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Text
and Photography by Bill Harrigan
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For
an instant we hang head-to-head in the crystalline water, eyeing each
other with unabashed curiosity. While they watch, I roll around to
the left and back again to the right. The dolphins react immediately,
banking around to see more. I arch my back and try a loop. They like
that too, and top it by zooming beneath me in a close formation that
would leave the Blue Angels green with envy two of them upside down
and one swimming on its side. I surface and float there, catching
my breath while the dolphins recharge their lungs on the fly and head
off to visit another snorkeler. I make a quick count and come up with
14 Spotted Dolphins, part of a large pod that lives in the area. The
water rings with their rapid clicks and squeals as they cavort all
around us. A tightly bunched trio passes beneath me, pectoral fins
always touching, like children holding hands to cross a busy street.
A mother brings her calf close by, and watches indulgently as the
little one makes a pass by my camera. Another group of seven or eight
cross ten feet in front of me, the sunlight rippling exquisitely along
their flanks. After 25 minutes, the dolphins begin to drift away.
But the encounter has been so exhilarating that it feels like we've
been in the water for hours.
Thirty years ago, swimming with wild dolphins was a rare event, and it was usually an individual animal rather than an entire family unit. Now dolphin encounters are occurring more frequently around the globe. The Bahamas, though, are the center of activity. Nowhere else in the world can you find more opportunities to swim with these beautiful marine mammals.
Today
we are off the island of Bimini, on the Great Bahama Bank, with Bimini
Undersea. They have developed a special relationship with the pod
that roams the flat north of Bimini, but swimming with wild dolphins
is not a guaranteed proposition. The dolphins decide when to share
their world with us. Even so, Bimini Undersea enjoys a success rate
for their Wild Dolphin Excursion that tops 80 percent.
In
addition to these areas, wild dolphin encounters take place regularly
in a number of other locations throughout The Bahamas. Blackbeard's
Cruises has been successful in putting snorkelers with dolphins
in the waters around Orange Cay. Small Hope Bay Lodge has been meeting
dolphins in the clear, freshwater river that splits Andros Island
in two, in addition to open water encounters. Your chances of a
dolphin encounter are also good with any of the Abacos dive operators.
For example, Brendals Dive Center offers wild dolphin dives as a
regular specialty trip.
A different kind of dolphin encounter takes place at Lucaya on Grand Bahama, where the Dolphin Experience hosts four programs, including an open water dolphin dive in conjunction with UNEXSO. The uncertainty of a wild encounter is eliminated here, where divers, snorkelers, and even waders are introduced to dolphins in controlled circumstances. Sixteen Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins are involved in the program, eight of them born under human care in Sanctuary Bay at Grand Bahama. On UNEXSO's Dolphin Dive, two of the dolphins join a maximum of ten scuba divers for an open ocean release. This
unique experience provides every diver with a series of one-on-one
encounters as the dolphins circulate among them. The Dolphin Close
Encounter is a chance for anyone, even non-swimmers, to interact with
dolphins while sitting on a partially submerged platform. The Dolphin
Swim gives six snorkelers the opportunity to swim with dolphins in
the protected waters of Sanctuary Bay. The fourth program, which has
a minimum age requirement of 16 and is limited to four participants,
is an all-day, in-depth Dolphin Assistant Trainer course that provides
a fun and educational introduction to dolphins and their care. The
UNEXSO Dolphin Dive and all three Dolphin Experience programs are
by reservation only and they are extremely popular, so book your space
well in advance. |
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