3rd – 9th June
Siquijor was recommended to us by Vicky in KL. We were toying with the idea of learning how to dive and Vicky had suggested this island would be the best place to test it and learn. Thank you Vicky 🙂
Travelling to Siquijor
The journey from Moalboal to Siquijor was a full day’s effort. We woke up early and saw two really large turtles on the floor of the sea just off the shore, just chomping on the grass! It was amazing, but our snorkels were so annoying that we gave up quite quickly.
We got a trike to the bus stop, waited on a corner with some others for the bus no timetable, or bus shelter, dubious that this would work. A non-air-con bus showed up! We squashed on and were stood up for the first half hour. We got a seat eventually and after a couple of hours arrived in Bato. Very glad to get off – so stop-start I felt a little sick!
We realised we were at the wrong port so had to get another trike, which was bumpy and loud. The boat took us to Dumaguette. Another trike through the city to the other port, and another boat later, we were in Siquijor! Immediately we hired a moped from friendly Charlie, and off we went to a cafe to sit our wary bones down and find somewhere to stay. The bike doesn’t have a speed gauge. It is a little bouncy. It will do the trick..
We finally chose a cliff edge hotel, called Emocion, which was on the south of the island, a little far away from the main strip but close enough to bike around easily. We were the only people there, and it was very luxurious. We had a 4 poster bed, mosquito nets and a semi-outdoor bathroom.

In search of Waterfalls
Last night 2 cats were having sex under our room, and we are in a bungalow hut on stilts so this was not what I was expecting to hear in the middle of the night!
We had a leisurely breakfast and made the plan for the day. First stop was Cambugahay Waterfall. It was the end of the dry season so unfortunately there wasn’t a waterfall. Just a big hole. This didn’t stop us going on an adventure though. We found some concrete pools, which didn’t look very inviting, and went for a walk upstream to see if there were any other falls.




These bamboo bridges were not fun to cross over, and then back again when we didn’t find any waterfalls. Very precarious!
Back on the bike! Other falls to see!

on our way we had lunch at the Get Wrecked bar and we stopped off at Sea Pearl Dive school to enquire about a try dive. We organised one for the next day, both of us excited but slightly nervous.
We headed to Lazi at the south of he island to the Lugrason Falls. These actually had water flowing and people. Lots of people. There were swings and Andy took advantage of them!



