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Travel

Dreaming of Costa Rica

Ah, Costa Rica…  This place has everything, diving, beaches, lush forests, coffee and lots of activities for the bubble deprived (i.e. non-divers).  When Oceanic Ventures was young we ran eight adventures in five years to Costa Rica.  At that time it was a little off the beaten path and things were a little challenging, especially for me since my Spanish is functional “border Spanish” and I have a vocabulary of a two year-old.  But we had a great time!

Diving in Costa Rica
White Water Rafting
Zip Line

It was during those early trips that we met Bill and Nadine Beard.  Bill brought diving to Costa Rica and Nadine kept an eye on Bill and ran the marketing arm of their operation and acted as a Dive Master too.  They helped us put together some truly unique adventures for our travelers including white water rafting, tours into the rain forest and hikes up to an active Volcano (you can’t get that close to it anymore – it is a safety thing you know).

All of these years later, we are still leading trips off the sidewalk and Costa Rica has so much to offer.  Picture yourself on a quiet beach with a gentle surf breaking or on a beach where big waves break with surfers riding them to the beach.  Or maybe peeking over a ridge and watching large bull sharks swim by is more to your liking.  The fun thing about Costa Rica is you can do both in the same day!  You can be diving in the morning and flying through trees in the afternoon.

And if you want to experience the true beauty of sharks, the Cocos Islands should be on your “must do” list.  In this remote island chain, there are schools of hammerheads swimming through cleaning stations and small sharks feeding on the rocky reefs.  And let’s not forget the tiger sharks always present in the distance and sometimes up close.

No trip to Costa Rica is complete without coffee.  Touring a coffee plantation is a fun way to understand this important part of the country.  And, you get to sample coffee made with different beans and different toasts while looking at the lush forest surrounding these plantations.

Scalloped Hammerhead
Enjoying Coffee

Costa Rican Gallo Pinto

As with all of my adventures you have to sample the local cuisine and nothing says Costa Rica like Gallo Pinto which is served with breakfast or lunch.  A combination of black beans, rich and spices makes this truly a Costa Rican dish.  But you will find beautiful fish dishes and fresh vegetables abound throughout the country. 

So as we all think about getting back to diving, imagine lush forests, soft sand beaches and pinnacles alive with fish and you can almost be there…  

Australia is Burning

Everyone has seen the headlines — “Australia is burning!” “Bush Fires Threatening all Areas of Australia” But, what people forget is that Australia is a large country and not all of it is burning! In fact, the fires, while horrible for those people living in or near these areas, are only in a small portion of the country. And, like the California fires, they have displaced people and wildlife but once under control, and extinguished, there is new growth coing back almost immediately.

The Australian department of Tourism created a few videos hoping to let people know that things are returning to normal and that they are open and ready for business. Here is one of those videos.

New Video – Who We Are

Ann’s round table had an assignment for each of their members — at the meeting you are hosting, you need to tell the group more about what it is you do. In true executive fashion, Ann assembled a team (ok, a team of one additional person) to develop a summary of what Oceanic Ventures does. The following video resulted from that team meeting.

Please shoot over to YouTube and tell us what you think. And, while you are there, please subscribe to the channel.

Australia Exploratory Trip Announced

This adventures to Great Barrier Reef Trip in the Coral Sea departs 19 February 2021

If you missed the Club Aquarius Social Club meeting last week, you probably missed the announcement of an exploratory trip to the Coral Sea aboard the Spirit of Freedom.  This trip includes a rare opportunity to visit to the SS Yongala, Australia’s largest shipwreck.  During this trip we will be visiting a number of sea mounts not visited by dive boats and operators.  We will be exploring them for the first time and we will even have the opportunity to name at least one of the sites we visit!  There are a limited number of available spots (both Eric and Ann have signed up to lead this trip) so now is the time to reserve your spot.
We will be publishing more trip information in January but you can always send Dive Mom a note to find out more before then.  You don’t want to miss this opportunity!

Panama Bound (#1)

[Note from Eric: in 1997, one of our instructors, Carl Strange and his wife set off to sail the world.  Everyone wanted to know what was happening with Carl, Karen and later with the addition of their new crew member, Rebecca.  So, we started to publish “The Strange Chronicles” so everyone could travel with them.  I was looking through some old files and found the Chronicles.  I started rereading them and decided it would be fun to republish some excerpts from them. They are an insight to the cruising lifestyle.]

