I have three days before the kids join me in
I'm not really sure what kind of slacker has taken over my body and given the boot to my restless, adventurous soul, but the imposter is currently well-entrenched. I've explored jungles, rainforests and barrier reefs, but I've never stayed in a World Heritage living museum – and that's what
I may have to re-evaluate.
So I muster some energy and walk a few steps from my lovingly renovated room to the
I strike up a conversation with a couple, Martin and Siobhan, on their second honeymoon. Turns out we all once lives within blocks of each other in
They ask what brings me to
"Congratulations, then," replies Siobhan. "Join us for dinner?"
We jaunt off to the famous Astrolab Observatory Restaurant and dine alfresco in the
The Morning Reckoning
Sitting up in bed, I catch a glimpse of my dive gear brooding in the corner and in an obviously plaintive mood, the zipper untouched since my arrival. As I stare, I realize the "poetic ease" gig is up, so I grab the bag and head off to visit my friends Nolo and Monica Ambrosi at PADI 5-Star Ocean Encounters dive center.
Like me, they're taking advantage of the quiet before the blitz of kids Sea Camp, of which they are a primary sponsor. They both decide to join me on the dive boat, and we go to one of my favorite critter dives, Small Wall. Here, in a sand patch a few fin kicks from the boat, the divemaster unearths a stark-white mantis shrimp that peers up at us from its perfectly round hole. I kick down to what is, literally, a small wall and settle in for a bit of slow-motion exploration.
Between dives the boat heads over to
Christian, one of Nolo and Monica's two sons, loves to tell a story to divers about the "Beaconese Indians" who once flourished on
Give Me Meat
That night I meet up with Monica, Nolo and Christian at a true locals-only restaurant. Well, it's not really a restaurant – it's more of a horse stable. With a big grill. And a bar. And lots and lots of meat. On top of it all, it's only open on Fridays, and good luck getting a table if you arrive after 5:30 p.m. The chef's not even a chef – he's a graphic designer during the other six days of the week.
The place is called Equus (the equines will probably peek out of their stalls during your meal), and there are only two items on the menu: a skewer of I-don't-want-to-quit-eating Argentinean beef and the likewise sumptuous chicken. You get a basket of bread and a garlic dipping sauce, and that's it. After the first bite, you pretty much lose the desire to ever eat anything else for the rest of your life.
This has become one of my favorite places to eat in the
Kids Gone Wild
The next afternoon, full of Argentinian beef and Kura Hulanda laissez-faire, I pick up my wife (Cindy) and kids (Ethan, 7, and Gillian, 4) at the airport and head off to the Royal Resorts condominiums next to the Curacao Seaquarium and Ocean Encounters, the gathering place for Kids Sea Camp. About 15 minutes after checking in, my kids pretty much disappear.
About three days into Kids Sea Camp Gillian sits next to me on the beach and proclaims
She and my son, Ethan, have been absorbed by this phenomenon called Kids Sea Camp. The two of them had talked about Sea Camp every single night at dinner for about a month before we came, and I feared that their expectations might exceed the reality of this family dive adventure. It didn't happen. They stay either I the water or immersed in the world of water from sunrise to bedtime. If they weren't full-blown water rats before this trip, they've established their water cred during this ocean-centric family week.
Ethan goes crazy for SASY (a modified tank and BC that kids use to "dive" on the surface) and follows me around the Seaquarium lagoon like a bona fide diver, flashing me the OK sign every time I look up to see how he's doing. The lagoon has a Plexiglas wall with holes in it for feeding big green sea turtles and equally large nurse sharks that like the same kind of free handouts. Ethan bounces back and forth between the two until it's time to surface.
Seizing my chance to see the other end of the Sea Camp spectrum, I join the newly minted preteen divers on a reef dive with one of the aquarium's sea lions and on their open-ocean dolphin-encounter dive. Although it's odd to see sea lions in Curacao, the Seaquarium houses the SOS (Sea lions in
Throughout the week, we parents get to indulge in what is perhaps the best-kept secret in the Caribbean: the undersea world of
As a parent, only one disconcerting thing happens all week. During the beach bonfire night, there's a live band. And whose young daughter is the first to get on stage and groove to the beat? Yep, mine: Gillian. Boy, am I in trouble when she gets older.
About this time, I'm struck by a profound moment of clarity. My days as a man of leisure and poetic ease have officially come to a screeching halt. But at least my family can keep coming to Curacao every year, where I can share one of my favorite corners of the








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