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- Newsgroups: rec.scuba
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!hexnut!ellene
- From: ellene@microsoft.com (Ellen Mitsue Eades)
- Subject: Re: Any infomation from Cancun and Cozumel
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.194151.4867@microsoft.com>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 19:41:51 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Corp.
- References: <pltjha.1.0@vtt.fi> <lg82ffINN7kv@utkcs2.cs.utk.edu>
- Lines: 99
-
- In article <lg82ffINN7kv@utkcs2.cs.utk.edu> clinard@cs.utk.edu (Michelle Clinard) writes:
- >In article <pltjha.1.0@vtt.fi> pltjha@vtt.fi (Juha Hakulinen) writes:
- >>I need information from Cancun and Conzumel at december. All comments are
- >>wellcome.
- >Me too! Me too! We're going down the week after Christmas, staying
- >at the Fiesta Inn, on Cozumel.
-
- What a coincidence. I just got back from Cozumel and stayed at the
- Fiesta Inn, and I just subscribed to this group for the first time.
-
- About me & my opinions: I'm a new diver, got less than 20 hours of
- diving under my belt, about half & half Puget Sound and tropics. I'm
- also a cold wimp, but oddly enough, I seem to do OK in the Sound with
- a wetsuit, though my SO uses a drysuit. And, of course, this has
- nothing to do with Microsoft.
-
- General info/preparedness stuff: Bring *lots* of sunscreen. Read a
- good book on diving in Cozumel (the series by Pisces Press, available
- in most bookstores, has a volume on Cozumel) so you get a feel for
- what areas you want to dive. Most of the dives are drift/wall dives,
- so be prepared for fast current and WATCH YOUR DEPTH GAUGE.
-
- Fiesta Inn: It's an average-to-good place. The all-you-can-eat breakfast
- is too expensive, though -- take a quick hop into town and grab something
- downtown. The inn is a rather long (20 min.) walk from town, but you can
- do it, or there are always taxis running along the main street that will
- take you for a few hundred pesos. (Also, the currency is changing over
- in January and they're chopping a few zeroes off the rates, so be aware
- of this if you're going after December). Best thing about the inn is
- that you can walk across the street to a small man-made beach and a
- dock with a ladder down into the ocean. Beware of ironshore, the hard
- limestone that makes up most of Cozumel; wear boots always, and gloves
- if you have them. Oh yes, one more thing: bring proof of your hotel
- reservation. When we showed up the desk guy told us we didn't have a
- reservation, but he changed his mind and found us one when we showed
- him the travel agent's confirmation sheet. (I hear this is a common
- problem in Mexico).
-
- Spend some time snorkeling. We walked across the street and into the
- water and spent a *wonderful* afternoon exploring something like a
- 100-foot stretch of reef; it was so varied and interesting that I never
- got bored with it. Within about 50 feet of shore, in 25 feet depths,
- were every kind of fish I saw on the scuba dives except the groupers,
- and all kinds of coral formations and interesting rock caves. Be
- careful, though, and don't touch anything you can't identify; it's
- fire coral area.
-
- Food: Cozumel has great food. We had some memorable dinners at Pepe's
- Grill and Santiago's Grill. Get one of the "Mexico on $40/day" books
- or its clones and look for good places. Also, strike up conversations
- with people. We were headed for Morgan's one night (a well-known
- Cozumel restaurant) when our cabby informed us that Pepe's was just
- as good and much less crowded, so we let him take us to Pepe's instead
- (He said he used to work there). Indeed, it was excellent; we had
- lobster that was incredible and were treated to live mariachi bands
- for half the night. I wouldn't bother with places like Carlos'n'Charlie's,
- but that's just because I don't go to Mexico in order to feel like I'm
- at Cheers; your mileage may vary.
-
- Diving: We went through Tom Hartegan's Dive Paradise, located behind the
- Hotel Barracuda about 10 minutes walk away from the Fiesta Inn. They
- have slow and fast boats, morning and (if you have 3 or more people)
- afternoon dives, and you can tell them where you want to go or let them
- pick. We did Tormentos Reef, Paraiso Reef, Chankanaab, and Santa Rosa
- Reef. Except for Chankanaab they were all drift dives, the first three
- around 55-60 feet and on the last dive I went down to 84 feet. The
- sea life was very abundant and beautiful: millions of grunts, several
- morays, lobsters, crabs, tame groupers looking for handouts, starfish,
- zillions of angelfish of various kinds, clowns, nudibranchs, damselfish.
- The guides were pretty good and obviously knew where the interesting
- things were, and found lots of stuff for us to look at. I recommend
- the fast boats, as you waste less time and get more diving in.
-
- We also did a night dive, which was both great and disappointing: great
- for the different animals we saw, such as octopi and rays, and
- disappointing because we were on a cattle-car boat of about 16
- divers in 2 groups, several of whom were complete yahoos. I really
- got angry at one guy who kept shoving in front to see things, kicking
- up sand, and then *poking* the animals with his light; I wanted to
- turn off his tank. Beware of yahoos. My advice is to get a group
- of 3-4 people you like and trust to dive with, and get a private
- dive so you don't have to deal with crowds of rude people.
-
- In December the water will be chilly enough to call for shorty suits
- or skins. I got quite chilled on the deep dive and got a shorty for
- the night dive (this was in October, and the water gets colder in
- winter). Also, if you are doing multiple dives, the surface intervals
- can get very cold; bring a windbreaker for the boat.
-
- One thing I didn't do that I wish I had had time for: visit the
- ruins of San Gervasio on the island. We continued on to Chichen
- Itza, though, so I had all the ruins my heart would desire a
- few days later. GREAT trip.
-
- Enjoy yourself,
-
- Ellen Eades
- --
- Ellen Eades Microsoft Corporation
- "Just call me F.G.M. I hate excess verbiage." _Twice Upon a Time_
-