The diving:
The sea gives us a glimpse of one of it's little jewels on each dive. A hammerhead swims up from below the murky thermocline to give us a once-over, then disappears back to where we cannot go. A school of jacks, thick enough to blacken the waters above our heads engulfs us, making us one of their numbers. A school of Mobula Rays glide by, into the current, probably just making fun of us clumsy, noisy interlopers helplessly pushed in the opposite direction by the tidal change.
On each dive, we were given one wonderful event, something to remember and talk about until our next foray. The final dive on the last full dive day, the ocean gave us her finale, like a small town fourth of July celebration, holding back the real show until it matters. A manta cruising past a resting black tip shark, a school of hammerheads, large and small, off in the distance as a backdrop. The Jacks, endlessly faced into the current swarm around us one last time. Then the show is over. On our last morning dive, the sea reminds us she is not one for ovations. The show is over and it is time to leave the theater.
For the intrepid dive traveller, the person who has seen the soft corals of Fiji, the Manta’s of Kona, the hammerheads of Galapagos, Layang Layang might prove a disappointment in that there is no abundance of any particular “species”. Surprisingly though, it is the pleasant surprise of seeing that one thing on each dive which kept me smiling.
All the diving sites are on the outside of the atoll with the dive shop on the protected side. There is a house reef, but it is small and mostly sand as it too is on the protected side of the atoll. There are three dives per day from the boats with a night dive offered each night for an additional cost. The boats are comfortable and quick, making the farthest site no more than a half hour ride. The resort does not have nitrox facilities, it is air only diving.
The dive staff are wonderful, and our divemaster and guide Aster showed that sixth sense for finding critters one gets only after diving an area for years. She would point out into the blue at what I saw as nothing, but sure enough, 10 seconds later there was the animal in question.
Visibility was fair for this part of the world, and Aster said it was strangely murky for this time of year, a theme which has followed me the last two months throughout Indonesia.
Of course, coming from southern California, 80 ft of visibility in my mind does not constitute “murky”. Not being able to read your gauges is murky.
The resort:
The resort itself is quite nice and the entire staff are wonderfully warm and inviting. It’s not that “I’m being paid to smile so I’m smiling” kind of pleasant; these people seem genuinely happy you have come to spend a week or two. There is a family feel here I have not experienced anywhere else. I was invited to participate in the nightly frisbee tournament, frisbee golf, frisbee football, frisbee whatever, with the staff and guests all running around and having a great time together.
Layang Layang seems to attract a younger crowd, possibly because it falls into a budget category not seen at most other resorts, and also begets the title “the UN of dive resorts”. The week I have been here, every country on the planet has sent a diving representative. It has made for wonderful conversation, inventive pantomime and sometimes just a pleasant smile and nod. My dive buddy, Watanabe, speaks no English and I speak no Japanese, yet we have had a wonderful time together, despite the fact that we know absolutely nothing about each other. He could be the capo di tuti capi of the Yakuza for all I know, but I got a picture of him with a manta over his head, so we are best buddies. I asked another dive boat compatriot, who as it turns out is a Dutch professor of Indonesian and Malaysian history, if he knew how the resort came to be. I will share with you what he told me, although I cannot verify the accuracy of the information.
Apparently, the waters around here are rich in oil, natural gas and heavy metals. The rights to these riches was, and continues to be hotly contested by several nations, so Malaysia built up this atoll and put a naval base and landing strip on the dredged sand spit. As a forward military presence apparently does not guarantee ownership of land or sea, an implanted civil society was required to make the claim legitimate in the eyes of the world. Thus came into being the Layang Layang Resort. Sounds plausible to me, but I’ll leave the veracity of this claim to those interested in actual research.
Services:
Here we must keep in mind that Layang Layang is a budget conscious resort. The food is buffet at each meal and the “western” food is rather bland. I cannot speak towards the “eastern” fare as the thought of fish stock soup for breakfast does not appeal to me. However, on Friday night, just as I was about to write off the culinary offerings as a Jenny Craig conspiracy, we have a barbeque that was no less than fantastic. There are no wait staff per se, so if you want a soda, beer or other libation with your meal you head off to the bar, which is 10 steps from the dinner table and get it there. The restaurant staff clean up the tables and are quick and efficient. You put down your fork and head to the desert table and by the time you get back your place is clean of dishes.
I do not consider any of this a detractor to the resort, and have lost my winter fat without feeling starved. You just don’t feel the need to go back for seconds, that’s all.
The rooms are quite nice with a small patio with sliding glass door, television (I never turned mine on so I don’t know what is offered), air conditioning, and private bathroom with a shower.
Getting here:
When I refer to Layang Layang being a “spit” of land, I really mean it. You can practically spit from the ocean to the lagoon. The layout is: Ocean with rock retaining wall, landing strip, resort 20 yards from the edge of the runway, pool, dive shop, lagoon. Flying in to the resort has a whole new meaning for me now. With that said, not once did I hear a plane land, have to pause in mid conversation or pantomime due to engine noise, or was even aware that the landing strip was active. The briefing we received on arrival included the request not to stand on the runway between 7 and 9 am as that is when the cargo, passenger and military planes come in. Good advice. Besides, the staff line the runway when a plane is landing to make sure no guest becomes part of the prop wash.
The plane which ferried us to the island is the only aspect of this operation I would question. Affectionately named “Layang Layang Aerospace” the contrivance we flew in seems just a decade younger than a Sopwith Camel. There was a Russian couple sitting across from me during the flight in and I thought the woman was going to hyperventilate herself into a stupor when the engines started our take-off roll. Me, I was just glad if I was going down, it was into warm water my body would be commended.
There is a 25 kilo weight limit on gear bags. Additional weight can be paid at 8.5 ringgit per kilo. Also, interestingly you and your carry-on will also be weighed, but I was not charged additionally for the big camera bag and backpack I was holding in my hands while standing on the scale.
Overall impression:
I love this place. Would I come back... absolutely. However, I do not think I would make this a prime destination from the USA. But it is a great place to spend a week if you find yourself in Singapore, Indonesia or some other place within a single 2 or 3 hours’ flight to Kota Kinabalu.
The Layang Layang photo shoot-out.
There will be a photo contest here at the resort from July 21 to 27 . The cost is $880.00 US for double occupancy and 12 boat dives. R/T flight to the island is not included. Over $30,000 US in prizes will be awarded (according to the flyer at the dive shop). The web site is www.layanglayang.com. email: layang@pop.jaring.my