Roatan – A Gem for Snorkeling

Grey Angelfish over sandy bottom in Roatan Honduras
Grey Angelfish

By Susan (Sue) Harris – (Tauranga, New Zealand)
As a solo older person I found my two weeks in Roatan, Honduras for snorkeling and freediving quite good. For my first week I stayed at Coco View Resort which is itself on an island near French Harbour. I chose not to go on dive boats which went twice a day as I wanted to really get to know the house reef.

The house reef is about a 10 minute swim from the door. The water depths were very good, from one meter up to 40 meters. I was able to see lots and get some good pictures. I saw lots of fish and other critters on route in the seagrass beds.

I snorkeled twice a day for about 1.5-2 hours a time. The water quality was great. There were lovely corals, heaps of purple sea fans, and sponges. I saw lobsters swimming, Scrawled Filefish, school of squid, eagle ray, various schools of grunts and Blue Tangs, Whiptail Eel, Trumpetfish, garfish and beautiful Queen, French, and Grey Angelfish, and more.

As I try and take photos Tim who owns the photography store adjacent to the lodge assisted me with my own snorkeling camera gear. He has camera systems to rent if you don’t have your own.

School of Blue Tangs over coral reef Roatan Honduras
School of Blue Tangs

The lodge, the accommodation, the ease for snorkeling and freediving at Coco View Resort was awesome.

For the second week I stayed at Tranquilseas Eco Resort in Sandy Bay. I had two boat trips with the dive shop located at the resort and saw a huge Rainbow Parrotfish. I didn’t even know these existed; awesome and very large. And I saw some large groupers, moray, one turtle, and school of squid.

The water near the lodge is not very clean due to boat traffic but I got in early and saw some good stuff under the dock – sea stars, shrimp and said hello to the resident barracuda.

Taxis are quite an economical way to get around which I did to West End and had a brief look at West Bay and the young people whooping it up.

I found it would be best to take US dollars as the ATM gives out Lempira. And some basic Spanish goes a long way with local folks.

Stoplight Parrotifsh over coral Roatan Honduras
Stoplight Parrotfish
Queen Angelfish in coral Roatan
Queen Angelfish

Comments Moved From Previous System

Nicole & Galen – Sep 2, 2018 – Thank you for your report

Hi Sue! Thank you for this great report about your snorkeling trip to Roatan. Sounds like you saw lots of wonderful sea life. Folks can read some more information about snorkeling in Roatan on this page and this page.

Anne – Sep 2, 2018 – Roatan and Coco View

I also am an older single snorkeler and did Coco View awhile ago and went on the boats two times per day. They always pointed me to the boats that would have the best snorkel. I had a fabulous time as well on the house reef. Great place.

Denise – Sep 3, 2018 – Solo Snorkeling

Do you snorkel by yourself? I have always gone on tours because I am an older single person who loves to snorkel but very cautious. Do you wear a snorkeling vest if you go by yourself? Maybe I am too paranoid. I am really glad you wrote about your trip to Coco View. I was thinking about going to that resort hopefully next year.

Susan Harris – Sep 3, 2018 – Coco View Roatan

It is of course best to snorkel or be in the water with someone else. You need to let the staff know so if there are others who snorkel you can buddy up. I am often the only snorkeler when I travel.

The reef and sea grass at Coco View I think is shallow enough to just float along. There are areas that are less than a meter. You can see lots if you are patient.

I am a confident swimmer, snorkeler and “somewhat freediver”. I do not wear a snorkeling vest but if I wasn’t confident I would. A light wetsuit also gives you buoyancy.

I would check the dive boat trips for depths and distances. I’d ask if you could get a guide for some snorkels if you are nervous when you are alone. Or if you can get a guide, go out to the reef. I found the staff very accommodating at Coco View.

Denise – Sep 4, 2018 – Solo Snorkeling

Thank you so much Sue and Anne… I definitely will try Coco View. Sounds like my kind of place.:)

Cindy Wakefield – Sep 6, 2018 – Speaking Spanish Added to the Trip

Snorkeling was wonderful, but an unexpected pleasure was that the local people seemed to enjoy helping me with my Spanish. And they liked practicing English too. Very fun and friendly location.

Anonymous – Sep 20, 2018 – Roatan

Always nice to learn of other wonderful places to try on Roatan. We were there a couple years ago staying on the West End and I was pretty new to snorkeling, the house reef there was amazing to me. I go alone also as my husband doesn’t swim much. I enjoyed the early mornings around 6:30am too. Returning this February to the other side, staying at Media Luna. I hope I like it there as much as West End…

April – Oct 7, 2018 – Love Roatan!

Roatan is our absolute favorite place for snorkeling and diving. We went there January 2017 and fell in love. I will say we loved Bonaire for snorkeling as well. But we didn’t fall in love with the vibe of the island in Bonaire. We absolutely fell in love with Roatan! Unfortunately since we went, flight prices have quickly skyrocketed. Any airport within a five hour drive of us is $900 plus per person. We literally check every week for any dates for any drops in prices and have since we went. So far they’ve only gone up and not down.

St. Croix is my favorite island all around but the snorkeling just isn’t as great as Roatan. Hopefully we can make it back there. 🙁

Rebecca – Oct 17, 2018 – West End Was Great

I snorkeled the west end of Roatan, far west end I guess, about 10 years ago and it is still the best snorkeling experience of my life (including the Fiji snorkeling trip I just returned from). We snorkeled, off the beach, an area about 2-3 football fields long by one wide, for five days, and never got bored. Fabulous pictures, up close, of good sized fish. Fiji seemed like most of the fish were aquarium-size.

I don’t know how the area is now; the coral is right on the shoreline, so shallow that at low tide it was a challenge finding a way in, so it may be degraded by tourists by now.

Pat – Oct 22, 2018 – Roatan Snorkeling

Sue, what month was this and what was the water temp? Thank you.

Sue – Oct 23, 2018 – Reply to Pat

Hi Pat, I was there the last two weeks in July 2018. Google says the temperature was around 28 degrees Celsius. It was cooler than that in the morning, like 8am. My guess is maybe 23-24 Celsius.

I get cold and was okay with short bottoms and I wore a long sleeve rash guard top.

Cheers.

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