Curacao Sea Aquarium sea turtle. CC Image by Anja Disseldorp
Free swim with dolphins is one of many delightful experiences at the Dolphin Academy in Curacao. Photo courtesy of the Dolphin Academy
Free swim with dolphins is one of many delightful experiences at the Dolphin Academy in Curacao. Photo courtesy of the Dolphin Academy

I was at the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Their bodies were sleek and graceful, the skin soft to the touch, their demeanor welcoming even if a bit skeptical. Still, they were more used to this more than I was. But I spread my arms out as instructed and flapped them in the water. 

Romeo and Pasku, two of my dolphin snorkeling companions, then swam under my outstretched limbs, and we laid back into the water as though sunbathing. Then we went back to free swim.

Such is one of the many highlights at the Dolphin Academy, one of several up-front-and-personal animal encounters available at the Sea Aquarium on the Caribbean island of Curacao.

Curacao Island: Are you ready to swim with dolphins and stingrays, feed turtles and see a variety of fish? Check out the Curacao Sea Aquarium and the Dolphin Academy on the Curacao Island
Curacao Island: Are you ready to swim with dolphins and stingrays, feed turtles and see a variety of fish? Check out the Curacao Sea Aquarium and the Dolphin Academy on the Curacao Island

Now I don’t usually like watching animals perform tricks that are alien to their DNA for the amusement of tourists, but at the Dolphin Academy, the residents are treated with such loving care, I swam alongside them with minimal guilt. 

According to trainer Yvette, the dolphins are the first priority. “They are on a very light work schedule and every day, it varies. Like humans, they react better when their life is not all that predictable. And if for any reason they don’t want to perform -– perhaps they’re preoccupied with a personal family situation (I didn’t pursue that) -– the program is called off.”

As if on cue, a participant related a past experience in which Dolphins used to give rides to people holding on to their fins. Nope, not any more – although it doesn’t harm the dolphin (although some disagree), they got a lot of criticism in the past and clearly the dolphins didn’t like, it so it was stopped years ago. I nodded; point well taken…score one for the dolphins.

Dolphin Safety is a High Priority at Curacao’s Dolphin Academy

Prior to the snorkel, Yvette instructed us on how to proceed: be patient; let them come to you; stroke them along their flanks. She taught us how to encourage the dolphin to come alongside and then free dive in unison.

Romeo and I shared a number of shallow dives together and in parting, he gave me a kiss. Okay, so he did it because he got a fish but still I thought he was actually smiling at me at the time.

A dolphin kiss is well worth waiting for after free swim at the Dolphin Academy   Photo by Victor Block
A dolphin kiss is well worth waiting for after free swim at the Dolphin Academy. Photo by Victor Block

Dafne Greeven, a dive instructor from The Hague, Netherlands, said she had seen dolphin in the ocean, but had never interacted with them.

“Most animal encounters are much more commercial,” she observed. “Snorkeling with them was a very special, personal experience.  It was wonderful to see how well they treat the dolphins here and encourage us to be relaxed so that the dolphins will be.”

And it was only the start of my very personal connection with sea life in Curacao. My next encounter took me even further underwater. I’ve been snorkeling before — but never in the past did the fish swarm to me rather than my having to swim out to them. But then again I don’t usually carry a supply of squiggly little sardines with me when I go, while at the same time making meaningful eye contact. Well, meaningful to me anyway.

Snorkeling at the Curacao Sea Aquarium Bears Little Resemblance to Snorkeling on Your Own

So many fish, so little time – a rewarding experience at the Curacao Sea Aquarium   Photo courtesy of the Curacao Sea Aquarium

But at the Sea Aquarium, getting up close and personal with a variety of denizens of the deep is the whole purpose. So there I was co-mingling with tarpon, common snook, French grunts, permit fish, horse-eyed jack and so many sting rays that I felt covered most of the time by a soft lightweight blanket caressing my body — only this blanket wanted to be fed fish which it ate with its underbelly. 

Sting rays eat with the underbellies while cuddling up close at the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo by Victor Block
Sting rays eat with the underbellies while cuddling up close at the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo by Victor Block

I wasn’t really surprised to find the huge loggerhead turtles and sharks behind a Plexiglas shield and fed through small holes in the glass. Still, the shark didn’t look any less menacing for being behind the protective covering. 

I carefully followed the instructions on when to feed them directly and when to take better care of my fingers. There’s not always a second chance to do that with a shark…

Feeding sharks and loggerhead turtles is done with care at the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo courtesy of the Dolphin Academy
Feeding sharks and loggerhead turtles is done with care at the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo courtesy of the Dolphin Academy

Ah so many fish, so little time — I fed as many as I could in the 35-minute feeding frenzy and came away with a new respect for the difference between just snorkeling — and actually swimming with the fishes…

Hanging Out With the Resident Sea Lion at the Aquarium has its Own Rewards

Back on land, my next animal rendezvous was of a more playful nature. I got to meet and greet Snapper, the sea lion. I learned the difference between sea lions and seals and watched Snapper do a seal imitation as he flopped along on his belly. Sea lions are much more genteel when they move — they walk on all fours. Using flippers, of course, but still…  

Snapper had a bit to say during our tete-a-tete  but his vocalization, unfortunately, resembled a very loud, deep belch that tended to continue long after it was socially acceptable to do so. But still, he was very cute -– and, like Romeo, very affectionate.

Yup, I got another kiss. Between the two, I got more action that weekend than I remember occurring at the height of my dating career.

Kisses are a highlight of hanging out with residents of the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo by Victor Block
Kisses are a highlight of hanging out with residents of the Curacao Sea Aquarium. Photo by Victor Block

And, of course, although all these activities are outside, all COVID protocols are being followed: mask-wearing is required (the dolphin are exempt; not sure about Snapper…) and social distancing is maintained.

If You Go

For more information visit the Dolphin Academy, and the Curaçao Sea Aquarium online.

Check out the Rambling Writer’s Travel Blog

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