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We've been all over the world--Malaysia, Australia, Costa Rica,
Fiji, etc. and we still enjoy diving the Florida Keys once or twice a
year.
We stay at Kelley's, a combination bed and breakfast style motel and
dive resort. Kelly's is on the bay side and shares a pool with Amoray,
which is next door. The rooms are just funky enough to make you feel like
you're in the Keys; each room is a little different, with refrigerator,
television, and phone. There's a centrally located washer and dryer, with
hammocks and a hot tub by the dock. The dive center is located in the
main office and the two 46' dive boats and a locked cage for wet gear
are a few steps away from the rooms.
The diving routine at Kelly's is super easy. Each morning we roll out
of bed and wander over to the breakfast area for pancakes, cereal, toast,
or bagels. After breakfast we gather our gear together and walk to the
dock about 8:00 A.M. After setting our gear up, the divemasters carry
the tank, B.C. and regulator onto the boat, which is comfortably large
with an easy ladder for exiting the water. The entire operation is run
very efficiently, almost too efficiently; they want divers to walk to
the dive platform with fins on, even from the front of the boat, which
can be hazardous. Dive time is limited to an hour from the time the first
diver is in the water, OK for most new divers that go through air fast,
but not for more experienced divers. We have seen problems crop up that
can be blamed mainly on time pressures and getting back to the dock on
time. But Kelly's is so convenient, with room, breakfast and dive boat
all within a few steps of each other, that we keep going back.
For a change of pace, and to leave the regimented feeling behind, we
also dive with Diver's City, just south of Kelly's on the other side of
the highway. We still bed and breakfast at Kelly's, then head a couple
minutes down the road to board the dive boat. Divers City's boat is smaller
than Kelly's so it's a little rougher when the waves are rocking. Divers
City does the usual sites, but also sites most other operations don't
do, like deeper drift dives off French or Molasses, and Nitrox dives on
the Duane and the Bibb shipwrecks. No time pressures here!
The Pennecamp reefs are beat, between the multitudes of divers and storms,
but the fish life is amazing! Since the park is a no-take zone, the fish
are not shy and it's easy to get close to them. Green morays, groupers,
lobsters, a semi-tame nurse shark, an occsional jewfish, and lots of friendly
tropicals abound.
Easy to get to, friendly fish, no passport necessary, Key Largo is a
fun place to dive and relax.
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