The M/V Wind Dancer's itinerary takes guests from Grenada up to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. During the one week voyage guests visit Bequia and the Tobago Cays which is known for some of the best diving in the region. REEF (reef.org) recently completed a field study in St. Vincent and
reported the story below in their Reef-Brief newsletter. Even though the
diving was not conducted from Wind Dancer, we the quality of their sightings
and counts were important enough to share. This area is the "undiscovered"
Caribbean that many people are seeking to find.
"Reef-Brief: St. Vincent Field Survey Breaks One-Week Species Record!"
By Lad Akins, Special Projects Coordinator, REEF (The Reef Environmental and Education Foundation) reef.org
To those who are in the know, St Vincent is considered the critter capital
of the Caribbean. To those who watch fish, it is known that the rare is
commonplace and that the fishwatching is unlike any other location in the
Caribbean. REEF's data from the June Field Survey supports those claims.
With a team of 13 divers, the REEF group recorded an astounding 243 species,
more than 65 of which were unlisted "write-ins" on the survey forms.
Diving with Bills Tewes at Dive St Vincent, long time REEF supporter and
widely regarded "Caribbean Character", the team split up on two boats and
survey sites around the southwest end of the island. Long-time REEF expert
Franklin Neal provided an extra special view from above and into shallow
water as he snorkeled, while other team members spent hours on each dive
exploring varied habitats and depths. Special finds during the week would take an entire newsletter to list, but
there were a few fish that stood out including the still undescribed Bluebar
Jawfish on most sites, five frog fish on one dive, multiple black brotula,
various pipefish commonly sighted and the largest spotfin gobies (10
inches?!) we've ever seen. The fish of the week may well have been the
Golden Hamlet that Bill pointed out as his favorite fish and the species
that adorns the cover of Reef Fish Identification. The diving was bottom time unlimited and many dives exceeded two hours
finishing in shallow water. Habitats were varied and visibility ranged from
good to excellent on all of our dives. REEF is already planning our next
Field Survey to dive St Vincent in August of 2008. The project will be led
by Paul Humann and will be a must for any serious fishwatcher. For more
details, contact Joe@reef.org |