Came back to the room to discover a big lizard hanging out above the loo. Perfect.
Try Dive
After a nervous breakfast we set off to Sea Pearl and met our dive instructor Riika who was from Finland. She had a great sense of humour, gave us enough information but didn’t bog down on the details for this first dive, and overall she was an excellent teacher. We signed our life away on the very intimidating and scary forms declaring we were fit to dive, and got suited up. Full neoprene wet suits with boots, a buoyancy control device (BCD), 4kg of weights around my waist and air tanks. It was all exceptionally heavy and just walking down to the sea edge was effort. Of course when we got into the water we could put air into the jacket and float easily. Next came the tricky bit. Breathing into the regulator under water! It’s actually not bad, the same mouth piece as a snorkel.
I let out all the air in my jacket, and with the weights around my waist, sank to the sea bed about 3m down and sat on my knees, waiting for Andy. He was having a bit of trouble. He was struggling with the BCD – it was too tight and caused him to breath too deeply, which meant he was too buoyant! After a couple of attempts and loosening of the jacket, he made it down to the floor. We kneeled on the sea bed for a little while whilst Riika showed us how to get water out of our masks by blowing air out through your nose whilst looking up, which we copied, and then we set off to explore! We had to keep equalising our ears, and we went down to 10m. It was awesome. We saw a scorpion fish, a snake, lots and lots of small fish and even clown fish in the anemone:) beautiful. I looked up a few times and the distance didn’t scare me after a while, there was so much going on around me! It was amazing.
Afterwards we were buzzing with adrenaline- it was such a wonderful dive, we were keen on the course. Sensibly we decided to go for food and decide by the end of the day if we were prepared to pay £300 each for the course. It was a lot of money but we thought it was worth it. We had to pay a deposit and the only ATM on the island was in the main town to the north.
When we returned to Riika later that afternoon she handed us an iPad and a book and told us to complete the first 3 sections out of 5 by the next dive, which we scheduled for the next afternoon.
We went to a pizza place for food, and couldn’t eat it all so brought it back in a paper bag for later. We began to watch the video for the first section. At the end of each section was a test, and at the end of the 5 sections was an exam. Each video was about an hour long and the book had all the tests in, so you could practice before filling out the answers online. It was a lot of work!
The first video showed us everything we should have done on our first dive. I felt scared, but in a good way. We went to bed and there was a huge storm. The electricity was cut off for a few hours so the room got very warm, and we heard a mouse going after the pizza!! Argh!! Not a good night’s sleep.
Dive 2
The next morning after breakfast we did the next section. We got scared again, there were a lot of techniques to cover. I didn’t eat much before the dive and I had a mild headache from worrying about all the skills. Of course as soon as we got to the school, and we were in our suits, I didn’t have time to be scared. I manned up!
We had an addition to our lesson, a French Canadian guy called Felix, who had done 2 try dives, and was now doing the course. Riika showed us how to put the BCD and the tank together, letting the air through to the regulators and checking it was all good to go. So much to remember! Then we went into the water. She had briefed us before on everything we would be doing. We walked down to the beach again, and did so many skills it was insane:
- Half filled mask
- Fully filled mask
- Mask off
- Regulator taken out
- Lost regulator
- Sharing regulator
- Buoyancy exercises
Wow! It was a lot to do! But afterwards we went for a swim, only kidding, we did more exercises! Swimming together on our buddy’s regulator was a bit of a faff, I am not the most agile under water!
Next we swam a bit deeper down to 10m. By this time we had all forgotten what was next in the brief. Riika intimated we were going to do another mask exercise, and Felix went first. He fully flooded his mask and took it off, waited the required couple of seconds and then put it back on, clearing it through his nose. All grand – I copied him, had a slight panic when putting the mask back on because my hair was flying about and I couldn’t secure it properly. Anyway, unbelievably I remained calm and kept breathing. I eventually got it back on. Then Andy did it, except he had been watching us two go, and he’d also seen Riika look baffled, we were only supposed to half fill our masks!! Oops. He did the exercise correctly. We all made it to the surface in one piece. I felt ridiculous ha.
We then did a controlled ascent on the surface, which I didn’t get at all; it was meant to be done from 5m down but we were just practicing swimming forwards on the surface. Got there eventually!
After the dive we went for food, drank lots of water and watched section 3. Even more terrifying.
2 brown outs over night, very warm in the hotel room.
Dives 3 and 4
Breakfast was a muffin from the shop, I couldn’t have a big breakfast again, too much food and it wasn’t sitting well!
We also moved hotels yesterday, closer to the strip and to the dive school. It is on the sea, but there wasn’t a beach. Ah well. Cheap and cheerful! A short bike ride later and we were ready for the first dive of the day.
We got a boat to the dive site and we practiced first getting into the water with mask and snorkel and flippers on, then putting on the BCD, which required some nifty lying back on top of the inflated BCD, whilst doing up all the straps, then finally the weights. This was the tricky bit. You had to lean forward and breath through the snorkel, whilst getting 4kg over behind you, and doing up the strap at the front. Goodness – took some effort. Anyway, got there in the end, and we were off.
At 5m we all stood up on the sea floor, and one by one took off the BCD, then put it back on again, then we took off our weights, and put them back on again, sodding weights, they are my nemesis! Then we had to do a fully flooded mask (no taking it off!) which was fine. Afterwards we did an alternative air source ascent. I went with Andy. Not the smoothest. You are supposed to go as the same speed as the smallest bubbles coming out of your regulator… We went slightly too fast. Science bit, as you rise to the surface, pockets of air will expand, causing you to go even faster, so you have to let out air all the time, so that you don’t go too fast. This is of course the most important aspect of diving. Keep breathing. Never ever hold your breath, if you change depth you could burst a lung. What a lovely thought.
On the video we had just watched we knew we had to ‘sip’ air out of a constant stream of air from our regulators. It looked impossible. I was worried I would breath in water, but actually doing it was so much easier!!
After all those skills we just about had enough air in our tanks to go for a little swim. We saw turtles, lots of fish and we followed the reef wall. Stunning.
We did an emergency ascent one to one with Riika, Andy had to do it twice, but I rocked it 🙂 we then had a break! The break is very important – it allows all of the nitrogen in your body to dissolve and then you won’t be at risk of getting the bends! Or decompression sickness. To give it the official title!
The second dive was really fun. We had to navigate with our compass and take off our masks at depth, all easy! We could then enjoy the swim without any more exercises!
We saw an octopus – just coming out from under a rock. So amazing to watch it change colour, it was just awesome. We went down to 18m depth and all the fish – breath taking.
After the dives we had to get more cash out to pay tomorrow and get the final two sections done. We were keen to finish it all this evening, so amidst brown outs and the heat, we finished the course and took the final exam! Woop!
Dive 5
All last night I had dreams of rising to the surface too fast and getting decompression sickness. Totally irrational! I know how to control my buoyancy!! plus we would never get to our limit, and Riika was awesome. So silly.
We did our final dive with Sea Pearl Divers and it was great. Saw so much reef life including a frog fish (took me a while to recognise it!) and turtles, and we didn’t do a single exercise!
Felix’s girlfriend came with us, she was already an advanced diver. Felix used his air a bit too fast so he went up before us, and we got extra time under water. We passed the course and got our certificates! Back at the dive school we met a couple and they gave us tips on where to go diving next! All very exciting. Get such a high from it, it’s so wonderful.
We celebrated a week of intensive learning by going to Charisma Beach and chilling out with some friendly puppies.



