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Costa Blanca, Spain, August 1995
I dived with 4
outfits in Spain in 1995. My girlfriend and I first dived with an outfit
called Tabarca Sub. They're actually based in Santa Pola, which
is the town nearest to the island of Tabarca. There's actually a marine
reserve around the island, for which you require a permit. They
don't have a permit, so they dive right on the edge of the marine
park. The guy who runs it is a really nice bloke, but he doesn't
really speak a great deal of English. You have to ring him up to
book because they just have a lockup near the harbour, so if your
Spanish isn't too good, you could have problems.
The diving was on some weed beds made up
of some seaweed exclusive to the Med. The maximum depth I've got
logged is 13m, so it's not very deep. We saw quite a lot of fish,
including some blennies, and we were given some sprats to feed the
fish with. The sea temperature was a nice and warm 26
degrees.
We hired all the equipment, which wasn't
great and no octopus was provided. I think it cost something like
5000 Pts. If you had your own kit, this would drop quite
substantially to about 2500 Pts. The address is:
Tabarca Sub
Avenida de Granada, 11 bajo
Santa Pola
Alicante
Telf/Fax (96) 669 24 28
The second place I went diving was in
Torrevieja with an outfit called Tevere. It took two attempts to
get out diving, because the first time I turned up, I was told
that the big boat was "kaput", and that I should come
back tomorrow. Having got up at 9.00am, I was less than amused.
They don't go out in the afternoon, because of a wind that comes
up off the sea. I would call it more of a light breeze myself,
but there you go.
They do go to a wreck site, but it was a
bit windy the second time I tried to go diving, so we went to
another weed bed. I went on my own, so buddied up with a German
guy. I put my equipment together, and it all seemed OK, but what I
didn't realise was that, as I closed the cylinder band, the
plastic buckle must've snapped, because the next time I picked it
up, the cylinder almost fell out. So we had to replace the buckle
on the boat. Whilst we were doing this, my German buddy decided
to go off on his own. So I had to go down and find him.
Fortunately the viz was pretty good (15m), and I found him within
a minute. There were some nice rocky overhangs you could swim
through and we saw a couple of large shoals of fish (50+). I also
saw a couple of sea fans. It was only about 11m. The rental gear
didn't have an octopus, or compass, so I had to rely on the
German to do the navigation. Well we went up twice so that he
could take a bearing back to the boat, and everytime we surfaced
the boat seemed further away. When we finally came up I decided
it was too far away to swim to, so they had come and get us. This
really cheered up the skipper, who's a miserable sod at the best
of times.
They've got a shop at the following
address:
Tevere
San Policarpo
Torrevieja
Telf: (96) 571 65 55
The women in the shop spoke reasonable
English. However, all they'll tell you to do is to go down to the
Sports Marina in Torrevieja at 9.00am in the morning, where
they've got premises. The cost was about 5000 Pts with all equipment.
The third place we went to was in
Benidorm with the Poseidon club. They're actually in the phone
book, but under 'B' for Buceadores, which means divers. No, I
didn't understand it either. We went diving off of the island in
the middle of the bay. They're shop is about 50 yards from the
beach, and you have to walk across the beach, and then wade out
to the boat. It was pretty crowded on the boat, and there was no
cover from the August sun. My girlfriend and I were diving with a
Spaniard from the shop, who at least had an octopus himself. Our
rental gear didn't have one.
The dive site was quite good, as it was a
rock wall with some interesting scenery, including some arches.
There were plenty of fish including a fairly tame moray and
conger both occuping the same hole. My maximum depth for the dive
was 26.5m and, below about 20m, the water temperature drops
suddenly from 24 degrees to about 17. You certainly need hoods
and 5mm wetsuits. The trouble is that you then sweat to death on
the boat. Still it was a nice dive, probably the best one we did
in Spain, and they go out in the afternoons, as well as the
occasional night dive. Their phone number is (96) 585 32
27.
The 4th place we went was in Cabo de
Palos. This is in Murcia province and is the cape just below the
Mar Menor and La Manga. Most of the diving there is on the Islas
Hormigas (Ant Islands), which are a few small islands off the
shore. They looked like a submerged set of small mountains. There
are apparently a number of wreck sites there, but we did a scenic
dive on a sunken hill. My maximum depth was 26m, and there was
quite a bit of life about, including an octopus.
The people in the dive centre spoke
reasonable English, certainly enough to be able to book the
dives, and they went out at 9am and 12am. The rental gear wasn't
great, with no octopus and no depth gauge. The filter on the 1st
stage was also very rusty. The price was about 5000 Pts with all
kit, or about 2500 Pts for just tank and weights. That seems to
be the going rate in Spain.
Their address was:
Paseo de la Barra, 15
Cabo de Palos
Murcia
Telf: (968) 14 55 30
In general, I would say diving in Spain
is worth doing, though I don't think I'd go there for a diving
holiday. The rental gear is pretty bad. You very rarely get an
octopus or a depth gauge, so I'd recommend taking your own regulator
and computer, if nothing else.
At the time our qualifications were PADI AOW and CMAS
1*, which are widely recognised in Spain. SSI seem to be quite
common of there too. You need to have medical insurance that
covers you for diving and most places do ask to see it.
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