Posts Tagged ‘Belize’

It is with sincere regret that I must write this article regarding what was at one point in my life, my favorite place to dive in the world- Moho Caye in Belize.

An article I wrote several years ago describes what is what like to visit Moho in the late 1990′s and early into the 21st century;

Moho Caye

“One of my other favorite spots in Belize was Moho Caye. It is a simple dive but there is a large coral pinnacle that starts in about 85 – 100 feet and makes it way up to within 20 feet of the surface and there are a large variety of critters to watch for while you circle this pinnacle.

The nice thing about this site is that you can end your dive in fifteen feet of water and still be seeing lots of marine life, like anemones and feathered sea cucumbers.

There are numerous ways to dive Moho Caye. I considered the starting point just off to the left of the small spot of sandy beach you can see in center of the right photo. From there, you could head south towards the pinnacle or north, towards a more sandy bottom and round the tip at the northern-most point. where the reef forms a sort of mini wall… quite steep with an eighty foot maximum bottom depth.

You can see from the photo at right how much shallow area there is surrounding the island. Its hard to pinpoint it from here, but if you were to begin your dive approximately halfway on the top middle side of this photo and swim left, you would find the pinnacle I am referring to. If you really want to find it, I recommend finding a woman named Lloydia in Placencia Village (its not hard. Ask anyone in the center of town) and go with her. She loves this spot.

In March, if you are around visit the east side of the island where the Pelicans roost and build their nest. Its fun to wander the island at that time… you can literally walk up to the nest with albino white baby pelicans squawking away.

I can honestly say that this is one of the nicest dive spots I have ever spent time at. No matter how often I visited, I always enjoyed myself. Yim and I used to take one of the boats out on our off days”

Imagine what they are doing with their sewage now… this Island is small. I could walk across it in fifteen minutes even hacking my way through the very middle of the Island. And of course, the next hurricane that passes through the area will wipe the place out but the Island will never be the same.

Sigh…


When we began building our houses in Belize, I designed them as a box with a top basically. A 24 foot by 24 foot square box which was to be delivered to the property on the back of a flatbed truck and hauled through the Maya Mountains across bridges that were no more than eighteen feet wide.

On some bridges, our houses hung over the sides of the bridges above a rushing river below as they were delivered to our property for installation.

Belizean pre-fabricated housing.

They were delivered a day before I arrived in Belize to supervise the placement and construction of the houses for two weeks.

Allen Reimer had decided he didn’t have time to wait until I arrived a day later and placed one of the house at the front of the property very near to the ocean and at a sharp angle and I decided I did not like it there and asked him to move it.

So, we placed the end of a flatbed truck under it, tilted the house up with a forklift and backed up until the house rested on the flatbed and we let the house down and drove it to where I wanted it. We then placed the pilings at the four corners of the house, lifted it up off the flatbed using the same forklift and drove the truck away gently, as we only had one forklift and the house needed to be left balanced on the four pilings.

No Steve we are no longer in Kansas.

This really only took the better part of a morning and after lunch, I was ready to tackle our house. The biggest problem with that was I also really wanted to keep a couple of 20 foot Palm Trees, which were located only a few feet from where I wanted the front of the house to be.

It’s not that easy to manouver a house on the back of a flatbed and the placement of the second house took the rest of the day to get into place but by the end of the first day, we had both houses in place and ready to begin adding footings to.

The next morning it began to rain. It rained all day and all night and the crew worked putting in the pilings and leveling the houses with the forklift and by the end of the second day, although the property was covered in water, we had both houses perfectly level on their pilings.

By the third day, we had to pour the cement for the foundation but had so much water on the property we had to dig a trench the entire length of the property at an angle so we could drain the water away from the houses. I was having a blast by now. I was absolutely soaked and dirtier than I had been for twenty years and loving the hell out of it.

These were my houses at the Ocean’s Edge.

Over the coming week or so, we set about cementing in the foundations such as they were, clearing the property, and beginning the decks around the houses. By the time I left to go back to Canada to get Yim, the houses had roofs completed and doors on them, which could be locked.

I was thrilled.

Two weeks later I came back with Yim and we drove to the property to give her a first glimpse at her house on the beach and I think it was one of the most exciting days of my life. We had done it.

We had a house on the Ocean’s Edge.

During our four years in Belize, we saw many changes.

The first year we visited and bought our property, Placencia was a very laid back fishing village which offered some very nice dive locations. Yim and I rented a small house close to the water tucked away in the mangroves 25 feet from the clay road which led to the village. The roads were covered by palm trees and had no pavement in any direction for at least 25 miles.

The cost was $300.00 a week. We stayed for three weeks.

We rode bikes across the airstrip to watch the planes land and take-off just over the ocean, watching them arch quickly to gain altitude. We walked along the shores and watched small rays forage for food along the Ocean’s Edge.

When we visited the property we eventually bought, we knew this was where we wanted to be.

When we left in 2004, there was a construction company that had opened 500 feet down the road from us which started work at 5 am and a resort adjacent to our property on the way up, at least 25 fairly major developments in various stages of construction, crime on the rise dramatically and we knew this was no longer the place we had wanted to be.

On last view, there was virtually a solid row of resorts along the coastline of Placencia and more under construction faster than we could have possibly imagined. The growth was explosive. This is not sustainable development.

Placencia is a 12 mile peninsula. At it’s widest point, I’m guessing it is perhaps 1/8 of a mile wide. On many occasions, we were told that we were very lucky as we had purchased the highest point of land on the entire peninsula. Our property was six feet above sea level.

