HONDURAS
UTILA - THE CHEAPEST DIVING IN THE WORLD (Nov 2006)
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Most backpackers traveling in Honduras visit the beautiful Bay Islands.
Utila is one of them, known as the cheapest place to learn to
dive. It´s a 1 hour boat ride from the town of La
Ceiba.
It was late afternoon, the sun was low bringing out the
colors of
the sky and the Carribean Sea. I was sitting at the bow of
the
speeding boat, watching the island grow bigger and bigger on the
horizon. I was ready for another adventure.
Diving is the opposite of mountaineering, but I like outdoor sports and
I had to try it. The next day after arrival I started PADI
Open
Water diving course. It involved watching videos and reading
a
book to start with. Later, doing 2 confined water and 4 open
water dives, filled with tasks to practice new skills. At the
end, an exam, 50 questions, 1 mistake. Easy.
Then I realized my diving was over and I decided I wanted more.
The next step was the Advanced water course. It
promised
some great diving, like night or wreck diving.
I signed up and the same evening we set off for a night dive.
It
wasn´t really dark on the way after the full Moon appeared
above
horizon. We prepared all equipment and, one by one, entered
the
black liquid. Sinking underwater in the dark was a little
scary
and very exciting experience. After a few meters we switched
on
our flashlights and soon reached the bottom at 20m.
One great thing about night diving are the colors. Water
absorbs
red very quickly, so at depth everything looks blue and dark.
But
with artificial light suddenly the reef exploded with vivid red.
It was stunning. We entered channels, narrow
canyons and a
cave, all formed by beautiful corals. It looks like rocks in
the
mountains, but water makes a lot of difference. It allows to
float effortlessly, almost as condors suspended next to big mountain
faces in the Andes. The feeling was fantastic.
It was my best dive until we went to the north side of the island.
The reef there is equally beautiful, but is home to much more
fish then the south side. As part of the course, we spend 30
min
identifying sea life. I didn´t see
anything new, but I
started to pay attention to what it is that I see. It made me
realize how much variety is out there. Before I only
distinguished between 2 types of fish: big and small or colorful or
not. I wasn´t even sure what is dangerous and what
isn´t. However, knowing that Black Urchin can sting
didin´t stop me putting my hand in the wrong place when we
were
wreck diving. I felt sharp pain in my thumb and I realized my
mistake. Another valuable lesson. Look where you
put your
hands!
Anyway, it was an excellent dive. The Haliburton wreck sits
at
30m making it my deepest dive. It was sunk in 1998 on
purpose, to
create a wreck dive and an ecosystem to complete Utila´s
diverse
underwater world. It takes some skill to dive a wreck, as I
learned bumping my tank entering through small doors and windows.
It only made me want to practice more.
The next day we finally went to dive in the Black Hills, according to
many people the best site in Utila. It´s an
underwater
mountain, where corals and countless fish found it´s home.
One of the highlights for me was swimming amongst hundreds of
3
inch long, vivid blue fish. They were not afraid of divers.
When I found myself in their path, they swam past me just in
front of my eyes, as if I wasn´t there. It feels
like being
in a huge aquarium, where some of the most amazing colors and shapes
the nature has to offer are on display. Sadly, it
isn´t a
cheap sport and I had to move on.
It took me a whole day to get to Guatemalan border. Roads are
not
bad in Honduras, but most buses would go straight to a museum in
Europe. When leaving a town they stop in various places where
the
guy why sells tickets gets out. His job is also to fill the
bus
with passengers. He almost pushes his victims into the bus,
then
runs along the road looking for more people waiting for transport.
So when I asked if the bus was going to Agua Caliente, he say
"yes", and then it turned out it was going in the right direction, but
I had to change.
Later, in places where we stopped, sometimes more than 10 people
entered the bus, selling anything from food to pens. Some as
young as 8, others as old as 70. I appreciate the fact that
they
try to earn a living honestly, even if they are too pushy sometimes.
After crossing the border, I found myself back in Guatemala.
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