Double Dive Trip
November 10
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November 10
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São Vicente is the second most populous island in Cape Verde, located in the Barlavento group of the archipelago. The São Vicente channel separates it from the neighboring island of Santo Antão, that is just 45 minutes way by ferryboat. The Cesaria Évora International Airport is located south of the Mindelo city, the main urban center of the island and the second largest city in the country, where a large part of the population of the island is concentrated, which in its entirety has about 70,000 inhabitants.
The island, wet and arid, has in its fishing, tourism and exploration of its busy sea port - Porto Grande - its main sources of revenue. The unlimited dive spots and amount of life makes São Vicente a must go when the subject is diving.
The local currency is the Cape Verdean escudo (CVE), but euros are accepted everywhere. The electrical outlets are EURO type and the voltage is 220V.
The island of São Vicente has a surface of 227 Km2. It measures 24 km from east to west and 16 km from north to south. It is the seventh largest island of Cape Verde (or the fourth smallest).
Although it is of volcanic origin, the island is relatively flat, especially the central area, the east side of Calhau and the northern area of the Bay of Gatas. The highest point of the island is the Monte Verde with 774 m of altitude. Other important elevations are Mount Cara - so named for resembling a human face looking at the sky (488 m at the peak of the "chin", 480 m at the tip of the "nose", being the highest elevation of the mountainous formation at the peak of Fateixa, more west 571 m).
The climate is tropical dry, around 24 ° C average air temperature. The temperature of the sea water fluctuates between 20 ° C and 27 ° C during the year. There are two seasons: from November to July the dry season occurs and when the trade winds blow; From August to October is the "rainy season", although the precept is actually low.
The soils of São Vicente island present a diverse variety, generally are narrow, shallow, very stony from volcanic rocks such as basalts, phonoliths, tufts, slag, trachytes, andesites and sedimentary rocks with limestone.
Due to the many clifs and bays we have more than 20 dive spots close to Mindelo. Underwater the rock formations covered by many diferente colors and huge viriaty of species alows everyone to have an amazing diving expirience in São Vicente.
Cape Verde, officially the Republic of Cape Verde, independent country since 1975, is an island country located in an archipelago formed by ten volcanic islands in the central Atlantic Ocean. The Portuguese explorers discovered and colonized the uninhabited islands in the fifteenth century, the first European settlement in the tropics.
Discovered on the day of St. Vincent (January 22) of 1462, by the Portuguese navigator Diogo Gomes, squire of the Infante D. Fernando, to whom belonged by donation of D. John II, the king his uncle. The island was initially granted to the Dukes of Viseu, which, however, did not proceed to its occupation, a situation that was maintained after, by inheritance, São Vicente passed to the property of King D. Manuel I. Due to the endemic lack of water, the island was, for many and many years, relegated to the humble condition of a simple grazing field of the cattle of some owners of the neighboring island of Santo Antão.
São Vicente would be the last of the archipelago's islands to be populated. It was only in 1838, when a coal deposit was established to supply ships en route through the Atlantic in the Bay of Porto Grande, which the population began to settle, being founded the city of Mindelo. With the expansion of steam in the second half of the nineteenth century, St. Vincent had a development boom, with many English coal deposits in operation and dozens of ships to reach the port of Mindelo to refuel.
The island became a mandatory stopover in the middle of the Atlantic for ships from all over the world, and sailors of many nationalities fraternized in the taverns and cafes of Mindelo. By that time, the city had become an important and cosmopolitan cultural center where music, literature and sport were cultivated. It was even thought of the possibility of transferring the capital to Mindelo.
The cycle lasted only a few decades, because with the replacement of coal in the early twentieth century by diesel as a fuel for ships, the important port lost its preponderance, being replaced by the Canaries and Dakar. Later, the island gained fresh air as a transatlantic point of submarine telegraph cables. In 1874 the submarine cables of the Western Telegraph Company were tied, connecting Matiota Beach, on the island of São Vicente, to Madeira and then to Brazil. In 1886, Cape Verde was also connected to Africa and Europe by submarine cable.
