sailing and snorkeling in Shark/Ray Alley and at the Hol Chan Marine Reserve on Belize’s Barrier Reef
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- Category: Tours
- Published on Wednesday, 11 April 2012 00:59
- Written by Trys
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Tour Descriptions: sailing and snorkeling in Shark/Ray Alley and at the Hol
Chan Marine Reserve on Belize’s Barrier Reef

Second only in size to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, the Belize Barrier Reef is one of the
natural wonders of the world. It is actually a series of coral reefs straddling the coast of Belize,
roughly 300 metres (1,000 ft) offshore in the north and 40 kilometers (25 mi) in the south. It
features the spectacular “Blue Hole”, formed when the roof of a massive underground cavern
collapsed, and attracts snorkelers and divers from all over the world.
The 186 miles long Belize section is less than one third of the 900 kilometres (560 miles)
long Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System, which runs from Cancún on the northeast tip of
the Yucatán Peninsula through the Riviera Maya down to Honduras. It is Belize's top tourist
destination, attracting almost half of its 290,000 visitors annually, and vital to its fishing
industry.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED:
- Swimming costume and towel!
- A tee-shirt to cover your shoulders and back – you burn really easily on and in the sea.
- IMPORTANT optional extra for you to consider if you’re exhibiting the classic symptom
- of male-pattern baldness: another tee-shirt, or a cloth, to put over your head, to be held on
- in the water by your goggles (honestly, even though I was smothered in 50 factor I was
- still like a well-cooked lobster by the evening)
- Sunblock + certainly a hat of some sort if, like me, you are follicly challenged.
- Bug spray, containing at least 25% deet for application before you hit land at lunchtime,
- and again after you’ve had your final snorkeling session.
- Drinking water – plenty of it, as you can dehydrate really fast out there!
- Camera (for some awesome shots from the boat; and if you’re lucky enough to have a
- waterproof camera, from down below as well).
It IS possible to do this day while based on the mainland, as long as you are within reach of the
water-taxi terminal in Belize City. It means an early breakfast in order to catch a boat that will
get you to Caye1 Caulker in time for the departure of your tour. Of course, it is easier if you
have spent the previous night on one of the Cayes, because then all you have to do is fall out
of bed into your tour boat. It will depart about 10.30am, and take you to two or three locations
which are known to be excellent snorkeling spots. You will certainly stop at an area known as
Shark/Ray Alley, because of the reliable presence of nurse sharks and giant eagle rays, and it
really is a special feeling to be in the water with these sizeable creatures, all of which flip lazily
about, mildly intrigued and not at all bothered by the arrival of four-limbed aliens floating on
top of their world. Not uncommonly there are also turtles, and a variety of other fish, all perhaps
expecting some of these weird creatures to have come bearing gifts of food….
Your other certain snorkeling session will be at the Hol Chan Marine Reserve, right on
the Barrier Reef. Here the number and variety of fish increases exponentially; you will be
surrounded by brightly coloured shoals of up to a hundred different species, spectacular as they
flip and dart in and around an amazing variety of coral formations. Some big fish here too –
varieties of grouper, and sometimes barracuda. You will need to be careful not to touch, or to
inadvertently bump into, any of the coral formations because they and you will damage easily
(the coral is brittle, and lacerations from sharp coral can make a nasty mess of whichever part of
your body came into contact with it).
The order in which you have these snorkeling sessions may vary, but in all probability after the
first one you will head for San Pedro for lunch. The price of this is not included in your tour,
which frees you to choose one of the many very reasonably priced restaurants on the island,
depending on your mood and your taste buds; after which it is back on the boat and a very
pleasant sail to the location of your second snorkeling session
The tour operators will be aware that those of you staying on the mainland will need to be back
in time to catch the last boat to Belize City, where your transport back to your hotel will be
waiting for you.
This is a wonderful day, of free movement over sparkling turquoise water, cool magic in it and
a blazing sun above it. Weather permitting (and it nearly always does permit) you will have
an experience to remember wistfully long after you’re home again, maybe with bitingly wintry
conditions outside, when you will fairly regularly wish you could be back in those enticing
Caribbean waters enjoying world class snorkeling, a warm, welcoming climate and friendly laid-
back people telling you “dis jooel is fer evribadi.”
Keep a bottle of good rum in the drinks cabinet, for just those occasions…
1. “Caye” (pronounced “key” as in Florida Keys) is from the Spanish Cayo, meaning a
small island.

