Archive for the ‘Dive & Adventure Travel’ Category

Bimini Bound

Sunday, March 27th, 2011

IWI is working very hard to open it’s first Photo Pro Center. We are joining Bimini Undersea Adventures and Wild Dolphin Adventures Bimini on the island of; you guessed it, Bimini, Bahamas.

We will have our works for sale, retail products, rentals, instruction, safaris above and below the water, workshops, invited pro guests and events. We will also be offering photo packages for guests to purchase DVD’s with their experinces recorded and edited.

Keep a sharp eye for updates coming soon on our progress!

Dominica, Upon Arrival…

Friday, October 31st, 2008

The first sight of Dominica comes out a little buzz buzz plane window…she doesn’t fit in the frame, not even close.  Most of the Caribbean islands you fly over or land on are small enough to take a whole island picture of in one frame. Dominica is 29 miles long by 16 miles wide. She has many peaks that rise above 3000 ft. One of the first things you notice is she is green from the ocean to the clouds and above.

As you drive the busy thoroughfare to your hotel, cottage or jungle lodge it would be easy to miss some hidden splendors. You might focus on the shacks, tin huts, one room wood homes. This is a place of simple living and few luxuries by western eyes. Do not allow yourself to judge or get caught up in this sad stereotype. Depending on which small airport you arrive by, your first impression will vary. The main landing strip is far from the city, but gives you a cool, moist, fresh air introduction in a cross island tour of Dominica’s tropical rainforest’s. This is a 90 min ride which will likely give you time to decompress and ready yourself for the sensory shindig you are about to experience. Should you come by the Canefield Airstrip, then you are minutes away from Roseau the capital, you are surrounded by the industrial center all the way to a crowded french colonial capital. No matter where you stay, where you come into, this is an island of exploration, get out and see for yourself! Now…I suggest renting a car, there are hundreds of taxi vans it seems and fare is just a dollar or so, but they are crowded and work on an express system usually. A rental is best, but be sure to spend a few more bucks and get a small SUV. The pot holes can be epic in size and frequency. Just a note though, Driving on the let side of the road in a right side car where everything is swapped inside and out takes allot of mental awareness.

Now get checked in quick…do not eat at the hotel unless you are seconds from passing out. Get out and find the most conspicuous, simple, plywood shack on the roadside anywhere. You will recognize them by a beer banner, wall of rum bottles, and a pastry box with bright lamp on the counter. This is your culinary surprise of a lifetime. Usually there is no menu, it’s what they have that day, like going to grandmas house. Have the local fare, some fish or goat stew, trust me it will amaze the most picky palate, I know that’s me. If you are fortunate you will be strolling down the roads of town and happen by an old lady, colorfully dressed on the sidewalk. Here she is manning a simple little BBQ grill…this is your diamond in the rough moment, do not let it pass. Peek at the protein, usually chicken or ribs, you want that. There is no carnival, fair, or picnic snack that even compares to this sweet tropical tender grilled goodness. Usually you have the most choices on Friday nights. There are plenty of restaurants, again ask about local food, the kind momma makes for her hard working family and shares with the street. PS..Bakes are fried biscuits that make KFC biscuits unappealing. On that note there are only two western fast food chains, KFC and Subway. The locals love KFC to the tune of waiting in lines of bodies fifty strong, or car lines half the city long. You however are forbidden to be so lazy, and unexplorative as to even consider this…ever!

Culinary surprises…At breakfast you will likely be given a piece of fruit unsolicited, eat it! It’s good for you. You will also be offered juice, Dominica is exploding with fruits and veggies, the juice is of whatever is in fruit at the time. It was just squeezed and nothing was added, drink it! It’s good for you. Not to mention there are plenty of delicacies that will require the counter balance of healthy to the fried demons we enjoy. Be sure to ask what comes on your sandwich though, they love veggies and cucumber and tomato with eggs and bacon are the norm. Now, for a beverage at any meal, just one good choice…Rum Punch, it differs at every location, and is the family recipe. I don’t like Rum, but I love these rocket fuel concoctions. You could have the local beer, Kubuli, a light easy lager.

Some direct suggestions… Shacks first!, Sidewalk BBQ ! Then “Guayave” upstairs buffet, “Chef”, “Papillote”, “River Rock Cafe” at Trafalgar Falls. Don’t miss these on the around island travels too…”The Shacks” at Ross University just before Portsmouth, and “Iguanas” in Portsmouth. A must break from the scenic drive is Jungle Bay Resort Restaurant on the South West coast. That should get you started.

