2025
推荐
2025
Yannick和Henri都是很好的专业人员,他们都很善于倾听。通过他们的两艘船,他们提供了与泰塔玛努和南部地区的日常航行。装备很好,安全和服务很好,一切都在欢乐和愉快中进行。另外?该中心是Longitude 181环保型充气娃娃中心的一部分:它对领土的可持续发展和保护龙的发展给予了真正的关注。在法卡拉瓦,你将会得到一个美好的纪念品。
你知道吗? 本评论由我们的专业作者撰写。
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成员的意见DIVE SPIRIT FAKARAVA
4.1/5
23 通知
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以下评分和评论反映的是会员的主观意见,而非 The Little Witty 的观点。
访问于七月 2025
Les deux passes Sud et Nord avec Bastien et votre rêve se réalise.
Si vous voulez plonger et prendre du plaisir sans vous prendre la tête, faites confiance à Bastien et son équipe.
Un bonjour à mon PM Bosco préféré
Merci merci
Si vous voulez plonger et prendre du plaisir sans vous prendre la tête, faites confiance à Bastien et son équipe.
Un bonjour à mon PM Bosco préféré
Merci merci
访问于七月 2025
A diving center really organised and professional.I had a beautiful experience mostly with the instructor Matilde really kind an helpful!
访问于五月 2025
A lot of safety issues. Many, many red flags:
- Contaminated air:
One of the tanks held contaminated air (CO), which led to a dive incident 5 min into the dive. The diver was unable to end the dive immediately because the dive guide had raced off pretty much immediately after descending.
- Unsafe dive guide:
After asking about any potential ear problems at the surface, the dive guide asked if everything was ok at about 5 m, then after everyone gave their ok, he descended very quickly, then raced off.
During the dive, he never asked about air consumption.
He disregarded information about not feeling well and instead raced off to show sleeping white tip sharks ahead and pointed out a nurse shark behind.
It took three attempts to finally get him to end the dive.
- No safety protocols:
When the dive was finally ended after the dive incident, the first group that included the diver with the incident, had to wait ~15-20 minutes on the boat for the second group to finish their dive because an emergency signal (i.e., revving the engine 3 times) was not put in place prior to the dive during the non-existent safety briefing. When the second group eventually surfaced, the guide's plan was to just put the diver with incident on a sand bank, complete everyone's surface interval and go for the second dive. Fortunately, a dive doctor was present in the second dive group, who insisted the diver with suspected CO poisoning be brought straight to the medical centre.
- Oxygen not working:
After a dive incident with them, there was no oxygen supply on board because the gear was faulty, which led to the O2 tank just continuously purging.
- No dive computers:
They sent everyone diving without dive computers. We were told to just "stay at the same depth" as the guide who raced off as soon as we descended. One person who had brought their own dive computer was told not to bring it because it was "too conservative" and made "too many stops" and instead dive without a computer.
- No safety briefing:
The dive briefing only lasted a maximum of a minute and was, thus, missing a lot of things, first and foremost a safety briefing! Furthermore, the dive briefing was conducted on the boat when we were already at the dive site.
- Steel tanks:
They use steel tanks which, according to them, are 5-6 kgs heavier than aluminium tanks. This means that if someone who usually uses 2-3 kgs when diving is majorly overweighted.
- Different sized tanks:
People with smaller BCDs got smaller tanks under the assumption that someone with a small BCD (i.e., XS) consumes less air than someone who needs a bigger BCD.
- Old gear: from BCDs to regs and wetsuits, everything was old and worn down. At least two people's regs weren't 100% working and the wetsuits were more holes than neoprene.
- Contaminated air:
One of the tanks held contaminated air (CO), which led to a dive incident 5 min into the dive. The diver was unable to end the dive immediately because the dive guide had raced off pretty much immediately after descending.
- Unsafe dive guide:
After asking about any potential ear problems at the surface, the dive guide asked if everything was ok at about 5 m, then after everyone gave their ok, he descended very quickly, then raced off.
During the dive, he never asked about air consumption.
He disregarded information about not feeling well and instead raced off to show sleeping white tip sharks ahead and pointed out a nurse shark behind.
It took three attempts to finally get him to end the dive.
- No safety protocols:
When the dive was finally ended after the dive incident, the first group that included the diver with the incident, had to wait ~15-20 minutes on the boat for the second group to finish their dive because an emergency signal (i.e., revving the engine 3 times) was not put in place prior to the dive during the non-existent safety briefing. When the second group eventually surfaced, the guide's plan was to just put the diver with incident on a sand bank, complete everyone's surface interval and go for the second dive. Fortunately, a dive doctor was present in the second dive group, who insisted the diver with suspected CO poisoning be brought straight to the medical centre.
- Oxygen not working:
After a dive incident with them, there was no oxygen supply on board because the gear was faulty, which led to the O2 tank just continuously purging.
- No dive computers:
They sent everyone diving without dive computers. We were told to just "stay at the same depth" as the guide who raced off as soon as we descended. One person who had brought their own dive computer was told not to bring it because it was "too conservative" and made "too many stops" and instead dive without a computer.
- No safety briefing:
The dive briefing only lasted a maximum of a minute and was, thus, missing a lot of things, first and foremost a safety briefing! Furthermore, the dive briefing was conducted on the boat when we were already at the dive site.
- Steel tanks:
They use steel tanks which, according to them, are 5-6 kgs heavier than aluminium tanks. This means that if someone who usually uses 2-3 kgs when diving is majorly overweighted.
- Different sized tanks:
People with smaller BCDs got smaller tanks under the assumption that someone with a small BCD (i.e., XS) consumes less air than someone who needs a bigger BCD.
- Old gear: from BCDs to regs and wetsuits, everything was old and worn down. At least two people's regs weren't 100% working and the wetsuits were more holes than neoprene.
访问于十月 2024
Très belles plongées avec Marie-Charlotte et en particulier celle du mur des requins à Fakarava sud. Un grand merci
Quand nous avons débarqué chez Dive Spirit Fakarava, ma compagne et moi étions un peu comme des figurants échappés du film "La Vie aquatique" de Wes Anderson : masques mal ajustés, palmes dans le mauvais sens, et une grâce aquatique digne d’un manchot enrhumé.
Mais ça, c’était avant "Bastien". Notre Dive Master, notre gourou des bulles, notre maître Jedi en T-shirt néoprène.
Grâce à sa "pédagogie limpide", son "humour toujours à flot", et une "gentillesse aussi profonde que l'océan", Bastien a su transformer nos flippettes aquatiques en apprentis plongeurs confiants — presque élégants, même (si si, on a des témoins).
À la fin de la formation, on se sentait carrément comme James Bond sortant de l’eau : détendus, stylés, et surtout "certifiés PADI Open Water" !
Le club est "ultra pro", l’ambiance "chaleureuse", les sites de plongée "époustouflants", et l’équipement "au top". Mention spéciale pour toute l’équipe, accueillante et bienveillante, qui fait de chaque immersion un vrai bonheur.
Bref, si vous hésitez encore… plongez sans réfléchir (mais avec Bastien !).
???? Merci Dive Spirit Fakarava pour cette aventure inoubliable !