg

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