15 March 2002 13°07N / 071°46W

Headed towards the Panama Canal. This is an area of unusually high winds and seas so we’ve been waiting for a decent weather window for days hoping to have an easy trip. Twelve hours into the trip we’ve run out of wind and turned south towards the Colombian coast hoping to find it again.
0100 Local Time – Getting any sleep during the first night of a trip is hard for both of us. I’m in the back cabin, dozing fitfully in my carefully arranged nest of pillows that help stop the rolling. It’s two hours into my three-hour off watch period and I’m finally getting a snatches of sleep when a large wave breaks just at our stern and throws a few buckets of sea water through the hatch. This soaks the curtain, sheets, a couple of pillows and me. I yell for help. Karen strips the bed, rolls everything into a ball and sends me back to bed saying we’ll deal with the mess in the morning.
0300 Local – I’ve been on watch for an hour now, sitting in our well protected cockpit. The rolling isn’t so noticeable when you’re not trying to sleep. The early morning skies are gorgeous with Sagittarius and the Southern Cross high in the southern sky. In the middle of this uneventful watch, a flying fish buzzed past my head, flew down the companionway and onto the floor under the Nav. station. I wasn’t sure what had happened till I heard the desperate flopping of the fish on the clean carpet. I threw the fish and loose scales overboard, wiped up the mess, poured a cup of coffee and went back on watch.

Karen on the bow of Enchante

0730 Local – Up early to enjoy the beginning of a beautiful, cool morning. We jibed in light winds and the gooseneck fitting on the main boom broke – before my first cup of coffee! It took three hours to get the main sail down and the broken boom and sail securely tied along the side deck. It would have gone a lot quicker if the topping lift hadn’t managed to snag the main halyard requiring a trip to the top of the mast. I don’t mind going up in a calm anchorage, but the top of the mast swings wildly offshore. Back on deck, after dropping the sail, I sat and enjoyed a large glass of water before I calmed down enough to help Karen clean up the mess of lines, blocks and heavy sail and boom. This fitting was replaced two years ago by an experienced, high-priced rigger in Houston. Half of his rivets in the fitting missed the boom. When we reach Panama I’ll order the parts and do the job myself.
Meanwhile, we’re continuing on in light airs. This long distance cruising is rough!

19 March 2002 In Panama!

W E MADE IT!!! We arrived in Panama this morning. Had to slow down yesterday because we were going to make a nighttime landfall and we avoid that at all costs. We are anchored in the area known as the flats. Lots of rolling from the tug boats and pilot boats coming through. “Flats” must have been a euphemism. “Yacht Club” is another euphemism. We took a quick tour around there with the boat. Tomorrow, we’ll go in and put our names on the list so we can get a slip. It might not be much, but hopefully, it will make getting work done on the boom easier. We’d like to get it fixed here instead of the Pedro Miguel Yacht Club because that would mean doing 2/3 of the transit with the boom and sail in the way.

14 April 2002

Your email arrived on the same day as one saying our parts have been shipped. The $190 FedEx charge helped push this project to the usual $1000 (1 Boat Bill) range. Hopefully everything will match Isomat’s catalog dimensions. Knowing it’s on the way, we’ll start the process of having the boat measured and scheduling our transit. Our transit should be one week or so after starting the paperwork.
Last week I went through as a line handler on another boat. The locks are very impressive but not nearly as large as I expected. Our raft of two boats tied alongside a tug and shared the three up locks with a huge container. After a long motor across Gatun lake we rafted back together and locked down center chamber in front of another container ship. Interestingly, sailboats cross the lake as quickly as large ships. We get to take shortcuts outside the main channel, don’t have to reduce speed when passing dredging operations and don’t need the assistance of tugs for the tight turns going into the lock area.
I worked on a letter describing the city of Colon but haven’t finished. On the plus side, there are some very nice locals and excellent Chinese food is cheap!
Hopefully we’ll get everything together and be on our way to the Marquesas in a couple of weeks.
 
