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Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

Alert Diver is the dive industry’s leading publication. Featuring DAN’s core content of dive safety, research, education and medical information, each issue is a must-read reference, archived and shared by passionate scuba enthusiasts. In addition, Alert Diver showcases fascinating dive destinations and marine environmental topics through images from the world’s greatest underwater photographers and stories from the most experienced and eloquent dive journalists in the business.

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out. Fishing was discouraged even before the area was<br />

officially a marine preserve.<br />

According to the group EcoWatch, which interviewed<br />

Castro on the subject in 2014, he deemed marine<br />

conservation to be important for Cuba. “Castro told<br />

us that he had fished and dived the extraordinary reef<br />

(Jardines de la Reina) over its entire 60-mile length.…<br />

He also told us about his personal evolution as an<br />

environmentalist. He began as an avid marlin fisherman<br />

and spearfisherman who slaughtered many marine<br />

species on the reef, assuming the oceans were infinite<br />

and could never be depleted, … then he met with marine<br />

conservationist Jacques Cousteau. That meeting helped<br />

transform Castro into a committed environmentalist. He<br />

has committed to preserve 25 percent of Cuba’s waters<br />

from extractive fishing as marine preserves, while the U.S.<br />

lags, preserving less than 2 percent of our coastal waters.”<br />

In 1996 the Gardens of the Queen officially became a<br />

marine preserve — one of the largest in the Caribbean.<br />

This is significant in many ways; it goes far beyond the<br />

dive tourism we enjoyed for a week this past July. As the<br />

New York Times observed in an article on July 14, 2015,<br />

the U.S. and Cuba are two countries whose ecosystems<br />

are closely interconnected, the environmental successes<br />

or missteps of one affecting the health and productivity<br />

of the other.”<br />

“When you have two areas that are 90 miles<br />

away, it’s not only possible but it’s probable that a<br />

considerable number of eggs and larvae are moving<br />

between Cuban and American reefs,” Jake Kritzer,<br />

an ocean and fisheries expert at the Environmental<br />

Defense Fund, told the New York Times.<br />

Jorge Angulo-Valdés, a senior scientist at Havana<br />

University’s Center for Marine Research, also<br />

observed, “Our two countries are connected by the<br />

water, and fish and other organisms move freely there.<br />

They don’t need a visa to come down or go up.”<br />

A study by marine biologist Fabián Pina Amargós,<br />

director of Cuba’s Center for Coastal Ecosystem<br />

Research, found that fish populations have increased<br />

30 percent since the preserve was established, and<br />

shark populations are 10 times greater within the<br />

protected zone than in the waters outside.<br />

Now that I’ve visited the Gardens of the Queen I<br />

can revise my assessment of Cuba diving. With an<br />

impressive density of marine life and pristine coral<br />

reefs, “overwhelmed” is more like it.<br />

THE TRAVEL<br />

We traveled to Cuba on a People to People International<br />

program. Even though diplomatic relations are thawing<br />

and commercial flights from the U.S. to Cuba resumed<br />

Aug. 31, <strong>2016</strong>, travel to Cuba is not without regulation.<br />

Simple tourism is still prohibited by statute, but there are<br />

12 categories of authorized travel, including journalistic<br />

activity, public performances or sports competitions,<br />

professional research and meetings, humanitarian<br />

projects and educational activities.<br />

As part of our program we visited Havana, which<br />

was worth the trip if for no other reason than to see<br />

the people, the architecture and the cars from 1950s<br />

Detroit that still rule the roads. Having grown up in<br />

an era when as a child I could name every car on the<br />

road, whether DeSoto, Studebaker, Ford, Plymouth<br />

or Chevrolet, Havana was astonishing. To the endless<br />

fascination of American tourists of a certain age, the<br />

city was filled with dream cars from the days before<br />

I could drive. The Baby Boomers on our bus kept<br />

shouting out “’57 Bel Air,” “’58 T-Bird,” “’52 Buick,”<br />

“’56 Fairlane!” My 23-year-old daughter didn’t share<br />

our enthusiasm for old cars, but even she knew this<br />

was a situation unique in the world — a function<br />

of five decades of embargo that forced Cubans to<br />

be resourceful and respectful of their cars. There<br />

was much to appreciate about Havana; I don’t think<br />

you could visit and not be impressed by the culture,<br />

history and fine dining.<br />

The Jardines de la Reina are a group of 250 coral<br />

and mangrove islands 60 miles offshore, so factoring<br />

in our travel time from Havana and the boat ride to<br />

the dive sites, the first day would be fully dedicated<br />

to travel. Once we joined our liveaboard we quickly<br />

shoved off to sea, enjoying lunch and what was to<br />

become our collective passion for the week: mojitos<br />

— concoctions of white rum, lime juice, sugar, soda<br />

water and crushed mint. We were happy to indulge in<br />

a drink or three, as we wouldn’t be diving that day.<br />

GARDENS OF THE QUEEN<br />

Checkout dives are often done at some crappy reef<br />

where nothing can be harmed by an errant fin stroke<br />

or poor buoyancy control. With that in mind I was<br />

pleasantly surprised to see massive and pristine pillar<br />

corals punctuating the seafloor at Boca de Anclitas.<br />

A friendly queen angel darted between the spires of<br />

this giant coral colony, making for a great photo op<br />

with my daughter as model. A pair of Nassau grouper<br />

kept nudging ever nearer my housing’s dome port.<br />

Whether they were seeing themselves in the reflection<br />

or had targeted me as a potential fish-feeder, I wasn’t<br />

quite sure. Soon after our first giant stride it became<br />

clear that these fish did not associate divers with<br />

70 | FALL <strong>2016</strong>

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