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Top Caribbean Island for Snorkeling (and Weirdness)

BLOGS

Top Caribbean Island for Snorkeling (and Weirdness)

June 15th, 2011
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Photo by: Thinkstock
Utila, Bay Islands, Honduras

Roatan and Utila are sister islands off the coast of Honduras. Roatan is a blossoming queen in the western Caribbean. Utila is the sister that wears strange hairdos to get attention, and can't. “Never been there.” That from an expat who's lived on Roatan nearly 20 years. It's a 12-minute flight to Utila from his home. It's two or three hours by ferry, depending on weather.

So for the expat, and anyone else paying attention, here are the five most unforgettable moments from a one-day snorkeling trip to Utila.

1. The airport. It's not really an airport. It's a slab of tarmac. When we landed there, our four-seat plane was the only craft on the ground, though there was a herd of cattle and a few donkeys. You do not need to clear customs, but you do need to clear the livestock.

2. The vehicles. A golf cart served as our airport transportation to Utila Lodge. The “road” was barely wide enough to hold us and a passing motorbike. Kisty Engel, the lodge's owner and shuttle driver, says there are maybe 20 cars and trucks on the entire island. Still not convinced golf-cart traffic here is safer than rush hour in Chicago.

3. The snorkeling. Oddness spills into the water here. No offense to the reef octopus or barrel sponge or eagle ray or checkered puffer. But you're all weird. Marine life is drawn to the world's second-largest barrier reef (Australia's Great Barrier Reef is the largest), part of which surrounds Utila, an island that's just 6 miles long and 2 miles wide. Oh, and it doesn't hurt to have in the neighborhood an underwater wall that drops 1,500 feet.

4. The whale-shark stories. The world's largest living fish passes through here during the first half of the year. Kisty and her family are believed to be the first people to get in the water with whale sharks in the early 1990s, this just after they moved here from North Dakota. “Even the islanders didn't swim with them,” says Kisty. So Dakotans taught Utilans about whale sharks. Hmm.

5. The cost. Utila is often referred to as a “backpacker island.” You can get a dorm room for $10 a night. Private out islands can be rented for $100 and up. The longtime expat on Roatan who's never been over to his neighboring island said, “Utila. I'm not cheap. Why would I want to go over there?”

Learn more about Utila on our destination page, then surf our travel deals to plan your next trip.

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