Swimming with Manatees: Life in the Slow Zone

After doing some research online, we decided to book our snorkel trip with American Pro Diving, located in Crystal River, right off Hwy 19. We were impressed with their affiliation with National Geographic, PADI, and Make A Wish Foundation, and we liked their manatee tour video.
We were off bright and early at 7:00 a.m. to catch up with our manatee friends. There was some uncertainty as to whether we would get a manatee encounter since the majority of manatees migrate away from Crystal River in the summer months. However, we were mostly optimistic we would get to swim with them.
American Pro Diving did not disappoint. Their new Dive Center was spacious and filled with everything you ever wanted to know or buy about manatees. After filling out the paperwork, we geared up with nice, clean wetsuits and snorkel equipment. The staff was great, very courteous and professional.

Next step was watching a short informational video about manatees and how they should be treated since they are endangered wild animals. Afterwards, we piled in our car for the short drive to Pete's Pier, where our pontoon boat was put into King's Bay.

We boarded the boat and got ready for our adventure. Our group consisted of 3 adults and 4 children ages 6-15.

Quinn, our guide gave us a short spiel on safety and then we were off.


We puttered out to King's Bay and after an extremely short 5 minutes ride, we slipped into a quiet inlet and looked for a recently sighted manatee mom and calf.

Quinn dived in and while he didn't spot the mom and baby, he did find a manatee having a seagrass breakfast. Several of us piled into the water to have a look for ourselves.

We scratched her skin, which was leathery, tough and taut, similar to the feel of a football. She was covered with algae which would get dislodged when we scratched her.
She must have liked the scratch massage with her breakfast because she rolled over and let us scratch her tummy. Then someone inadvertently kicked her tail, which she really did not like and she terminated our encounter by swiftly swimming away.
We knew we didn't hurt her, but we did annoy her and as a result we were really careful to keep our fins to ourselves and out of the way.
We got back in the boat and puttered off to another location close by where we met at least 10 additional manatees, 2 of which were moms and their newborn calves. One newborn was only about 1-2 days old and looked like a small grey white sausage appended to a giant grey sausage. It was very cute.

Due to recent storms, water visibility was poor, so mask and snorkel were key to a good look at our manatee friends.


Everyone had a great time. For our next wildlife excursion, we're thinking of getting scuba certified and diving in Florida's Rainbow River where the water clarity is crystal clear.
Dolores Parker is a blogger for our sister site Downloadsquad.com. She lives in Florida and enjoys taking frequent trips off the beaten path.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Jun 28th 2007 @ 3:18PM
Willy said...
I'm so envious of your experience. It looks like you had a great time; this is an experience you'll remember forever. At $62, this seems like money well-spent!
You wrote: "The staff was great, very courteous and professional." Therefore, I'm assuming the girl in the first photo holding the yellow fin is NOT staff?
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Jun 28th 2007 @ 4:52PM
Dolores Parker said...
Willy,
Thanks for your note. Yes, it was $62 well spent and I still wonder why I didn't buy that dvd/video.
But au contraire, despite that lass in the photo being young, she could estimate your size in wetsuits like nobody's business.
cheers!
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