Trip Report Revillagigedos on the Nautilus Explorer, May 24-June 1, 2019

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scubadada

Diver
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Location
Philadelphia and Boynton Beach
# of dives
1000 - 2499
From May 24 through June 1, 2019, I traveled on the Nautilus Explorer to the Revillagigedos.

RESERVATIONS: I made my reservations on the Explorer directly through the Nautilus website. It is very easy to check availability and to reserve your cabin. Flight reservations were made directly with American Airlines. Land transportation to Cabo San Lucas and back to the airport was with Terramar. They were recommended by Nautilus, reservations were made directly. I stayed at the Tesoro Hotel and did some diving with See Creatures prior to the liveaboard. I posted a separate, short review describing the hotel and dive operator. I reserved the hotel and diving directly.

TRAVEL: Air travel from Philadelphia to Los Cabos was quick and simple, a single stop in Phoenix. My scuba gear arrived with me in Mexico. Passage through immigration and customs was quick and efficient. I had modest camera gear in my carryon bag, there were no questions and I exited uneventfully. Transportation by Terramar from Los Cabos International Airport to Cabo San Lucas, and back at the end of the trip, was flawless. It is about a 45 minute ride from the airport to Cabo San Lucas, passing through San Jose del Cabo on the way.

BOAT AND CREW:
The Explorer was built in Canada and was launched in 2000. It is said to be the first fully SOLAS certified dive ship. There are up to 25 passengers, our trip had 23. It was a reasonably diverse group, 9 from the US, 8 from the Philippines, 2 from Japan, and 1 each from Canada, England, Australia, and New Zealand. There are 9 cabins below deck, the remaining 4 cabins are on the upper deck, along with a hot tub, wet suit storage, and the bridge. The main deck includes the dive area, a nice salon, the galley and dining area. There is a modest sized sun deck on the uppermost level. I chose one of the two single cabins below deck, located most forward (see more below regarding exits). My room was very comfortable, best bed I’ve had on a liveaboard, good air conditioning, and an adequate shower. I took most of my showers on the dive deck. The Explorer has satellite Wi-Fi. For $100, I had adequate internet access most all of the time. It was easily good enough for email and web browsing.

The safety briefing was very complete. Alarms, emergency lighting and all exits were pointed out. The main exit from the lower level was toward the stern, up a wide stairway, onto the dive deck, outside of the salon. The emergency exit was next to my room, up a ladder, through a hatch, into the dining room. After the briefing, with permission, I tried out the emergency exit and found the climb and hatch to work well. Ahead of time, I decided to use the main exit, unless it was unavailable to me. There was a full practice evacuation drill with gathering of everyone at the muster station on the dive deck and donning of PFDs. Several guests had to redo their PFD, until they had it right. One day, during the trip, the crew held a timed fire drill, without guest participation, in which they put on full firefighting dress and deployed hoses and other gear. I was told they perform the drill on each trip. Charging was only allowed in the cabins when you were present. I did not fully appreciate all of the safety measures until several months later.

The dive deck was relatively spacious and well organized. There was a single tank at each station with under seat storage in a crate. The standard tanks were AL80s and were refilled in place. I did not see anyone diving a larger tank. Fills were good, averaging 3050 psi (2975-3150). Nitrox ran 31-2% all week, nearly all, 32%. There was a large, metal camera table with many built in electrical outlets. The RHIBs were boarded from the lower dive deck. There were two hot water showers on this lower deck.

The crew were all excellent, hardworking, considerate and communicative. We had four very good divemasters/guides. Victor and Pablo were from Mexico, Mirko was from Italy, and Jesse was from Switzerland. The four rotated daily between the three dive groups. Everyone has their own style, Victor was my personal favorite.

All meals were served buffet style in the dining room. The food was not the best I’ve had on a liveaboard, but was very good, with plenty of selections. There were snacks available at all times. Alcoholic beverages were an additional charge from the bar but the prices were reasonable and they often offered a special. They had the best beer selection of any liveaboard I have been on.

DIVING: Fantastic! Galapagos, Silvertip, Silky, Blacktip, Scalloped Hammerhead, and White-Tipped Reef Sharks. Mantas, mantas, mantas. Dolphins, Longtail Stingrays, Panamic Green Morays and many gorgeous fish, especially for a diver, like me, who spends most of his time in Florida and the Caribbean. These included large schools of jacks and trevally, a few tuna, Redtail Triggerfish, Moorish Idols, King Angels, Barberfish, Forceps Fish, Guineafowl Puffers, Spotfin Burrfish, Bicolor Parrotfish, Clarion Angelfish, Balloonfish…many others.

We dived in three groups that stayed the same all week. All the divers from the Philippines dived together. The other two groups were divided up roughly by diving experience and any buddy preferences. The four guides rotated between the 3 groups on a daily basis, exposing you to all of the guides. The groups launched first, second, or third on a rotating basis also. The launches were about 10 minutes apart and often had slightly different drops and/or routes. It was relatively unusual to run into another group while diving.