As we watched the development take place, we had to wonder what this would do to the local environment. Where would the sewage go. The sand could not possibly leech away all that additional waste. How would that affect the surrounding waters?

I think what I found hard to deal with was the alienation the resort owners had with the locals. I found that it was difficult to share the local values if the owners spent their time in New York City and came down to continue development. There was little respect for the locals and that is where I believe Placenica will eventually fail.

The village of Seine Bight was a good example. By North American standards, the villagers lived poorly. Often, their homes had no windows, no running water and no garbage removal services of any type, so the ocean was their form of washing away the garbage which accumulated.

The introduction of resorts surrounding the village did little to help as very few of the resort owners recognized that while they may have been employing the villagers, they were certainly not assisting them in any way. That is not sustainable development.

Villagers had some money now but overwhelmingly, the resort owners insisted that these villagers, myself included to a smaller degree at first, show up for work at exactly 8 am and ‘put in a full work day’. From my perspective at the time, I loved to scuba dive and was building a business where all my staff could earn a decent living and create a better life for themselves. Why would they not want to be a part of that?

I quickly learned that what was important to me was certainly not important to the locals who had lived there their entire lives and I began to spend a little time with a couple of my employees out spear-fishing or lobster hunting on our off days, which helped me understand a little better what their value systems were.

But let’s be honest here. I was brought up in Montreal. A big cosmopolitan city. I may have aspired to being able to culturally adapt but I can’t fool myself. I had certain ingrained expectations that required a very open mind to simply look at when it came to some local customs, and quite frankly, who was I to say if my ways were better than their ways, with the exception of a few things.

It’s always easier to reflect on experiences after they’ve happened. No doubt about that, but I like to think that the days Yim and I got to wander north along the coastline of Belize, splashing our feet in the water and trying to encourage Sheba, our Belizean mongrel pup, to actually come in the water were the days where Belize was what it was supposed to me for me.

In the mornings we would walk to the Ocean’s Edge and have our coffee, Sheba trying to dig up a buried crab frantically and sometimes, a small juvenile manta ray would bump into our feet.

But then again, we had some money, not a lot, but we could simply drive into town and buy some food if we chose. Lots of the locals had no money whatsoever and their days were focused on the most basic of human needs… nourishment.

In that context, where does money come into play?

I have ben writing a book on Belize and one of the short stories I am including goes as follows;

Title: But Steve… I caught three fish.

We waited and waited for Wayne to show up for the bone-fishing charter we had arranged. Eventually, we managed to find another fishermen at 9:30 am but by then, it was already too hot for the best bone-fishing of the day.

I waited almost three days until I saw Wayne again. Wayne was a good guy… fairly dependable and a likeable fellow so when I saw him, I asked him if he was all-right, thinking something must have been wrong.

He said he was fine and asked why I thought something was wrong.

I said, ‘Well, Wayne, you had a fishing charter that a guest was really looking forward to and you did not show up.’

He replied, ‘Well Steve, on my way in that day, I caught three fish.’

A little puzzled, I said, ‘Yes, but you had a charter, Why didn’t you show up?’

He repeated to me that he had caught three fish.

Now a little annoyed, I said, ‘Yes Wayne, but we had a guest who waited for you for almost three and a half hours.’

He repeated to me once again that he had caught three fish, only this time he added, ‘So I didn’t need any money for a few days. I had food.’

It was on that day when I realized that it would be a long time before I would be able to figure out just what made the world go around in southern Belize.


Approximately 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Belize City lies the almost perfectly circular Blue Hole.

More than 1,000 feet (305 meters) across and some 400 feet (123 meters) deep, the hole is the opening to what was a dry cave system during the Ice Age. When the ice melted and the sea level rose, the caves were flooded, creating what is now a magnet for intrepid divers.

Today the Blue Hole is famed for its sponges, barracuda, corals, angelfish—and a school of sharks often seen patrolling the hole’s edge.

This is on my list of Top Ten Dive Spots in the World.


One of my other favorite spots in Belize was Moho Caye. It’s a simple dive but there is a large coral pinnacle that starts in about 85 – 100 feet and makes it way up to within 20 feet of the surface and there are a large variety of critters to watch for while you circle this pinnacle.

The nice thing about this site is that you can end your dive in fifteen feet of water and still be seeing lots of marine life, like anemones and feathered sea cucumbers.

There are numerous ways to dive Moho Caye. I considered the starting point just off to the left of the small spot of sandy beach you can see in center of the right photo. From there, you could head south towards the pinnacle or north, towards a more sandy bottom and round the tip at the northern-most point. where the reef forms a sort of mini wall… quite steep with an eighty foot maximum bottom depth.

You can see from the photo above at left how much shallow area there is surrounding the island. It’s hard to pinpoint it from here, but if you were to begin your dive approximately halfway on the top middle side of this photo and swim left, you’d find the pinnacle I am referring to. If you really want to find it, I recommend finding a woman named Lloydia in Placencia Village (it’s not hard. Ask anyone in the center of town) and go with her. She loves this spot.

In March, if you are around visit the east side of the island where the Pelicans roost and build their nest. It’s fun to wander the island at that time… you can literally walk up to the nest with albino white baby pelicans squawking away.

I can honestly say that this is one of the nicest dive spots I have ever spent time at. No matter how often I visited, I always enjoyed myself. Yim and I used to take one of the baots out on our days off and hang out here with a picnic of sandwiches. Just a wonderful place to spend the day.