Scuba diving in the Cenotes Angelita and Gran Cenote

This post is part of the summary-article 3-Week Itinerary Yucatan (Mexico, Belize & Guatemala) on a Budget . You can either use the links in the summary to get detailed information about each place in the itinerary, or the floating bar at the bottom of the page to navigate through each day.

Tulum – 

It’s raining again*. On our schedule today are the cenote Angelita and the Gran Cenote.

Angelita, “little angel” in English, is a unique and rather unusual cenote experience. Actually, Angelita is more for more experienced scuba divers (AOWD or 30+ dives), but even with an OWD from Germany this is not an issue, as all of your training dives are in worse conditions and much lower visibility in lakes. Verena may therefore also dive with us… and it sure would be a pity if she missed Angelita.

Cenote Angelita

Die picturesque cenote resembles a circular lake and is about 60m deep. Once you dive down about 10m, you look down at a swirling layer of hydrogen sulfide at about 30 meters, which looks like a huge cloud. Dead tree trunks and branches reaching out from it makes the whole sight kinda spooky . Since the density is changing at that level, we put in a little air in the BCD and descend down slowly. Below the cloud is salt water… and absolute darkness. During our slow ascending through the cloud again our fins create swirls on the sulfide layer. We spirally follow Carlos along the walls to a depth of 10m and then pass through a small cave. That is a scuba dive location you shouldn’t miss.

Gran Cenote

Ena is a little too exhausted for the next dive in the Gran Cenote, but I don’t wanna miss this experience. According to the name, the Gran Cenote is a very large and impressive cenote – a bit similar to Dos Ojos – but not only interesting for cavern and cave divers, but also for snorkelers. It is part of the Sac-Aktun-System, which means “White Cave” in Maya and just about 4km from Tulum towards Coba. The cenote has only a max. depth of 10m, yet good buoyancy control is necessary because of many narrow passages and plenty of stalactites and stalagmites reaching into the cave.

The rest of the evening is quite similar to the one the day before. First we have a siesta and then we look for a nice restaurant for dinner. Meanwhile, the drizzle started changing into a storm. Just as we find a restaurant that looks nice and sit down, we have a power outage on our side of the road. No cooked food, no daiquiris, no margaritas. But hey! You don’t need a mixer for a mojito .

* Overall, I believe that you can have better visibility at good weather in the cenotes thanks to better light, but with such rainy weather we made the best out of the situation

Related posts

One more Night in Tulum

Scuba Diving in the Cenotes Tajma Ha and Dos Ojos

Back to Tulum

6 comments

Danielle 2017-09-22 - 20:59
I'm not certified but would love to be one day! We visited cenotes in Mexico and like your pictures, they are lovely. Thanks for sharing!
Kerry Maskell 2017-09-22 - 23:36
I'm heading here in November ? So found this post really helpful and informative x so excited now!
Mario 2017-09-23 - 15:11
Have fun & keep safe! Cenotes are a great expecience for a scuba diver
Earths Pilgrim 2017-09-23 - 12:36
Unusual cenote experience and amazing Scuba diving pictures. Truly inspiring
Heraa 2017-09-24 - 10:57
I have never tried scuba diving but it's on the list. Your pictures giving great motivation
Courtney Coughlan 2017-09-25 - 04:25
All of my friends are divers so this was super interesting to read! I'm going to share it with them
Add Comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Read More