From the golden period, the city of Mindelo preserves a relatively well-preserved historical center, dominated by colonial-style architecture, the Governor's Palace being a good example. The National Liceu de Cabo Verde (which later came to be known as the Central School Infante D. Henrique and is the current Jorge Barbosa School), inaugurated in 1917, was of great importance in the development of national Cape Verdean consciousness, having studied there many of the workers of national independence, including Amílcar Cabral and the current President of the Republic Jorge Carlos Fonseca.
In Cape Verde there are no ferocious or poisonous animals. The Cape Verde’s fauna consists mainly of domestic and non-domestic animals such as birds, small reptiles, coleoptera, endemic insects and birds, there are also several species of small apes on the Santiago island.
There are more than 100 species of terrestrial and marine birds, of which about forty reproduce locally, some endemic and others migratory, from Europe and Africa. A good part is marine, building their nests on cliffs around the islands and islets.
Among the varieties of reptiles are lizards, most of them endemic species. The most famous lizard, the Macrocercos cotei (giant lizard), could reach 50 cm in length, this species was last sighted in 1912 and given as extinct in 2013.
The indigenous flora of Cape Verde consists in 224 species. There are 85 endemic species belonging to 11 families and 17 genera. The most representative genus is Diplotaxis (Mostarda-brabo), with 8 species, followed by the Limonium (Carqueja), Lotus (Piorno) and Tornabenea (Funcho), with 5 species. The family with the highest specific diversity is the Asteraceae (composite) with 10 species, among them Sonchus daltonii Webb (Crown-of-king) and Artemisia gorgoneum Webb (Losna).
The flora of Cape Verde, particularly the endemic, when compared to other Macaronesian archipelagos, is relatively poor in numbers of species and individuals that are inserted in extremely vulnerable ecosystems and subjected to the most varied adverse conditions, such as natural factors, erosive and anthropogenic, which have led, over the years, to a growing degradation of species populations.
The weather and sea conditions in Cape Verde allows us to dive all year around. Cape Verde offers exciting dives with a great diversity of species including some endemic ones like the white tail damselfish (Chromis lubbocki) till the nurse shark, exotic frogfish and not forgetting the huge shoals of surgeon fish, soldier fish, yellow grunt fish and other big pelagic fish.
The water temperatures goes from 21ºC to 27ºC and the visibility is between 15 and 30 meters.
High season is from July to November and a 3 or 5mm wetsuit is recommended. On the low season from December to June a 5 or 7mm wetsuit is recommended.
Diving is made from rigid inflatable boats and the boat trips are short, from 10 to 30 minutes. The surface interval is usually made on the boat and we provide water, traditional cookies and local fruit.
Our rib boat has 8,60 meters and is equipped with two 150-horsepower YAMAHA engines, VHF, fish finder visor, GPS, oxygen kit and first aid for your safety. To ensure comfort we have two sturdy ladders as well as seats for all the equipment on board. Undoubtedly one of the best dive boats in São Vicente, Cape Verde.
Know our roots.
The species chosen as the mascot of this center is the white-tailed damselfish (Similiparma hermani) an endemic species of Cape Verde. While juvenil this fish has a bright blue and yellow color and then when it becomes an adult it turns black with a white tail as you can see in the picture.
Meet the members of our team, who work daily to provide the best underwater experiences.
Fábio Samouco
Base Leader fabio.samouco@haliotis.ptFilipa Pinto
Diving Instructor filipa.pinto@haliotis.pt
Telm: + 351 262 781 160
Telm CV: +238 522 77 81
E-mail: saovicente@haliotis.pt
The Haliotis was supported by Promar and the NSRF in a development project of a Subsea Species Guide Portugal and in the tasks of its management tools as well as international promotion.