Belize City, Beliz
Nancy Zupancic
A Scuba Diving Excursion
Belize has a lot of reefs along the
coast. It makes up part of the second largest barrier reef in the world,
after the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Therefore when the ship is at
anchor, you can barely see Belize. Huge speed boat type tenders whisk
you in and it still takes about 20 minutes.
These factors made the decision to choose the ship’s excursion easier.
Again we took the certified scuba excursion. They pick you up right at
the ship and you are then on your way to the dive shop. We also knew the
ship used Huge Parkey’s Belize Dive Connection and we really enjoyed it.
The excursion was to the Turneffe Atoll which was an hour boat ride from
the ship. The weather wasn’t completely cooperating as a cold front came
into Miami the day we left and seemed to follow us for the entire
cruise. If the weather was better the boat ride to the Atolls would have
been glorious, but for us it was windy but fun!
Just as the day before we had two boats (pro 48s), they were big, fast
and very comfortable. It was the kind of dive day I love having lots of
crew looking after you, a beautiful, comfortable boat with lots of space
for everyone and everyone’s stuff. They even put on your fin’s for you
when you approached the platform with your tank on…I loved that!
On our boat there was about 15 divers plus the crew so we went out with
three groups of six. Our dive leader ‘Phil’ was excellent and very
excited about showing us good stuff.
The first dive site was called Jojo’s split named after a favorite spot
of Hugh’s son Jojo. This was a big wall drop we went 75 feet for 45
minutes. At the end of the dive there were three huge black grouper
feeding in the currents.
They let us stay down as long as our air allowed and we didn’t all
ascend when the first person ran low, they went back to the boat alone.
However, we did have one who sucked up their air really fast (there’s
always one) it seemed just a few minutes into the dive he was already at
1500 psi. Phil was a little pissed because he wanted to take us further
down to this coral formation and we had to stay closer to the boat then
expected, but this was safer and was not the fault of the dive op. I am
commenting on this because I know there are a lot of questions regarding
‘does the whole group have to ascend when the first person runs out of
air’ and Hugh Parkey’s dive op DMs would swing around to the boat when
someone was running low but the others still continued.
The second dive was named after a woman who was the wife of a resort
owner her name was Lee Ellen. They told us she returned from a trip
‘enhanced’. The dive site was called ‘LeeEllen’s melons’ this was
because there were numerous round barrel sponges. OK guys – very funny!
This dive was 60 feet for 45 minutes. We saw a southern stingray in the
sand. This dive was also along a beautiful wall drop.
Hugh Parkey's Belize Dive Connection
PO Box 1818
Belize City, Belize, Central America
Tel: 501-223-4526 Toll Free: (888) 223-5403 -Fax: 501-227-8808
E-mail: hugh@belizediving.com
After our great dives and a nice (but windy) ride back to the ship, we
had just enough time to at least take the tender in and back. We dumped
off our gear and headed for the tenders. It was great, we were the only
passengers going into town. Belize was the gem of the trip. I loved it
so much I would seriously consider living there. The people were warm
and friendly and they all seemed to say ‘comeback to Belize and stay for
a longer vacation’. This seemed to be their national slogan, but it was
very welcoming. We bought some t-shirts and the requisite trinkets right
there at the small market at the pier. Here we bought some excellent
coffee. Really dark arabica beans, it was excellent! Belize City looked
like a nice size and I thought the pier and bay area was very pretty
with a lot more tourist infrastructure than I was expecting. Of course
the outer islands, cays & reefs are the real jewels of Belize. The other
ships in port with us were the Carnival Legend, Splendour Of The Seas &
NCL Sea.