 

Our Palau Adventure – A Quick Update

What a trip! This was my first trip back to Palau for over 20 years and I can’t understand why I stayed away for so long.
Like on our previous trip we stayed at the beautiful Palau Pacific Resort.  This is one of the nicest hotels on the island and over the years since my last visit they have added a small, exclusive hotel within the property as well as some over the water bungalows complete with glass viewing ports.  But while the hotel has grown, the warm, friendly atmosphere created by the staff has not changed.    They excited to be there and made us all feel welcome.  The staff at the poolside bar was simply fantastic (yes we spent a lot of time her).  Maria even remembered every customer’s name and room number as well as what you were drinking the previous night — if only I had her memory.
While on our previous trips the Mantas alluded us in German Channel, on this trip they were in abundance also with sharks visiting the cleaning stations – wait until you see the photos.  The weather was even calm enough for us to visit Pelilu and dive Pelilu wall.
Navot and Tova from Fish -n-Fins have assembled a great team.  Our dive guide, Hiro, was wonderful to work with and he was patient having to work with normal recreational divers, CCR divers and even divers using sidemount.  He made it a nice trip for me taking much of the burden for the group underwater  He was assisted on the dive by his “trainee” IB and Captain Rodney.  They were all fun to work with and kept things light and fun during the day as we visited multiple dive sites each day (3 dives a day).
I am only sorry the trip had to end but I and 1/2 of the guests were headed to Truk Lagoon for another wreck diving adventure.
I hope it doesn’t take me so long to come back.
 

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Testimonials

Oceanic Ventures is the best

I have been to many scuba stores in Houston and this one is by far the best. Most scuba stores...

Charles Franklin

5
2016-10-15T17:16:43-06:00

Charles Franklin

I have been to many scuba stores in Houston and this one is by far the best. Most scuba stores have a couple of salespersons who will show you one of the 40 types of fins and 10 types of regulators that they have in stock and immediately try to sell these to you. Most of these same stores really cater only to people just getting certified. Oceanic ventures has a very different business model. While they do have an inventory, it is not as large as other stores. The difference is that they really try to foster a dive community. It works. People come back again and again. Further, unlike many stores, they teach just about everything possible. If you want to teach your child how to snorkel, they teach that. If you want to learn how to dive 350 feet down on a rebreather using helium gas mixes and several additional scuba tanks, they teach that. They teach everything in between. Not many stores do that. Additionally, the staff is very knowledgeable about all the equipment they sell. You will never get an "I don't know about that" type of answer.
https://oceanicventures.com/testimonials/oceanic-ventures-best/

Oceanic Ventures is wonderful

They gave been wonderful all the way. My son started in Scuba Rangers and now we are both certified; thank...

Jean Janssen

5
2016-10-15T16:53:58-06:00

Jean Janssen

They gave been wonderful all the way. My son started in Scuba Rangers and now we are both certified; thank you for taking care of us!
https://oceanicventures.com/testimonials/oceanic-ventures-wonderful/

I loved it

I loved the course!

Stephanie Watowich

2016-10-15T16:56:22-06:00

Stephanie Watowich

I loved the course!
https://oceanicventures.com/testimonials/i-loved-it/

Oceanic Ventures is great with children

They are great with children!

Holland Geibel

5
2016-10-15T17:00:26-06:00

Holland Geibel

They are great with children!
https://oceanicventures.com/testimonials/oceanic-ventures-great-children/

Thank you for the memories

I will never forget diving with my teen aged son for the first time. Thank you for the memories.

Andrea Lebovitz

5
2016-10-15T17:02:59-06:00

Andrea Lebovitz

I will never forget diving with my teen aged son for the first time. Thank you for the memories.
https://oceanicventures.com/testimonials/thank-you-for-the-memories/
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Why People Choose Us

People choose their friends carefully just as they should choose their adventure partners and Scuba Diving Instructors.  Oceanic Ventures is the premier scuba dive shop in Houston, Texas, and the Southwest because of our exceptional service and our sense of adventure.  In talking with our clients and friends, people choose us for a number of reasons such as: Passion – We love what we do and we want to share the beauty and excitement of the underwater world with everyone we meet. Caring- Our clients tell us they love us because we truly care about people and strive to make their scuba diving experiences safe, fun and enjoyable. Professional – Our staff members are the … [Read more …]

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