I love all my children the same, but differently. Same goes for my favorite watch brands. Sinn’s humorless dedication to tool watch indestructibility floats my boat. Grand Seiko flicks my Bic because they’re perfect. Cuervo y Sobrinos earns my admiration with their combination of minimalism, dial texture and, most of all, color. Not all of their watches hew (hue?) to that description, but the new Buceador Caribe does. That said, one of these things is not like the other . . .
Obviously, the blue Buceador Caribe is the one – the most brand faithful of the triplets. As we explained in our post Cuervo Y Sobrinos Explained, the Swiss watch brand’s roots go straight to Havana, Cuba. The watchmaker first found their footing in the “Pearl of the Antilles,” where the ocean is cyan blue and vivid colors are a way of life.
More specifically, pastels. Beautiful, soft, calming pastels. Like the Caribe’s “Varadero” blue gradient dial, named after the Cuban beach pipped at the post for TripAdvisor’s world’s best beach award.
It’s not just the blue that makes the Buceador Caribe pop, of course. It’s the large, sand colored hands. The bright olive green accents adorning the second hand tip, 15-minute indices (against a sky blue background), the infilled CyS logo and the crown surrounds.
Completing the horological festivities: two bands shipped with the watch. One’s turquoise rubber with a yellow underside, the other made of dark blue high gloss Toscano leather.
Silver? That too. The high polish 43mm stainless steel bezel and crowns contrast beautifully with the matte silver octahedron case and lugs. Flip the Buceador Caribe over and you’re immersed in the dodecagon’s screw down caseback’s ode to underwater exploration. Credit CyS’ partnership with Cuba-born record holding free diver Francisco ‘Pipin’ Ferraras.
“We were attracted to Pipin for a number of reasons,” CyS’ PR bumf reveals. “He epitomizes the Cuban spirit, demonstrates a thirst for adventure and is incredibly courageous. Indeed, both parties to this agreement share the same mindset and a love for Cuba.”
Yes, well, Ferrars’ life story is tainted by the death of his wife and fellow free diver Audrey Mestre. Wikipedia.org:
On October 12, 2002, Mestre died in an attempt to break the 160 meters no-limits world record . . . with too few safety divers, lacking proper rescue equipment, with no doctors at sea and shore. In a no-limits freedive, the standard diving method is holding on to a weighted sled to the target depth, and there open a pressurized air tank that fills a large inflatable balloon which carries the freediver back to the surface.
On Mestre’s fatal dive, this air tank was empty when Mestre reached her target depth of 171 meters (561 ft). Ferreras was in charge of Mestre’s air tank and did not allow any of the team to check that the tank had been charged. . . . minutes were wasted with Ferreras attempting to resuscitate her in the water.
This tragic tale in no way diminishes Ferrars’ legendary accomplishments, but there are members of the diving community who never forgave the naturalized American for his carelessness. Equally, I’ve met more than a few superstitious watch collectors. So there is that. Anyway . . .
The Buceador Caribe is water resistant to the limits of deep diving (200m/20 ATM), complete with a lock for the rotating inner bezel. Super-LuminNova on the XXL indices make the watch a cave diver’s delight – assuming they have a dive computer on their other wrist.
Cuervo y Sobrinos’ first dive watch is powered by CYS’ 5104 automatic movement, based on ETA’s Peseux 224 engine. I can’t find intel on the base movement’s accuracy and CyS ain’t sayin’. The only other example I can find sits in a $365 Mathey-Tissot.
Which brings us to the kicker: Cuervo Y Sobrinos sells the Buceador Caribe for $3300. Once again, CyS is asking watch collectors to fork out a big chunk of change for a timepiece from an obscure Swiss brand. In comparison, Sinn sells a wide range of indestructible, insanely capable watches (1000m water resistance anyone?) for around the same price, or less.
Although every Cuervo Y Sobrinos watch I’ve tested has been beautifully made and reasonably accurate, the brand’s appeal is based on one thing more than anything else: style. If $3300 is chump change and you want something different, something flamboyant, I reckon the Buceador Caribe is your huckleberry.
Meanwhile, I celebrate the blue Buceador Caribe for what it is: a fun watch. As Dr. Seuss might have said, these things are fun and fun is good. I mean who doesn’t like a watch that comes in a proper humidor?
Nice write-up. Enjoyed the back stories, enjoyed views of the watch and its presentation. I’d have opted for a sandwich dial, but that’s more about my current tastes and mood than anything else. $3300 seems a peculiar price point for a ‘fun’ piece.
“Cuervo y Sobrinos’ first dive watch is powered by CYS’ 5104 automatic movement, based on ETA’s Peseux 224 engine.”
It would be interesting to know what is really going on here.
Peseux was integrated into ETA in 1985, but its classic hand wound movements were rebranded as ETA, e.g., the Peseux 7001 became the ETA 7001.
This 224 or p224, on the other hand, is not one of the classic Peseux movements. It is a clone of the ETA 2824 (which evolved from an Eterna movement).
I’m guessing it is one of two things:
ETA is branding some of its 2824 movements as Peseux p224 for some weird reason.
ETA somehow lost the Peseux trademark and some jokers are using it to sell 2824 clones.
Thanks for the insight! I’ll ping CyS and see what they say…
One of the great mysteries of life is why do watch makers put leather straps on divers watches. Nice watch otherwise, just needs a little more design finesse for the date display (a date hand perhaps?) and a higher grade movement.