Sometimes, things that happen are just "so Roatan", and if you've ever been here you know what I'm talking about.
I was walking to meet my friend for ice cream one evening when I passed West End Divers, and co-owner Gary (more commonly known as Bugs around these parts) stopped me in the street.
"Have you been drinking?" was the first thing out of his mouth.
I wondered if my (100% sober) gait was deceiving people, and responded with a, "no I haven't, thank you very much!"
"We're doing a blackwater dive in 5 minutes. Wanna come?"
How do you say no to an offer like that? I had heard rave reviews from the first few trial runs of the dive, and I was seriously intrigued. Of course, I called my ice cream date and said sorry, can't go, and ran to my house to change into a swimsuit and grab my mask. I was back at the dive shop in 5 minutes flat, out of breath and a little anxious about what I had just gotten myself into.
Blackwater dives are very different from the traditional night diving on Roatan. Instead of heading out at sunset, jumping off the boat and exploring the reef, you leave much later (at 7pm) and the boat goes 1-2 miles OFF the reef, out into the blue - which is out into the black at night. West End Divers has developed a unique and safe tethering system, so that the divers are attached to the boat via an individual 40ft anchor line and personal tether at all times during the dive. Your 10ft tether rope can swing 360 degrees around your anchor line, but you can't pass 50ft down and the divers spend the dive neutrally buoyant between 20-40ft.
What's the point of a blackwater dive? Well, it's mostly for the insane little creatures you can see that far off the reef! At night, many deepwater marine creatures come up to feed on the phytoplankton that lives near the surface. Lots of little weird gelatinous/jellyfish-type things, tiny squid and fish, larval eels, and generally just bizarre things that we don't see during a night dive on the reef. No big guys (mantas, sharks, etc.) have been spotted yet, but the emphasis is on the yet - I am confident that the more blackwater dives West End Divers does, the more divers will see! The bioluminescence in the water is also much, much more visible during the lights-out part of the dive than it is during a reef night dive, just due to less light pollution (when we night dive on the reef, the lights from resorts, etc. on shore affects us underwater because it's so close).
It's definitely a weird and disorienting feeling the first few minutes. Not having the reef around you for any reference was a new thing for me, and I remember thinking, "wow, I'm really breathing hard - I must be nervous!" and checking my dive computer constantly because I had no idea what depth I was at. There was a little bit of current, so I just got myself neutrally buoyant and let the tether line hold me in one spot so there wasn't any resistance and I didn't have to kick. You can see all the other divers around you because everyone has lights, and you can see what they're seeing in their beams which is kind of cool if they've spotted something. I was able to reach my buddy by kicking over to her and scare her by grabbing her leg (we had an emergency hand holding plan in place in case we got scared, but we didn't end up having to use it - haha). With the current, my buddy and I were in front of the other three who all had cameras, so if we noticed flashes going off behind us we just turned around to see what they were looking at. I spent a lot of time just resting with my beam pointed out into the dark, seeing what creatures were whizzing by me. I squealed with excitement when I spotted a tiny squid, and my buddy and I caught a few things that were cool but we had no clue what they were. As dive pros with thousands of dives on Roatan's reef, it's a lot of fun for us to see new things.
me and lanita on our lines - by mickey charteris
A massive thank you to Shawn Jackson, Mickey Charteris and Courtney Blankenship for letting me use your photos for this post. Thanks to Bugs for catching me on the street with the best invite ever, and to the shop for loaning me gear. Also thank you to Lanita, my favorite dive buddy of all time who didn't question me when I called and said "get your ass down here in five minutes dude we're going blackwater diving" - always good to check off another adventure with you my friend!Disclosure: West End Divers generously hosted me for this dive but it was not in exchange for a review. I just happened to be walking by the shop after people canceled last-minute so I was offered the spot. Right place, right time. You guys know no matter who is taking care of the bill that I'll always give you my honest opinion!
Guys, make sure to follow me on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter ... there's lots of extras posted there that don't make it onto the blog. I also have Google+ if anyone even uses that? And I'm on Bloglovin', so you can follow me there too! Plus it makes me try to post more than once a month. So there's that.