Gulf & Main

GETTING DOWN IN THE GULF

Scuba divers, take a look at Florida’s west coast!

- BY BROOKE MORTON

The Florida Keys is a scuba destinatio­n that every Sunshine State resident and visitor seems to know about, yet the Sarasota “Cultural Coast” and Lee Island Coast areas of the Gulf of Mexico actually offer more than twice the amount of real estate underwater. However, these stretches aren’t top of mind for dive enthusiast­s.

Some of Florida’s west coast operators find that surprising. “It’s a body of water—I don’t know why anybody wouldn’t know there is diving here,” says Troy Sorensen, instructor with Dive Florida based in Bradenton.

“Well, it’s about half and half,” says Ian Kaye, divemaster with Scuba Quest in Sarasota. “Half the people think our diving will be just like the Florida Keys, and the other half think that there is nothing.” The truth is somewhere in between those two assumption­s. “We definitely have fish, but we don’t have the soft corals of the Keys,” adds Kaye. So many fish, in fact, that the largest spearfishi­ng tournament in the world is held in St. Petersburg. The nonstop bounty includes snapper, grouper and other big species. “The schools of fish out here are massive,” he explains.

Fish aside, the topography may not be entirely what a Florida diver might expect. The bottom is mostly sand. If it’s not sand, it’s limestone ledge. But the appeal of the Gulf is what sits on top of the sand and ledges.

Says Sorensen, “I have more than 4,000 numbers in my GPS for dive sites.” Those numbers include wrecks, bridge pieces, statues, ledges and a variety of manmade artificial reefs.

The area’s most popular sites for recreation­al divers include the following: the USS Mohawk, a 165-foot cutter 28 miles off Captiva Island; the 80-foot-deep USCG Blackthorn off St. Petersburg; and the new Circle of Heroes underwater dive memorial, honoring fallen soldiers.

With a long list of sites—which Pinellas County has posted online—there’s no debating that there are underwater structures to see. But the biggest variable that limits diving in the Gulf is visibility. “Visibility can be really good, or it can be really bad—and there is no average when it comes to what to expect here,” says Kevin Sweeney, owner of SCUBAdvent­ures Naples, of the water clarity off Florida’s west coast.

The bottom is mostly sand. If it’s not sand, it’s limestone ledge. But the appeal of the Gulf is what sits on top of the sand and ledges.

The biggest factor determinin­g what divers will get underwater is the runoff from Lake Okeechobee, emptying into the Fort Myers area via the Caloosahat­chee River. Because of this, areas south of Fort Myers are subject to more unpredicta­ble water quality, but north of this area tends to be noticeably better.

During the summer of 2019, Steve Jones, owner of Florida West Scuba & Charters, says visibility was 30 feet on most days that he was underwater with guests who chose Venice for shark teeth dives. Venice is famous for regularly yielding up fossilized shark teeth and other finds dating back to the Pleistocen­e Epoch some 11,700 years ago.

The teeth serve as tangible evidence of what Jones, Sorensen, Kaye and most everyone else who has been diving in the Gulf already know: This area may not serve up perfect water visibility, but it still offers divers loads to see.

USS MOHAWK

Easily the most well-known wreck in the Gulf, the 165-foot-long cutter was purpose-sunk 28 miles west of Captiva Island’s Red Fish Pass and now sits upright with its bow facing east. It has become a gathering site for goliath grouper and big schools of snapper, grunts and other warm-water fish.

MEXICAN PRIDE

The Mexican Pride, a 200-foot bulk cargo ship, fell into disrepair in 1970, and soon enjoyed its next life as an artificial reef after being towed 35 miles

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 ??  ?? Scuba divers often come face-to-face with goliath grouper in the Gulf.
Scuba divers often come face-to-face with goliath grouper in the Gulf.

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