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4102 Entries Found: Page 203  of  206

Kneza

   Croatia  Mediterranean Sea


  • KNEZA is a wall\rock dive down to 30mtrs with
    Amphora to spy.


  • BANJA , Very rocky with lots of holes to poke about in.

  • The GARDA is a flat wreck and worth a good rummage and at 23 metres


  • SESTRICA , Lighthouse rock. A site with rocks within 2mtrs of the surface
    in the middle of a channel we thought maybe we would find something, afraid not,
    but lots of life.


  • MAJSAN , a swim down to 30mtrs to look at an anchor dumping ground
    including a thirteenth century anchor, three metres tall stood upright on the
    bottom

  • The BOCA , in 10mtrs a total awe-inspiring 28yr old huge wreck which
    stands proud of the surface. It is very intact with all parts assessable
    including the engine room, machine shop with lathe, cargo, spare prop, main prop
    and portholes. (Don't touch). The story is that the skipper was drunk and didn't
    see the shore, bang. You can see the hulls concertina shape as the bow stopped
    and the stern didn't. You must visit this site.


  • DUBA East , Octopus reef, 25mtrs Octopus and Conger.


  • DUBA West , A rocky wall dive with Amphora wedged in the rocks.




more info about Kneza including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwrecksmallairmacro

The Souffleur

   Lebanon  Mediterranean Sea

The Souffleur


The submarine 'Souffleur' is a French Vichy Submarine, built in 1924
and sunk by the British on April 25th 1941 with a loss of 50 lives.


The Macedonia


This wreck is starting to form an artificial reef. The 'Macedonia' is
the shallowest of the diveable wrecks, laying in 2 sections in 16M. She was a
cargo ship who ran aground on the shallow rocks during the 1960's. The crew
managed to keep her afloat until the cargo was removed and she was then sold to
an individual in order to be broken up for scrap. Unfortunately, the new owner
was unable to complete his task, as the remains of the ship sank during a storm!
This is not a breathtaking dive as she is barely recognizable as a ship; the
remains are mainly broken ribs and plates but her position next to a small reef
means she has been fairly well colonized and Groupers and Morays are common.
Lobsters can be seen in season and we were fortunate enough to encounter a
Common Guitarfish.


Alice B


The ' Alice B ' is an excellent wreck for penetration dives and very
photogenic due to the fact that she sits upright and largely intact at 37M. The
Militia sank her during the civil war in order to make an insurance claim. She
was declared 'lost at sea' and the insurance company duly paid out one million
US dollars in compensation! Still, the insurance company's loss is our gain!




more info about The Souffleur including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwrecksmallairmacro

Reefs, Anguilla

   Anguilla  Caribbean Sea

The refloating and sinking of four vessels in 1990 increased
the number and variety of dive sites found in Anguilla's waters. Since then, a
considerable amount of coral growth has been noted as well as the attraction of
an abundance of marine life in terms of schools of baitfish, jacks and a wide
variety of demersal species. The ships have settled well and are sitting upright
facing the waves. Seven wreck dive sites in addition to excellent reef and wall
dives suitable for both novice and experienced divers offer expanded dive
opportunities. The quality and diversity of dives, coupled with attractive daily
discounted multi-day dive rates, make Anguilla a rewarding destination for scuba
divers seeking 'new' dives. Divers can choose from an array of
accommodations, ranging from cozy inns and guesthouses with rates between $50
and $125 daily to luxurious resorts where each dollar a guests spends is value
received in the sheer beauty of the surroundings and the level of service
rendered. Anguilla now has two full service dive centers with programs catering
to divers and their non diving companions. Some examples of dive sites regularly
visited include the wreck of the 230 foot long M.V. Sara at a depth of 80
feet, an imposing backdrop for underwater photographs. Sunk only last year, the
wreck has already attracted an impressive amount of marine life. ' Prickly
Pear
' at a depth of 30-70 feet is noted for its underwater canyon
characterized by ledges and caverns. 'Grouper Bowl' at a depth of 25-
50 feet is part of the Sail Reef System and home to some of Anguilla's hard
coral formations. Large groupers are found among the overhangs and small
caverns. 'Little Bay and ' Frenchman's Reef ' at depths of
15 to 40 feet are excellent novice wand photographic dives featuring an
abundance of marine life.




more info about Reefs, Anguilla including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatshorewrecksmallcoralairmacro

Reefs

   Venezuela  Caribbean Sea

Pinnacle (or Guasa) the 'not for
sissies' dive. Lots of surge and current and struggling down a rope to the
top of the pinnacle. It was very poor—but we still managed to see everything
you can think of up close: huge, varied species of parrot fish, more octopus,
drums, eels, scorpion fish, interesting corals, and more reef fish that you
could imagine. With the current, we could only imagine what lay out of our line
of vision!



Los Gatos brought us huge nurse sharks, morays, fighting (with each
other!) scorpion fish and the biggest scrawled filefish any of us had ever seen.



Green Paradise (and it was). 1st and Los Cuchos ('Eagle
Rays' and there were!) (2nd) Good vis and all the Eagle Rays you could
count—not to mention a few bull sharks swimming back and forth below. Huge
green morays (some of the biggest we’ve seen since Cozumel 10 years ago!) were
on every dive many times more than one sighting and also out free swimming!



