MaresMan1
Contributor
Just returned from a vacation in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Two weeks of great weather and water. Stayed at Young Island Resort. A little on the expensive side, but a beautiful resort with great people and services.
If you stay there be sure to ask for the mosquito nets for your bed and bring plenty of repellent. The resort is very lush and has no air conditioning, phones or TV, so nature abounds. However the resort and views are magnificent.
Diving with Dive St. Vincent was a joy. Bill Tewes has a great team of instructors/guides that make diving a pleasure. While St. Vincent is known as the critter capital of the Caribbean, it does have it share of bigger stuff.
The reefs are under good care by the team and in great shape. Water is warm with no or mild currents and visibility is 80+ feet. The team is very knowledgeable and very good at finding hidden critters.
The dive sites that stood out to me were Orca II, Hans reef, Turtle Bay, Steps, Coral Castle, and Dark Head. On these dives I saw the largest sea horses that I have ever seen.
Eagle rays, Great Grey angel fish, Scorpion fish, Peacock flounder of various sizes, schools of Blue tang and orange chromis, nudibranchs, spiny lobster, a few barracuda, flying gunards, spotted sea snakes and loads of eels in all sizes and colors.
The reefs and walls are beautiful with a kaleidoscope of color and life, with loads of tube, bowl and barrel sponges. There were rope sponges, staghorn coral, sea whips and a great deal more.
This is definitely a place to do relaxing dives and enjoy the beauty of the seas. As soon as I get the picture back, I will post them here. Just hope they come out well.
Dive Smart; Dive Safe
Enjoy the ride
:mean:
If you stay there be sure to ask for the mosquito nets for your bed and bring plenty of repellent. The resort is very lush and has no air conditioning, phones or TV, so nature abounds. However the resort and views are magnificent.
Diving with Dive St. Vincent was a joy. Bill Tewes has a great team of instructors/guides that make diving a pleasure. While St. Vincent is known as the critter capital of the Caribbean, it does have it share of bigger stuff.
The reefs are under good care by the team and in great shape. Water is warm with no or mild currents and visibility is 80+ feet. The team is very knowledgeable and very good at finding hidden critters.
The dive sites that stood out to me were Orca II, Hans reef, Turtle Bay, Steps, Coral Castle, and Dark Head. On these dives I saw the largest sea horses that I have ever seen.
Eagle rays, Great Grey angel fish, Scorpion fish, Peacock flounder of various sizes, schools of Blue tang and orange chromis, nudibranchs, spiny lobster, a few barracuda, flying gunards, spotted sea snakes and loads of eels in all sizes and colors.
The reefs and walls are beautiful with a kaleidoscope of color and life, with loads of tube, bowl and barrel sponges. There were rope sponges, staghorn coral, sea whips and a great deal more.
This is definitely a place to do relaxing dives and enjoy the beauty of the seas. As soon as I get the picture back, I will post them here. Just hope they come out well.
Dive Smart; Dive Safe
Enjoy the ride
:mean: