Top 5 best family dive adventures with younger divers ages 4-16

Top 5 dives for family, The Philippines, kids Sea Camp, kids and diving

MARGO PEYTON’S: Top 5 best family dive adventures with young children, plus many more.

1. Bonaire: This island is at the top of my kid-friendly list because of many of the condo properties, such as Buddy Dive, Capt Don’s, and Bel Mar. They are perfect for larger families, offering 1-, 2-, and 3-bedroom villas. Buddy Dive, in particular, offers the Buddy Dive Academy, with PADI programs such as SASY for kids age 5-7, PADI Seal Team for kids age 8 & 9, and Jr. Open Water, Jr. Advanced, and even Jr. Rescue.

Their staff is well-trained with oodles of experience with kids. Not to mention, Bonaire is one of the calmest, clearest, and easiest places to dive in the world. Parents and their certified youngsters can jump right off Buddy Dive’s dock and enjoy a nice, easy dive. Since kids aged 10 and 11 have a 40-foot max depth, it’s often hard to find places where the sandy bottom does all the work at 40 ft.

Here, parents can relax and enjoy their kids diving with tarpon, turtles, schools of colorful tropical fish, and, of course, the coral nursery trees. Bonaire also has lots to do topside for families, including one of my favorites, Blow Karting on the world’s largest salt track! Bonaire caters to every level of diver and is one of our more affordable programs.

2. St. Lucia: I just love bringing families to this island. It’s world-famous for honeymooners, but now that the honeymooners have children, they can return to celebrate with the whole family. Some of the best diving is below the famous Pitons, and there are some great wrecks for teen divers to explore. It’s crazy cool to dive some of those volcanic formations and pinnacles under the sea. Kids especially love Superman’s Flight, one of the best drift dives on the island. Anse Chastanet is perfect for both diving and non-diving families. They offer paddleboarding, kayaking, sunrise and sunset yoga, volcano hiking, jungle biking, and, of course, scuba diving.

Did I mention chocolate tasting and farm-to-table culinary classes with cupcake decorating? How about live music and jazzy sunset cruises? And if that’s not enough, every May and June, you may be lucky enough to catch the sea turtles nesting on the Anse Mamin Beach. I have also been fortunate to catch the sea turtles’ hatch in late July and August. We released 98 baby turtles 2 years ago, and it was amazing! During the Kids Sea Camp weeks at Anse Chastanet, kids can learn to dive, do SASY or Seal Team, and explore the protected marine sanctuary.

American, Delta, and United Airlines all offer daily nonstop flights from the US, making it one of the easiest places to reach. There are 1- and 2-bedroom Piton-view rooms, as well as beach-level rooms for families. Dive St. Lucia is very family-friendly. All dives are guided, and the ratio for kids is 1 instructor or Dive Master to every 2 kids. It does not get any safer than diving with Dive St. Lucia.

3. The Philippines is also high up on my list with Sea Explorers, and I would just tell you that taking kids to dive with Whale Sharks in Oslob, turtles at Apo Island, and to experience the largest to the smallest marine animals on one trip is truly life-changing. Pura Vida Homes is perfect for families. We sell out for Kids Sea Camp every year. Traveling in a private guided group is the way to go here, with an experienced dive team including Margo, Tom, and Bigs.

Top 5, Palau, kids and diving, family dive vacations4. Palau: Yes, I know it seems a long way to go, but Palau is definitely a Wow! Kids love JellyFish Lake; it’s the only time they don’t have to be afraid because the jellyfish don’t sting. It’s a rare opportunity to see the 8th wonder of the world! Palau is also one of the few places in the world where kids can safely learn about and dive with sharks, manta rays, and other big marine life. Many of the dive sites are in shallow water, easy for all to enjoy.

5. Fiji: To me, Fiji is all about family. It is all about love and children, music and dance, food and friendship. It’s a place where culture becomes an integral part of the trip.  Kids have so many opportunities to interact with the local villages and local children. It’s a very humbling experience and for sure an educational vacation. I believe there is one resort that stands out for its Luxury 5-star service and diving: Jean-Michel Cousteau’s resort. The name kinda says it all. 1- and 2-bedroom villas are perfect for families, with the Point Bure for families of 5. There is shore diving and spectacular reef and shark dives. JMC has a full-service, kid-friendly dive team. They can cater to any diet and are also special-needs-friendly. I have had great experiences at Castaway Island and Beqa Lagoon as well, but I would for sure say JMC is absolute perfection for kids.

With beautiful over-water cabanas and a private lagoon to snorkel or paddle board, it’s perfect for families that want peace & tranquility. Mayan Princess offers 1 and 2-bedroom oceanfront villas with full Kitchens. The dive sites are 5-10 minutes away, and the boats are large and spacious. Both locations offer excellent in-ocean training areas for Seal Team & SASY. All-inclusive resorts are an easy way to budget your trip and get the most for your money!

PLUS FIVE

I know you only asked for 5, but since kids and diving are my life, I’m going to give you a few bits more. For liveaboards and kids, you can’t beat the Rocio Del Mar Team in the Sea of Cortez and Socorro. They are like papas in the water with kids and families, and really have an outstanding safety record. We offer a full-boat charter, so it’s all about the kids. Dancing with sea lions and giant manta is an amazing liveaboard experience for kids and parents alike.

 Roatan: The Bay Islands continue to be one of the dive world’s hidden treasures. The marine park has blossomed, and since its inception, there has been a huge comeback of turtles, large schools of fish, grouper, and lobster. There are so many shallow sites and beautiful beaches to explore. My two favorite properties for families are Turquoise Bay Beach Resort and Mayan Princess, both all-inclusive, owned and operated by local families. The staff is super kid-friendly at both resorts and dive operations, with Mayan Divers and Subway Divers offering lots of smaller tanks and kids’ gear. Turquoise Bay offers free horseback riding every day and has just completed a total resort renovation.

I did not talk about the beautiful Cayman Islands, where my own son was born and where my kids learned to dive, because everyone already knows how awesome they are. They’re easy to get to, lots to do, and a great choice for so many reasons.

 All of the above are featured Kids Sea Camp destinations. That does not mean that’s all there is out there; it just means those are the ones I feel are best suited for our younger divers, SASY and Seals.

Taking your kids on dive adventures around the world is giving them a living classroom to learn in. It’s giving them a global view of the world and all its possibilities. It’s taking their dreams and making them a reality, a priceless family bonding adventure.

Kids Sea Camp has contributed to over 8,100 youth certifications and taken over 350 families a year diving. We have a perfect safety record, with zero accidents. Please join our Kids Sea Camp family at one of these locations this year. Cherish the opportunity to dive with your kids while they are still young. It’s one of the most beautiful, forever memories you can give them.

Margo Peyton, Owner, Kids Sea Camp & Family Dive Adventures
PADI Instructor 57474

Screws & Hammers in the Galapagos

Kids Scuba diving, Galapagos, Kids Sea Camp, Margo Peyton, Family Scuba Diving Vacations, Family Dive Adventures, Scuba Diving, diving with seals

A few screws and a heap of hammers diving after spinal surgery in the Galapagos

During the summer of 2017, I noticed that my back was curving, and the curve worsened quickly—I started to get shorter! Initially, we thought it would be fine, but as more people commented on my condition, we checked my spine. The diagnosis was severe: I had a 60-degree scoliosis and needed an operation urgently to prevent further deterioration. The procedure involved breaking my back, straightening it, and securing it with two titanium screws in each vertebra, along with two cobalt chrome rods to maintain the alignment. The removed bone fragments were processed into a pulp and then reinserted as a bone graft to fuse the spine at 10 levels. I thought, “Wow, that’s quite the operation!” But I wondered how I could continue diving with a fragile back like this.

Thanks to the incredible team at Boston Children’s Hospital, I successfully underwent a ten-hour surgery. During my post-operative visit, Dr. Hresko reassured me, saying, “You’re not fragile, Zeb—you are screwed together with titanium!” At that moment, I felt confident that I could dive again.

Margo is always right

As a regular participant in Kids Sea Camp, Margo Peyton was the most natural person to consult. She has taken numerous children and adults with special needs diving, so I was sure she would have a plan! Margo herself had undergone back surgery, but was still an outstanding diver, so I knew I was in good hands. She assured me that diving was still possible and implemented a few special handling instructions for my situation, which was highly beneficial (she’s always right!).

Kids Sea Camp, Kids and diving

First, my dad suggested I learn to dive sidemount to reduce pressure on my spine. Honestly, I think he was also interested in advancing his diving skills into a more technical area! Margo arranged for my dad and me to go to Grand Cayman to take a PADI sidemount course with DiveTech. Although it felt unusual to dive this way, it was interesting, but I found the extra hassle of managing two tanks cumbersome. I appreciated learning the technique, but wanted to feel normal again.

Once I was comfortable with sidemount diving, we decided to book a trip to the Galapagos. Margo got the necessary approvals—this was essential since sidemount diving had been banned on the liveaboards. She communicated with the crew and management of Galapagos Sky, who were incredibly accommodating and made a notable exception for me. As the trip approached, I felt my back getting stronger, and I resumed my workouts at the gym. I reached a point where I was ready to try regular diving again. After a brief dive using a standard tank close to home, I was ecstatic to discover how magical it felt to be underwater again, as I had in the past, without the anxiety of navigating different systems.

Diving in the Galapagos

We were all set for the Galapagos, and I was thrilled to dive using a regular central cylinder. The crew of the Galapagos Sky catered to all my needs. Margo chartered the entire boat for my family and three others, which allowed her to customize everything for my success. We selected our dive sites, received assistance for easier entry and exit, and had our private guides.

I appreciated that the staff noticed my significant scar down my back; it was humbling for me—a fit young man with a six-pack—to have to ask for help. The crew helped me step down into the Panga without my gear, then passed my equipment to me and assisted in getting me ready. This arrangement meant I didn’t have to carry my gear or navigate steps while suited up. After a short ride to the dive site, everyone else back-rolled into the water, while I side-rolled to minimize stress on my back.

“I can’t see that turtle through the wall of hammerheads.”

And wow, was it worth it! The underwater life was beyond amazing. We encountered schools of hammerhead sharks on every dive—there were so many that at times I wanted to say, “Seriously, I can’t see that turtle through the wall of hammerheads; could you move aside a bit?” Then there were the majestic whale sharks, gracefully gliding through the water without a sound; these gentle giants seemed just as curious about us as we were about them. I also had the incredible experience of diving with large oceanic wild dolphins. Although I had seen them playing at the surface many times, I had never had the opportunity to swim underwater with them while diving.  

Loving the seals

One of my all-time favorites was the seals. They appear so “clumsy” on land but are full of grace, fun, and frolicking underwater. They loved to play in my bubbles, do tricks around us, sneak up on us, and even try to get us to join in the fun. We also encountered marine iguanas, red-lipped batfish, huge bait balls of fish, and an astonishing variety of birds. There was a sense of peace every evening as we moored overlooking Darwin’s Arch and the surrounding islands. The orange glow of volcanoes on the horizon, the gentle lapping of the waves, and the delightful aroma of meals prepared by the crew created a wonderful atmosphere. There were so many photos to take and experiences to cherish. Sharks were plentiful and abundant; Galapagos sharks, silkies, hammerheads, and other reef sharks were present on every dive.

“The experience of a lifetime.”

Kids Scuba, Family Scuba Diving Adventures, Kids Sea Camp, Margo Peyton, Philippines family dive tripsAs Margo always said, “The experience of a lifetime.” I feel so fortunate to have had this opportunity, thanks to the collaboration of Margo Peyton, the owner of Kids Sea Camp, Fraser Purdon from Scubapro, my parents, and many others who worked together to ensure my safety during this trip. I am incredibly thankful to all of you for making this experience possible.

If anyone has similar experiences or concerns, please get in touch with me. Scoliosis is surprisingly common, and I’m happy to help. Kids Sea Camp is a wonderful place where families of all abilities and disabilities can dive together. I love them so much!

By Zebedee Wakely, Kids Sea Camp, PADI Master Diver

Grandmother uses KSC for quality family time

Grandmother divers, family dive vacations, kids sea camp

Discovering Kids Sea Camp is a real gift to my family  

My two adult sons, Danny and Chris, are divers, and they convinced me, 25 years ago, to become a PADI-certified diver.  When they married their wives, Celenie and Stela, they also joined the adventures and became divers. Over the years, I had made taking dive trips with my sons and their wives a top priority for quality family time. 

When my grandkids came along, much to my sadness, the family dive trips came to an end. Then one day, as I was thumbing through Scuba Diving Magazine, dreaming of taking dive adventures with my grandkids, I discovered Kids Sea Camp. 

Kids Scuba, Family Scuba Diving Adventures, Kids Sea Camp, Margo PeytonI immediately called and shared my find with my sons, and suggested we start taking family dive trips again. They were all for it, and in 2013, we were off on our first trip — to Palau Royal Resort and diving with Sam’s Tours and Kids Sea Camp.

The grandkids were 3, 7, 7 & 10. Benjamin, Sophia, and Hunter started SASY with Margo, while Jackson, at age 10, joined the PADI Jr. Open Water Diver class. We, the adult kids, felt like we had gone to heaven. We enjoyed diving during the days while the kids had fun learning with other kids. It was absolutely PERFECT for everyone! There are times set when adults and kids dive or snorkel together, too. Because of owner Margo Peyton’s expertise, instructor training, and perfect safety record with kids, she is granted a special waiver to dive in the ocean with PADI Seal Team kids aged 8 & 9 worldwide. 

Kids Sea Camp in Fiji

We have traveled with Kids Sea Camp to Fiji, where the kids had run of the entire resort, and while Benji was still in SASY, Hunter and Sophia advanced to the PADI Seal Team classes. We had lots of interaction with the local people, and everyone on staff was not only helpful, warm, and hospitable but also genuinely interested in our experience.  When we were leaving Fiji, my grandkids were crying and hugging the very special people they had come to know and love. Hunter even said (while sobbing), “How can I possibly leave these people?”  You know your grandkids have had a life-changing experience when their emotional reactions are so intense, and they don’t want to leave. 

In the summer of 2017, we traveled to Kids Sea Camp Philippines with Sea Explorers. My second grandson, Hunter, became a PADI Jr diver and joined Jackson diving with the other certified kids. We now have 3 generations of divers in our family, diving together. 

It seemed impossible to top Palau or Fiji, but Margo & Tom managed to do it yet again. As always. The Pura Vida Homes resort was luxurious, and the staff and service were nothing short of excellent. I had a torn ankle tendon prior to the trip, and a divemaster was always right there on the ladder to help me take off my equipment and hand it up. The Banka boats were the coolest and most spacious dive boats I have ever been on. 

Whale sharks in Oslob

We all went to Oslob Island, where we swam and dove with EIGHT whale sharks!! An absolutely mind-blowing experience and a memory created that we, as a family, will never, ever forget. How many families get to have an experience like that?

Each trip is better than the last. Kids Sea Camp sets the bar high with dive operators. Margo runs her trips with expert organization, safety, and professionalism. I love the many interesting and fun outings, events, and activities planned for us to enjoy as a family, out of the water. 

All of our trips have been, as the MasterCard commercial says, “priceless.”

I know for absolute certainty that our next trip will be another amazing adventure filled with precious family time, diving, and unforgettable memories. 

Sophia and Benji are next to get certified, then we will all be a family of divers again. Owners Margo & Tom Peyton provide a very personal experience, from planning your trip to assisting you every step along the way. Tom and Margo arrange visits to local schools or villages, provide special-needs care and special-occasion surprises, give educational presentations, and so much great family time. 

In Palau, Margo set up a spectacular helicopter ride over the Rock Islands for us. The result of all the personal service is why we keep coming back! It’s impossible to put into words how these unique family dive adventures have bonded our family and created memories for me with my grandkids that will last them a lifetime.

We have experienced fascinating cultures and explored new worlds so very different than our own. Each of these trips has expanded our knowledge, appreciation, acceptance, and love of people from all over the world. At the end of each trip, Margo Peyton and Brad Holland have left us memories to last a lifetime, documented in their photo gallery on www.familydivers.com. 

Thank you, thank you, thank you, Tom and Margo, Peyton, for creating Kids Sea Camp, the gift of being able to dive and travel with my kids and grandkids.

Story by Vicki Singley

Fiji changes a young adult’s perspective on life at Kids Sea Camp

Fiji, Kids Sea Camp

I see my life differently because of Kids Sea Camp

I took a trip with my family to Kids Sea Camp at Beqa Lagoon Resort in Fiji, an island in the middle of the Pacific. My life has been pretty different since that amazing experience.

Fiji, Kids Sea Camp, Kids and scuba diving, family vacationBefore my trip to Fiji, I had no clue we were going to visit a village inhabited by what I would consider poverty-stricken families, and a school that didn’t have enough notebooks, pencils, or basic supplies for its children. I thought we were just going to be scuba diving, but meeting those children who did not have the most basic things I have in my life hit me hard.

I realized that what we view as problems in our society, not having a girlfriend, not being invited to that party, are drastically different than their problems, which are much more real and significant. They spend time worrying about where the next meal will come from, hoping for medical treatment when sick, and about getting through the jungle safely when walking to school. The experiences I had in Fiji made me realize how fortunate I am, and to appreciate the little things I never gave much thought to.

Fijians, smiling and singing

When I heard my dad, sister, and I were traveling to the Fijian Islands, I didn’t know exactly what to expect. Learning that the islands are in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, I pictured a chain of islands full of luscious jungles, lots of sunshine, and warm blue water. To say that my experience was so different from that picture would be an understatement. When we arrived at the boat to take us to our island, the rain was falling so hard it felt like pellets against my skin. Big waves didn’t help either, surf splashing onto our boat, soaking our clothes. Yet when we arrived on the island of Beqa, the locals and staff from the dive resort were smiling and singing; they helped us off the boat and gave out hot beverages. 

Bula to everyone

Already, I was learning how friendly the Fijian people were. They taught me some basic words in the native language: “Bula,” meaning hello, and “Moce,” meaning goodbye. I thought at the beginning of the week that the weather was so important, but later I realized that the people of Fiji left the strongest mark.

While the diving was truly amazing and all the other kids at Sea Camp were awesome, getting to know the local inhabitants meant much more in the long run. Every day, we dove at least twice before returning to the resort for lunch. After that, we would usually play soccer or volleyball with the staff and villagers. When the locals came, I realized they were very different from us outwardly but much the same on the inside.

Villagers welcomed us with open arms

Some kids would show up in torn-up shirts and shorts with all kinds of stains that looked like they’d been there for weeks or months. After a couple of days, we started to get to know the staff and villagers better. Every day, we would walk to their villages, and they would smile, cheek to cheek, and welcome us with the traditional greeting of “Bula”.

Fijian poverty hit me very hard

It was the 4th day when we entered the village of Ravi Ravi in Fiji. Fijian poverty hit me very hard. I saw families with four or more children, as well as adults, living in huts and tiny shacks. To this day, that picture has never left my mind. Instead of being sad, I saw the villagers happy as can be, doing their hard daily work. I couldn’t even imagine living like that. Seeing them living with almost nothing and being as happy as they were made me realize how my everyday problems are nothing compared to theirs.

The next day, we visited a school, and that left the most lasting impression. Many of us brought donations and school supplies for the students. As we walked past the village and into the jungle, the trees grew larger, and the path grew more rugged and untamed. Finally, as we hiked up the last hill, the school came into view. Kids were playing on what was supposed to be their playground. The dirt playground consisted of a basketball hoop made from a wooden bucket and tree leaves, attached to a large tree branch, and two cardboard swings, also hanging from a tree. 

Fiji, Kids Sea CampThe school

The inside of the classrooms was also impactful. As we walked inside, I saw what kids use every day for school: notebooks, pencils, and markers. The big difference between ours was that each classroom just had a few pencils, notebooks, and markers, so three kids had to share one pencil, marker, and notebook. I had never thought of a lack of materials in schools. If we don’t have them, we simply go out and buy whatever we need. Those kids did not have this opportunity. I know the materials that Kids Sea Camp arranges for the school help them, but deep inside, I feel like we could have done so much more.

Still so good and happy

I feel like I changed for the better after my journey to Fiji with Kids Sea Camp to dive and learn about the Fijian people. I realize how many little things we have that others don’t. Those little things aren’t little at all to kids in Fiji and elsewhere around the world. I can’t even imagine waking up every day and walking 35 minutes through the jungle to go to school. I will never forget the kids at the school with no windows, no floors, and no books, yet still so good-natured and happy.

My takeaway from my trip is that the little things in life matter most, and that family is important. While diving with sharks was an amazing experience, my most lasting and important impression was to appreciate how fortunate I am, not to take basic things for granted, and to realize that I have a responsibility to reach out and help others who are less fortunate.

A meaningful vacation

Fiji, Kids Sea Camp
From right to (left) Skip Sallee,(middle) Liam Sallee (far right), Elza Sallee

I would like to thank my family, especially my father, for helping me see such a contrast in the world. And a special thanks to TomMargo Peyton, and Kids Sea Camp for creating such a meaningful vacation. I can’t wait to experience our next family adventure with KSC in the Philippines this summer.

By Liam Sallee, age 14 

Liam, his sister Eliza, and their father, Skip, will be attending their 8th Kids Sea Camp week this year in the Philippines. Liam has almost 100 dives.

Moments that last a lifetime in Cayman Brac

Cayman Bra dive trips, Kids Sea Camp, Kids Scuba, Family Scuba Diving Adventures, Margo Peyton, Family Dive Adventures, Scuba Diving

Kids Sea Camp making a lifetime of memories in the Cayman Brac

By Evan Groth

Cayman Brac Reef Resort: Sharing moments of dazzling Caribbean sunsets, salty sea breezes, and night skies brimming with stars brings me nostalgia found only in the best of memories. These memories are of my first Kids Sea Camp adventure spent in Cayman Brac. Every day was spent to its fullest, and every moment was full of friendship, adventure, and peace of mind. 

The underwater world is filled with silence, mystery, and grace. Throughout my first ocean dives, I discovered what keeps bringing divers back under the waves. Strange colors and the alien movements and fish patterns lure the mind into a state of serenity and Zen. Weightlessness and silence filled only with the most foreign sounds envelop you in a trance and give you the impression of a stranger in a strange world.  Everything is shrouded in mystery, and nature feels as powerful as it should be.  These feelings lure divers into the underwater world, but Kids Sea Camp offers even more. (See The Cayman Islands Gallery)

The president and founder of Kids Sea Camp, Margo Peyton, did the impossible by taking something perfect and making it more remarkable.  I arrived at the 2018 Cayman Brac week excited but a little nervous. Most of the guests had traveled to Kids Sea Camp weeks together for years and I thought I would be the stranger among them.  I couldn’t have been more wrong. The atmosphere was the most welcoming I had ever felt traveling, and within a day or two, I felt like I was longtime friends with almost all the guests at the resort. When people say that Kids Sea Camp is one great family, it means it’s a place where you can bond with those around you faster than you thought possible.  Not for a moment did I feel like an outsider, and I got to experience diving at its maximum capacity. 

Kids Sea Camp, Kids and diving

I dove thrice daily, starting as a PADI Open Water Diver. The instruction and care provided by the staff were unmatched, and throughout the week I achieved my PADI Advanced Open Water and PADI Rescue Diver certifications.  As a diver, I grew much faster than I thought possible in such a brief time, and despite my rigorous training schedule, I didn’t feel rushed or stressed at all.  I did my training and certification with other people my age all while making unforgettable friends and memories.

Kids Sea Camp changes diving from an underwater safari to an undersea fantasy world. The limit is what you can come up with.  Every dive has the sightseeing and sea creatures you expect, but Kids Sea Camp adds a twist. At the end of the dives before safety stops, everyone plays around as kids should.  Sandy bottoms lead to filming underwater lightsaber fights. Finger wrestling tournaments, underwater acrobatics shows, and bubble ring contests are common. When we get old we stop playing as much, but playing underwater feels like playing in space, something to try no matter your age. 

I guess I am saying that Kids Sea Camp has something for everyone.  Whether you seek tranquility, thrill, sharks, or the sparks of new friendships.  Despite only being able to see each other for one week a year, it is clear all those on Kids Sea Camp are close and love each other like family.  Becoming a part of that family has been an honor for me, and I already can’t wait for next summer.  I work for Kids Sea Camp as a part-time summer employee trying to become an instructor.  As a 19-year-old college student, I have the best job in the world.  Margo and Tom gave me an opportunity I could never have dreamed of years ago. To travel the world diving with amazing people, there isn’t much more I could ask for.

If you are considering going to Kids Sea Camp for the first time, I can highly recommend it. There is nothing quite like it in the diving industry because it’s not just a company—it’s a family. It’s a place for kids to learn to dive and fall in love with the Ocean. You will remember your Cayman Brac KSC week forever.

Perfection is easily desired but rarely achieved on vacation

Perfect dive trip, Palau, Kids Sea Camp

I rarely write letters of recommendation

Dear MargoI rarely write letters of recommendation, I hate the constant solicitation from Amazon to write reviews, but it is with great pleasure that I write this note to you. First, thank you for sharing your wonderful husband with us here at our first Pacific Kids Sea Camp trip, especially at this time. Tom Peyton is warm and generous and made our first days at Kids’ Sea Camp Palau a very pleasant affair.

Making the effort to be perfect in Palau

Rarely have I seen so many people work so hard to make a vacation work well for my family. I know that some look for perfection in such vacations; I do not. I look for effort. Perfection is easily desired but rarely achieved. Sincere effort is rarely made and is usually driven by rules, not the heart. Only one can be achieved, and it takes a lot of hard work. Your choice of resorts around the world is, in my opinion, excellent. I can’t turn around without finding one of your staff waiting to see what I want and to try to make my vacation better. Your people are good at what they do and are sincere in their friendships. It is great just being around them.

Josh is wonderful

This brings me to Josh Comay. The number of fun and sometimes serious conversations my family has shared with these two warm and funny people will leave an impact that we will take home with us. Their concern for our stay isn’t lip service; it is from the heart. I know that I’ve already written this, but I can’t state it firmly enough. Tom may have told you that I have an overboard sense of humor. It takes stamina and patience to deal with it at times. Josh took it in and gave back in equal measure, something that takes courage and a great sense of humor. I am grateful for that and their friendship. That brings us to time spent. I came on this trip with the notion that I would learn a bit about underwater photography. (See KSC gallery)

Instead, I learned a great deal, including a good bit about my above-water photography. I am a practiced amateur at above-water shooting. The conversations I’ve had with Josh have given me great insight into shooting at depth, but they’ve also made me rethink a number of things about my picture-taking in general. His effort there was quite high and is much appreciated. In fact, the time he spent teaching me was extensive and pleasant. I will forever carry a warm spot for Nudibranchs in my heart due to conversations with Tom.

Teaching my children

The kids I have coached and refereed in youth soccer. Finding staff, people who understand children and teaching, and getting good outcomes, is tough. In my opinion, American culture has forgotten that teachers are a valuable asset in the emotional and external development of our children. We only want kids to learn what we want them to learn, forgetting that other thinking and opinion is good for them. I have been impressed by the efforts to teach my kids about the oceans, about being in the marine environment, and about our obligations to take care of that resource. Most of all, your staff’s efforts to teach my kids to behave carefully while scuba diving are greatly appreciated.

My brother-in-law is a huge WWII fan. In part, we came to Palau so he could visit and experience the WWII history here. The recognition by your folks was important to him, and it has led to numerous discussions on how to make that part of his vacation as fulfilling as possible. I will end by thanking you for your efforts on behalf of my family and for making my holiday most enjoyable.

With Regards, Lyle O. Ross, Husband of Alice Chen and father of Auden and Emerson Chen

Family finds their vacation answer with Kids Sea Camp

Kids Sea Camp, Kids and diving, Galapagos dive vacations

“Honey, I think I found what we have been looking for!”

By Patti Snyder

In the spring of 2010, I sat at my computer late one night, searching for our next family vacation. Sam was 5, and we had recently adopted our son, Hunter, also 5, from China. My husband, Andy, and I were avid divers. While Andy’s diving background was drysuit diving in the cold ocean off the coast of Scotland, I preferred warmer waters. As avid cave divers, we loved diving in the springs in Florida, and having kids meant that cave diving was in the past for us. While we enjoyed the beach and boating, our passion was scuba diving, so we searched for the perfect family vacation.

Kids Sea Camp, Amazing vacations, family vacation

Unfortunately, we thought, kids and scuba diving would not go together very well. As I sat at my computer, hopeful, I entered various words into the search engines online: “family diving,” “kids scuba diving,” “family vacations.” Kids Sea Camp popped up, and I turned to my husband and said, “Honey, I think I found what we have been looking for!”

I read everything about Kids Sea Camp and its founder, Margo Peyton. If you Google either of those phrases, there are pages of great stories and information, and it’s all positive. (See our KSC gallery)

I called the next day, and Margo answered the phone. We spoke at length, as I had many concerns because Hunter couldn’t swim or speak English, and Sam, who has ADHD, is not one to sit through a course. Maybe it was selfish of us, but I just knew we had to go.

Margo assured me it would all work out, and we booked our first of many trips to Buddy Dive in Bonaire for June 2010. At this point, Hunter was not too enamored with the ocean, as his first water event occurred at home, when he fell into the pool and sank to the bottom. This soon was remedied with swim lessons, and by spring, he had donned a wetsuit and was playing in the waves in St. Augustine, Florida.

When we arrived at Buddy Dive, we were apprehensive. What was I thinking going off diving while my two 5-year-old kids were left with the Kids Sea Camp staff? My fears were allayed when I watched the kids feeding beautiful parrot fish off the dock. They were laughing and having the time of their life. By the end of the week, these two 5-year-olds were making new friends, learning about fish, and even managing giant strides off the dock in SASY gear. They loved their instructors and learned to set up and use their gear. We have never looked back.

Over the past eight years, our family vacations have been with Kids Sea Camp. There were challenges along the way. The hardest part for Sam was completing the book work for his Jr. Open Water class. But you put Sam in a wetsuit and scuba gear, and the little diver in him takes right over. Sam and Hunter love zero gravity, and that little kid who once sank to the bottom of the pool is now a varsity swimmer and triathlete. They want to experience life to the fullest, and nothing holds them back. We have taken them diving at Kids Sea Camp in Bonaire, Grand Cayman, Roatan, Utila, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent, and, coming up this month, Belize. Our first liveaboard Kids Sea Camp in the Socorro Islands is planned for this December.

Kids Sea Camp, Kids and diving

Some of those KSC places have seen our faces more than once. Each time we go, we reconnect with families we have met and meet new ones. We have watched as our kids (and other families’ kids) have transitioned from SASY to Seals to JOW to AOW divers. We are all divers; watching our kids become divers is a bond we share.

I am the lucky one. I have three men in my life who share my passion for the sea. Not all of the places Margo researches for Kids Sea Camp pass her muster because it takes a special family-friendly place, a special family-friendly PADI dive instructor, and a special local family-owned operation for her to feel safe entrusting “her kids” in the underwater world.

Margo is a PADI instructor whose whole life is dedicated to keeping kids safe while teaching them about the ocean. All of the resorts are PADI five-star dive centers. Then there are the extras that are included, like private boats, kids’ dive gear, private instructors, and even Margo and Tom. There are other things to do, like zip-lining, chocolate tasting, spas, jungle biking, beach volleyball, fire dancers, sunset cruises, and cultural excursions.

A Kids Sea Camp vacation is more than just diving. I learned underwater sign language (yes, there is a valuable course on that), how to use sealife cameras, about coral reef restoration, and understanding our impact and role as responsible divers. Then there is the tradition of family poetry writing. Inspired by the Sealife camera prizes, Andy writes about this magical journey at each destination, the week’s highlights, and the precious moments captured in the smiles on our sons’ faces each day.

These poems express overwhelming joy, as each trip creates lifelong memories for Kids Sea Camp families. When Andy reads his poems, he is always choking back emotion and tears, as is the entire group.

You see, wreck diving off the coast of North Carolina brought us together 28 years ago, and Kids Sea Camp rekindles that with the perfect family dive vacation.

Kids Sea Camp Adventures inspires young diver to become new advocate for the ocean

Kids Sea Camp, Galapagos, Diving adventures

Becoming the voice of the underwater world

My very first dive will always be in my memory, the very first time I was able to become the voice of the underwater world.

I had been excitedly waiting for that moment, even before I had stepped off the airplane into Grand Cayman’s sun. My parents had always spun elaborate tales of their experiences diving, and now it was my turn to see the wondrous world they had shared under the waves.

Kids Sea Camp, Family Diving, Family vacationsOn that day of my first dive, the thing that struck me most was that I could actually breathe underwater. I took a deep breath in to make sure I wasn’t dreaming. I could see the surface was a good fifteen feet above me, but I was breathing. I floated above the sea bottom and just breathed. I beheld the world around me as I descended into the blue.

Everything was behind me now, as if in another life. I couldn’t hear anything, but my own inhales, and those were very quiet, although Darth-Vader reminiscent. When I exhaled, I could hear absolutely nothing else. I now understand why the ocean is sometimes called the ‘Silent World.’

At first, I saw nothing, but upon closer inspection, I saw spiky red sea urchins populating the ocean floor. The urchins fascinated me. I had seen urchins very similar to them in the touch tanks at the aquarium, but I had always assumed that they lived in the deep ocean, not right here off the edge of a dock.

The sun showed right through the water, lighting up all the coral and fish around me. I am filled with awe at all I can see, and at first, I don’t know where to look, perhaps the deep sapphire blue out in the distance, or the small yellow fish not two feet away.

My problem evaporated very quickly, and soon I knew exactly where to look. As far as the eye could see, there were brilliant oranges, pinks, and reds. The sea-fans were made of a spider-web pattern, lacy strands of vivid coral with little holes between them. The tide washed in and out, swishing the seafans each time it came in. The ocean’s synchronized dancers captivated me: Tide in, sea-fans lean towards shore. Tide out, sea-fans lean away. Their routine was almost hypnotic, dancing to their own silent song.

I remember spotting my first lobster, a beady-eyed creature that was far larger than any I had seen lying on the ice in Pike Place Market at home in Seattle. The way it moved was completely alien to me. I had only ever seen a live lobster in a tiny restaurant tank, crawling over dozens of its siblings.

It’s been years since my first dive, and Kids Sea Camp has given me a lot of confidence as a diver. Each experience has inspired my interests in marine science. I have met other kids and families who share my interest in diving. Kids Sea Camp is very often the highlight of my summer! It’s what I talk about when I go back to school and write essays about when we get a free topic. I have attained many certifications, including Advanced Open Water Diver, Drift, Shark Aware, and an Underwater Photographer specialty.

Not afraid of sharks anymore

I was terrified of sharks, but now I’ve learned so much about them and other marine life. I have been diving with schooling hammerheads at Darwin’s Arch in the Galapagos, black tips at Blue Corner in Palau, grey reef sharks and mantas in Yap, and stingrays in Grand Cayman. I’m just not afraid anymore.

I’ve learned a lot about ocean-related issues, but the decline in shark populations is what I’ve been focusing on most. While in Palau, I attended a KSC lecture about the value of a shark’s alive vs. dead.  The economic impact of shark tourism actually outweighs the profit from shark finning.  I was fascinated by this, and I have been driven to do more — to stay informed about shark finning and other shark issues. Whenever I hear someone make a negative shark comment or reference Jaws, I launch into my mini-speech about sharks and how important they are for our oceans.

Diving is my passion

You see, diving is my passion. It has let me see and learn about creatures I never knew existed. I love going to Kids Sea Camp, meeting new people, and diving with other teens my age. I also like that my parents can dive with adults, and I can dive with newfound friends. KSC also has fun excursions while we’re not diving. My favorite was Jellyfish Lake in Palau. It was so peculiar to swim with thousands of jellies and touch them without getting stung!

Lastly, I enjoy diving as a family and having time together. I don’t feel like I’m on a completely separate vacation. I’ve done a lot of writing and speaking about my diving experiences; I feel it’s important and our responsibility to protect the oceans. I encourage my audience to be active in conservation and consider scuba diving.  I know that most people reading this are divers, and they already have the oceans close to their hearts. To you, I will say the most influential thing you can do for conservation is to educate a young person. Bring your children, grandchildren, your godchildren, or your nieces and nephews on a dive vacation, and share with them the underwater world that you love. Present a slideshow at a local school, library, or teen center. If you can pique their interest in diving, even better! Tell families about Kids Sea Camp: Kids ages 10+ can earn their Open Water certifications, and those younger can do SASY or Seal Team. 15 PADI dive courses have college credits. Getting the next generation to care about the ocean is key.

 Margo Peyton rocks!

Margo is the creator of Kids Sea Camp, and she takes time for each and every family and genuinely wants to know how she can serve and enrich their experiences. She’s also an excellent dive instructor and event planner; she has fun activities up her sleeve for the whole family (4-year-olds to grandparents!). I think that Margo is secretly Superwoman.

Since I have earned all my certifications and done most of my diving through Kids Sea Camp, I closely tie KSC to my diving “career”. I strongly believe that Kids Sea Camp has been a big part of who I am today. I’m more globally aware and confident because of my certifications. For all of this, I also say THANK YOU to my mom and dad for choosing Kids Sea Camp for our family vacations!

My favorite animal encounters so far have been with sea lions and whale sharks in the Galapagos. I felt very safe and well informed, and loved sharing those dives with new friends Melea and JB, as well as my mom and dad.

One of my favorite non-dive excursions was in Palau — bathing myself in a Milky Way mud bath. Each trip offers authentic activities that help you learn about the culture and people.

I am excited to be attending Kids Sea Camp Grand Cayman over my spring break; I’m going to be taking a PADI Jr. Rescue Diver course. I feel it will make me a safer diver and a better buddy. I’m very excited because Rescue Diver is the next big step in dive education, and my goal is to become a PADI divemaster when I’m 18.

Remember, the ocean is silent —it has no voice. It cannot speak for itself in debates about marine preserves or commercial fishing laws. I am eager for my voice to be a voice of the ocean, to be a protector and advocate for it. I am a certified diver with just under fifty dives, and after every single dive, I feel a renewed passion towards my goal — to be the voice.  I encourage you to travel and to dive with your families, experience the underwater silent world, and become a voice too.

By Audrey Sarin, age 13, PADI Open Water diver and working on becoming a Jr. Rescue diver

A passion for sharks and photography

whale sharks, Kids and diving, Kids Sea Camp

Passion for Photography created by Kids Sea Camp Adventures

I just don’t know where to begin. Kids Sea Camp is just so awesome that it’s even difficult to write about. But here you are now, reading my excited mess of ideas and thoughts on what diving means to me, so I’ll give it a go (no promises though.

I should probably start with the exciting stuff, like where I backward roll into a school of 50-plus sharks in Yap (the country, not the small annoying noise made by dogs) or when I’m charging at top speed through the current of Ulong Channel in Palau, but instead, I’ll start at the beginning.

Photography, Kids and diving, Kids Sea CampAt the age of five, I joined my first KSC. My parents signed me up for the PADI group known as SASY. Little kids get to put on scuba gear, but substitute a life jacket for the BCD so we float on the surface while breathing through a regulator. This was my first incredible experience with scuba diving.

Since I was already a water baby by six months and swimming by one, I thought KSC was created just for me. Quickly making my way through the dive ranks, I again returned to KSC in Roatan for Seal Team. This was a landmark in my interest in scuba diving.

Seal Team is a program for eight- and nine-year-old kids to experience diving in confined water. However, KSC Seals can dive in the ocean. I just fell in love with diving.

On my 10th birthday, my mom and dad chose Yap and Palau for our family adventure, and that’s where the real story begins. The experiences I had in Yap and Palau were likely some of the best I thought I would ever have. Completing my PADI Jr. Open Water certification with manta rays overhead was surely one of the greatest moments of my life.

The feeling I had when I was diving with 15-foot mantas and some 50-plus reef sharks daily was phenomenal, too amazing to fully describe. It’s funny, everyone said it was all downhill from there. I guess they didn’t know Margo and Tom Peyton or Kids Sea Camp. Since then, I have dove with and learned about tiger sharks and bull sharks with the shark school at KSC Fiji. I traveled with my family to the Philippines, where I dove with rare thresher sharks and had the second-best day of my life diving in Oslob with whale sharks. The memories created at KSC are outstanding. The friends I have made are the best friends in my life. This is also where I properly learned photography. The support from Margo and my family is the reason I have stuck with it.

Margo hired me to be the photo pro for the Philippines 2016 trip, and I photographed the entire 17-day journey above and below. You can see for yourself my passion for photography in the Philippines photo gallery on the KSC website. I can safely say these experiences have significantly contributed to who I am today.

Passionate about saving sharks

At the age of 10, after returning home from Palau, I was so passionate about saving sharks (learning all about the Palau shark sanctuary) that I set up a small organization called Save Our Sharks Bermuda. I collected over 1,000 signatures and met with the minister for the environment to discuss and plan how best to protect our sharks. Bermuda then signed the International Agreement on the Conservation of Pelagic Species. I was so totally delighted about this because I had made an impact on Bermuda and the conservation of the sea.

Having the privilege to dive from a young age is exceptional. Through diving with KSC over the years, I have advanced through the PADI ranks from SASY, Seal Team, Jr. Open Water, Advanced Open Water, Rescue, and Master Scuba Diver, with more than 150 dives and 9 specialties.

This feels too good to describe. Having the family dive adventures that Margo and Tom create, and growing through all the PADI ranks like my dad, a PADI instructor too, is what I love the most. I have made lifelong friends around the world and have been encouraged by my family in a way I could never repay.

So thank you, Mom, Dad, and Holly.

Margo created the best organization that I have ever known. She has influenced me, trusted me, and helped me in every aspect of my life. She and Dad have guided me through diving safely with each step. I am even more grateful to my family for finding Margo; she is an inspiring instructor, with her focus 100% on safety. She is the heart of Kids Sea Camp!

This year, we are heading to The Galapagos and Cayman Brac KSC weeks so we can all dive together with the families we have met around the world.

By Zebedee Wakely, age 16. 

 

Being a 10-year old shark diver is pretty cool!

Kids Sea Camp, Kids and diving, family vacations

I was born in The Cayman Islands. As my dad works in the scuba diving industry, I have had a mask and snorkel strapped to my face most of my life. And never did I think I’d become a shark diver!

In the summer of 2008, I was given the opportunity by my parents to join Kids Sea Camp (KSC) on my home island of Grand Cayman. This is where my love and passion for the underwater world began.

As my parents dove with other parents, I started my days learning about marine life. The afternoons were spent playing on the beach with new friends. I love that there also is dedicated family time for us to dive together.

Shark, Diver, Nurse shark, Kids Sea Camp, family vacations, kids and diving

At age 6, I was snorkeling with my dad and KSC owner Margo Peyton at Stingray City and was stung by a jellyfish, causing an allergic reaction. Safety is essential to Margo, and she knows just what to do. She responded quickly to her emergency protocol in place. 

That experience left me with a fear of jellyfish, but Margo helped me overcome that fear. A couple of years later, at Palau KSC, Dad and I snorkeled Jellyfish Lake with millions of jellyfish that did not sting. I’m so glad that I shook that fear. But I was going to be a shark Diver!

I became a PADI OW diver in Micronesia. My dad, Fraser Purdon, is a Tec instructor, and I knew he’d been waiting for that day my whole life. He was so very proud of me. I was a little scared on that dive because there were many reef sharks in the water.  Margo said I would be safe, and my dad said I didn’t have to dive, but I plucked up the courage and jumped in right behind my dad. I am so glad I did; being a 10-year-old shark diver was pretty cool.

Learning about and diving with sharks eliminated fears, and I learned how important it is to protect them. Traveling with my parents has taught me so much about the world.

I learned about diving pressure by cracking eggs underwater. Did you know they stay together, and you can even bat them around unless a fish eats the yolk?

I have developed courage, confidence, and knowledge as a diver, and I try to inspire others who are just starting. I dove with mantas ten times my size, big sharks like bull sharks, white tips, and black tips, and I have even been face-to-face with tiger sharks and survived!

My parents’ favorite KSC week was Anse Chastanet, St. Lucia. Our room was on the top of the mountain with amazing views of the Pitons, and it had one wall open to the ocean. I loved St. Lucia because that’s where I experienced my first-night dive.  It was fun seeing all the marine life that you don’t see during the day, like basket stars, octopuses, lobsters, and giant crabs.

I meet children worldwide through KSC and have learned to be more environmentally conscious. So many worldwide have so little, but we have so much and take it for granted. You learn that when you travel and experience the local culture.

Each year, I look forward to seeing old friends and making new ones. Scuba diving has been a big part of my family’s life. (I even used diving as my science project — and got second place at the county level.)

Mum isn’t as big a diver as Dad and I, but we enjoy diving together at KSC.  We have become good friends with Margo and Tom Peyton, as my family hosts some of the weeks, too. I get to welcome everyone and assist Dad with the Sealife photo weeks. 

Margo is my KSC mum; she treats all of us that way.  After all, it is Kids Sea Camp.

From helping me put my first set of ScubaPro gear together to holding my hand in strong currents, she always makes me feel safe.

Tom is the Zen diver. He calms everything down by saying, “There is only kung fu,” as he does wax on, wax off hand motions. He makes everyone laugh.

I earned my PADI Rescue Diver and Master Dive certification this year. Tom and Margo have already offered me a job, so I know becoming a PADI divemaster is on the way. Diving is not my whole life, but it certainly has become the foundation for family fun. It’s not often you publicly get to say thank you, parents, but thank you, Mum and Dad. I’m so lucky I have become a shark diver with Kids Sea Camp.

I love my Kids Sea Camp life!

By Sophie Purdon, age 16