Caribbean (Fodor's, 2011) - Fodor's Travel Publications [15]
The Chikuzen, sunk northwest of Brewers Bay in 1981, is a 246-foot vessel in 75 feet of water; it’s home to thousands of fish, colorful corals, and big rays. In 1867 the RMS Rhone, a 310-foot royal mail steamer, split in two when it sank in a devastating hurricane. It’s so well preserved that it was used as an underwater prop in the movie The Deep. You can see the crow’s nest and bowsprit, the cargo hold in the bow, and the engine and enormous propeller shaft in the stern. Its four parts are at various depths from 30 to 80 feet. Get yourself some snorkeling gear and hop aboard a dive boat to this wreck near Salt Island (across the channel from Road Town). Every dive outfit in the BVI runs scuba and snorkel tours to this part of the BVI National Parks Trust; if you have time for only one trip, make it this one. Rates start at around $75 for a one-tank dive and $100 for a two-tank dive.
Your hotel probably has a dive company right on the premises. If not, the staff can recommend one nearby. Using your hotel’s dive company makes a trip to the offshore dive and snorkel sites a breeze. Just stroll down to the dock and hop aboard. All dive companies are certified by PADI, the Professional Association of Diving Instructors, which ensures your instructors are qualified to safely take vacationers diving. The boats are also inspected to make sure they’re seaworthy. If you’ve never dived, try a short introductory dive, often called a resort course, which teaches you enough to get you under water. In the unlikely event you get a case of the bends, a condition that can happen when you rise to the surface too fast, your dive team will whisk you to the decompression chamber at Roy L. Schneider Regional Medical Center in nearby St. Thomas.
Blue Waters Divers
(Nanny Cay VG1130 | 284/494–2847 | Soper’s Hole, West End VG1130 | 284/495–1200 | www.bluewaterdiversbvi.com) teaches resort, open-water, rescue, and advanced diving courses, and also makes daily dive trips. If you’re chartering a sailboat, the company’s boat will meet your boat at Peter, Salt, Norman, or Cooper Island for a rendezvous dive. Rates include all equipment as well as instruction. Reserve two days in advance. Dive Tortola (Prospect Reef Resort, Road Town VG1110 | 284/494–9200 | www.divetortola.com) offers beginner and advanced diving courses and daily dive trips. Trainers teach open-water, rescue, advanced diving, and resort courses. Dive Tortola also offers a rendezvous diving option for folks on charter sailboats.
FISHING
Most of the boats that take you deep-sea fishing for bluefish, wahoo, swordfish, and shark leave from nearby St. Thomas, but local anglers like to fish the shallower water for bonefish. A half day runs about $480, a full day around $850. Call Caribbean Fly Fishing (Nanny Cay VG1130 | 284/494–4797 | www.caribflyfishing.com).
HIKING
Sage Mountain National Park attracts hikers who enjoy the quiet trails that crisscross the island’s loftiest peak. There are some lovely views and the chance to see rare species that grow only at higher elevations.
SAILING
Fodor’s Choice | The BVI are among the world’s most popular sailing destinations. They’re clustered together and surrounded by calm waters, so it’s fairly easy to sail from one anchorage to the next. Most of the Caribbean’s biggest sailboat