Ok, now that your salivating..a couple notes. When planning for Dominica…7 days is not enough and 10 will give you just enough to leave you begging for more. Not to mention in 10 days you will likely find yourself shopping for property! May I recommend the last week of October as your first choice to travel here. This is the week of Creole Fest, Reunion, and ends with the Independence Day Celebrations. This two weeks starting the last weekend of October every year is for locals to rejoice in their heritage, have family come back from afar, and celebrate their achievements as a free people. Dominicans are proudest to share this time and show visitors their island home up close and personal. Bring hiking shoes and Camel Backs.  Dive not more than half the time, its great, you will see amazing things, but that is half of the splendor.

I will conclude this installment, please read on as I categorize Dominica’s many appealing traits in the many articles to come.

Get out there!

Best Wishes

Troy

Statia

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

St. Eustatius or Statia as we island people know it, is one of the six or so neighbors my bedroom window looks out on. We took a little trip over mid June too see what all the chatter was about from the many recent divers who had been there or were going there in addition to their Saba visit. Thanks Lynn for the hook up, and Glenn & Michelle for the great hospitality…
At first the island seems like a flatter Saba, if we here lived at harbor level. We arrived at The Old Gin House Hotel to find a very New Orleans like building and gardens. Very well appointed with nice staff and great food. They have an ocean front restaurant and bar, something Saba does not. The other very noticeable element is a long stretching beach.
Sidebar here; The island history is amazing, long and storied…this is an untapped treasure that shows every resemblance to what she was just a short time ago. Go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sint_Eustatius for the complete story.
After checking in with Golden Rock Dive Center at the hotel, and getting the quick picture of where and when for the next days dives and food right now, we scurry to the local hamburger joint; also the ice cream shop. Upon arriving, it’s Tuesday at 3pm by the way, we find a patio filled with screaming Dutch people in full regalia watching the Euro Soccer tournament. The beer could not be delivered fast enough for these people. Priorities are realigned. They win! Hoopla!
So diving is a bit like Saba…further from shore…with some nice twists.
Century Slave Beads, but we didn’t find any ourselves, but we weren’t, looking either. Seconds from submersion the excitement began. Flying play peek-a-boo endlessly, Octopus poking out of sand holes, The lava flows are the similar with the same life…however when we encounter certain fish like barracuda, we encounter dozens at a time. A must dive is the Hangover reef, a low flat shelf formation running nearly a mile from shore. Statia has two things that Saba does not…Wrecks and an amazing Muck dive. We dove the Charlie Brown, a very long ship on her side. It is newer, but well attended by local life. I did see the largest school of Horse Eyed Jacks I have ever seen here, hundreds. As for the Muck dive, Blue Bead Hole is famous for 17th century slave beads, but we found none, and we we not looking either. The second we submerge it’s Flying Gurnards, Pike blennies of every variety, Mantis shrimp abound and Yellowhead Jawfish and Sailfin Blennies are boring they are so common here…and…a first for everyone on the dive, including the dive staff, owners, and everyone we’ve told so far….a Bandtail Searobin; see Statia Gallery. We begged for the site everyday after…we are going back just to dive this site again and again…it is a Macro photogs Utopia. There was a confirmed and video recorded encounter with a Manta Ray the second day in…we found out exactly where and our crew was determined to make the best attempt they could to find it. They set up a two way drift dive. A first for me, something like a ” You go ’round back” cops style endeavor. Three of us would get dropped at Off The Wall, drift thru Mushroom Garden and head onto The Humps. Joel would move the boat to The Humps and begin diving towards us, hoping we would encounter the Devil Fish in between us. The Vis was crap, but that was good, it was a massive plankton bloom, we scoured it till the air ran out and did not have the fortune to see it. Joels girlfriend just two weeks prior was doing her first certification dive, and guess what, MANTA! Likely the same one hanging about enjoying the massive food supply flowing past. Beginners luck huh? They have one nice hike, something Saba is superior on, yet this is very unique too. The Quill is a true volcano with crater and everything. So we trekked for about three so hours and acheived the rim, and explored the crater. The only true rain forest on Statia is inside the crater. It was like a scene from Jurassic Park, WOW. I perched atop a rock pile and shot Anoles for nearly an hour. See Statia Gallery.

As for the rest of the island, as on Saba, Friday night is Karaoke and the bar crawl. So is the lack of any other social stimulation otherwise. If you are a serious diver, or even more a serious photographer, leave your watch and high expectations at home and try Statia, and Saba too.