I spent about four and a half months on Colemak earlier this year. Its similarities to qwerty make it very easy to learn, and it's very easy to switch between Colemak and qwerty, but at the same time it's tightly optimised to the home row and has a few other tricks up its sleeve that are supposed to make typing faster and more comfortable, so the thinking goes.
However, I have found that it gets over-hyped a bit by some of its users. I didn't find any advantage in terms of speed, and you really need a split ergonomic keyboard if you are to see any benefits in comfort from it. Conventional flat keyboards are actually more comfortable if your layout doesn't focus on the home row, otherwise you have two factors combining to force your wrists together into a rather awkward angle. I've also found that Colemak it has no little advantage if you're programming, especially in curly-bracket-y languages such as C#, PHP or JavaScript where your fingers have to go all over the place anyway no matter what layout you are using.
These days, I occasionally switch to Colemak if I have to type a lot of text, but most of the time I just stick with qwerty.