Dives were from a back roll off the RHIB with a prompt descent. Some of the large cameras were handed down. We made our dives as a loose group and ascended together for boarding. I did not dive with a buddy. One removed weights, BC and then, fins, before climbing the ladder. The water temperature varied from 72-74 degrees, mostly 73. I dived a full 7 mm wetsuit and a 5/3 mm hooded vest. I was very comfortable on all the dives. Some divers had less exposure protection and ended up very cold at times. Visibility was between about 40-100 feet, mostly something like 60-80 feet. My maximum depths were an average of 93 feet (67-108 feet) with average depth of 59 feet (46-68 feet). There was significant current and/or surge on some of the dives. Due to the route, there was some diving against the current at times. Dive times averaged 51 minutes (40-59 minutes). Surface intervals during daily repetitive dives averaged 2 hours (1:09-2:36).

The trip is advertised as 9 days, keep in mind that the first evening and second day as well as the evening of the 7th day and the 8th day are spent traveling the 240 miles between Cabo San Lucas and San Benedicto. You depart on the morning of the 9th day. We did 19 dives over 5 days:

Dive day 1: San Benedicto, 1 dive at Fondeadero and 3 dives at the Cañón

Dive day 2: Socorro, 3 dives at Cabo Pierce and 1 dive at the West Wall Boulder Field

Dive day 3: Socorro, Mexican Navy inspection, 1 dive at Old Man’s Rock, 2 dives at Punta Tosca

Dive day 4: Roca Partida, 4 dives at Roca Partida

Dive day 5: San Benedicto, 4 dives at the Boiler

Though all of the dives were enjoyable, I had my favorites. The 3 dives at the Cañón had great shark action with Galapagos, Silvertip, Hammerhead, and White-Tipped Reef Sharks as well as several Giant Mantas. Roca Partida had huge schools of jacks and trevally, some tuna, many Galapagos Sharks, and large groups of White-Tipped Reef Sharks resting on ledges. The Boiler was manta heaven, more than you could count, often 2 or 3 doing acrobatics together. This is where we encountered most of the dolphins also.

So, this was one of my favorite dive trips, rivaling the fantastic trip I had to Galapagos. The boat, the crew, the diving, all superlative. I don’t repeat many of my dive trips, I’m already scheming on how to get back to the Revillagigedos.

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Nice write up. We did both Guadalupe and Revillagigedos ( Socorro ) on the Explorer, and can't say enough good things about the ship and crew.
 
Wow! Great stuff; sounds like the viz. was a good deal better than what I saw in the Galapagos, and for wide angle, big animal (and lots of animal) action, that would be a very nice thing (and your photos reflect that).

On most of the dives, what did you spend most of the dive doing? In the Galapagos, it was a mix of hanging onto boulders or finning along over rock/boulder wall/bottom. How does Socorros diving compare in terms of what you do underwater?

The Explorer has satellite Wi-Fi. For $100, I had adequate internet access most all of the time. It was easily good enough for email and web browsing.

Seems like Internet access is slowly breaking into the live-aboard experience. Valuable for a lot of people.
 
Hi Richard,

The visibility in the Revillagigedos was better for me than it was in Galapagos Galapagos Aggressor III April 26-May 3, 2018 The trip to Revillagigedos and the trip to Galapagos are my two favorite trips. Rather than one being better than the other, they were very complementary. Revillagigedos easily had more close up, action packed time with sharks and mantas. Galapagos easily has the most diversity of any place I've been. Cocos was also a very good trip, more like Galapagos, but without the tremendous diversity Cocos, March 27-April 5, 2017 In June, I go to Malpelo, and then will be able to compare the four.

There was considerably more swimming and less holding on to rocks and boulders in Revillagigedos than in Galapagos. The topography was often quite similar, but a bit more varied with points and plateaus with rises and pinnacles. The current and surge was very similar, sometimes quite brisk.

The Nautilus Explorer was the first boat I've been on with satellite Wi-Fi. Previously, I've always been at the mercy of a cell connection. It is very nice being able to let the family know you are alive and well. My wife and I recently took a cruise to Antarctica for our 40th wedding anniversary, we had satellite Wi-Fi and had an acceptable connection most of the time. Sometime soon, satellite Wi-Fi will become the standard for liveaboards.

I would imagine that Revillagigedos is on you wish list, I think you would really enjoy it.

Very best and good diving,

Craig
 
I hope that day never comes!

It's nice to disconnect sometimes, but some people need to stay in touch with family, and I've seen posts by people for whom being unreachable for a business/job back home for a week isn't workable. My wife likes to know when I'm done diving for the day, and safe.

On my last live-aboard trip, we had enough data access to use WhatsApp, my iPhone's Apple Messenger app, and for my phone to get notifications - no web browsing or e-mails. One notification tipped me off there'd be a large out-of-state fraudulent charge on my credit card. I couldn't access my account via my phone's app., but I could text my wife, explain the situation that way and have her call the credit card company and have the card deactivated.

With all the diving and downloading photos and video, the live-aboard schedule doesn't lend itself to everyone staring at their phones all day.
 
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