Mini Wall, New Wall, Ledges Turtles, African Pompano, queen angels
everywhere, soap fish, huge southern rays. Wicked, flying current at Ledges but
big nurse sharks hidden everywhere in the ledges, big porcupine fish, and
biggest cowfish we have ever seen. Beautiful forests of corals and so many
schools we called it the 'Fish Freeway'.



El Avion and La Cocina . Visibility dubbed La Cocina the
'Where Were You?' dive. Almost all of us rolled off and never saw our
own buddy until the end of the dive. We buddied up with whomever we could find
and all made the dive. Again, "clouds" of every size wrasse and other
fish. The last dive was called the "Sergeant Major dive"-they were
everywhere.




more info about Reefs including maps, reviews, and ratings...Liveaboarddayboatbigsmallsharksairmacrowideangle

Black Wall

   Puerto Rico  Caribbean Sea

The Black Wall – 97 ft


This dive is on a wall covered with black corals and is pretty typical of the
profile that we dove for the wall dives. The top of the reef is at 60 feet and
we dove to a depth of ~95 feet along the wall. Dropping in we first sighted a
Spotted Eagle Ray and were accompanied by Four Eyed Butterfly fish while on top
of the reef and also spotted a four plus foot Green Moray.


The Super Bowl – 80 ft


The super bowl reminded me of Cedral in Cozumel with coral heads separated by
narrow sandy channels and is also around the same depth with a bottom at 80 or
so feet and the top of the reef at 50 some. At this site we saw the only shark
of the weekend and the only shark that others had seen in several days of
diving.


The Hole in the Wall – 135 ft


The hole in the wall starts at 125 feet and exits about 90 feet. This is a
nice dive and an easy swim thru that needn’t worry anyone. This is where one
of the group spotted a rock fish and we saw a couple of nice sized eels here to.


The Chimney – 75 ft


This was a really nice drive and was typical of the second dives in depth and
bottom. But, we were treated to a school of Barracuda and a Hawks Bill turtle
that Angel swears never saw me as I had to get out of its way or I would have
been run into. No kidding, it came within a very few inches.



In summary, Puerto Rico offers some excellent opportunities for wall and
reef diving and Angel has stated his intention to explore more dive sites west
of Parguera since he now has a craft that can reach them quickly. I also
can’t wait to check out the west coast around Mayaguez and Aguadilla
as I was told that the reefs and water there are beautiful as well. So, bring
the dive gear and come and explore a fascinating island with much to do and see
both above and beneath the sea.




more info about Black Wall including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatcavesmallturtlescoralairmacrowideangle

Paradise Sport

   Papua New Guinea  South China Sea

It doesn’t get any better than this! The diving left us speechless. From
the untouched beauty of the bommies to the tiny, weird creatures in the muck, to
the B-17 Blackjack bomber, everything was superlative. We saw everything from a
Harlequin Ghost Pipefish to a Hammerhead. Be careful of the Panda Anemonefish–they
are quite aggressive and they bite hard!


There is even a Nautilus dive where a cage is sent down with bait and several
Nautilus are brought up for the divers to see and hold. The crew then takes the
animals back down to 200’ where they are released unharmed.




  • The Ranch --So called because of its resident pygmy seahorses, at about
    20 m.


  • Silver & Black --A fun dive site, where a flutemouth hovered over
    me to hide as it stalked prey. The main attraction is a sandy plain with
    hundreds of garden eels, bobbing and weaving in the current. Schools of
    triggerfish and other reef fish. At night, we saw two ocellated epaullette
    sharks, an enormous grouper, blue spotted rays, and even a dime sized octopus
    free swimming in the blue.


  • Jason's Reef --Two bommies where Rhinopeus have frequently been
    spotted.


  • Bunama Beach --A muck dive site, filled with fantastic creatures! A
    pair of harlequin ghost pipefish, numerous porcelain crabs, eels, seahorses,
    lots of shrimpfish flitting through the seagrass, double ended pipefish, red
    tailed pipefish, a variety of outrageously colored gobies, and much more. At
    night, we watched a color show put on by a cuttlefish, a swarming ball of
    catfish feeding, a shy little cowfish, and ghost spider crabs. Fantastic!


  • Ayers Rock --Again looking for Rhinopeus, again failed. A great
    consolation was a mature blue ribbon eel as well as the black, juvenile
    version.


  • Observation Point --Billed by the divemaster as a great muck diving
    site, it was a bit disappointing. Nobody could find much of anything.


  • Wreck of the B-17 "Blackjack"-- Lying at 48.5 meters. It is
    almost perfectly intact, with very little encrustation to mar the beautiful
    lines of this enormous airplane. Such is the condition of this plane that the
    twin cannons in the tail turret still move in their mounts, and the belt of
    bullets is still clearly visible. Reach into the cockpit, and you'll find that
    the pilot's yoke still moves. The nose of the plane is caved in from the
    impact, and the propeller tips are bent back, but it still looks like the
    plane is ready to fly


  • Kearst Reef --A blue water dive, this was a bit disappointing. We did
    three dives, and only managed to spot one very shy gray reef shark, a small
    school of barracuda, and the occasional moray.


  • Deacon's Reef and Dinah's Beach --Two dive sites close to each other.
    The boat tied up at Dinah's Beach with two tenders running divers over to
    Deacon's. I'd seen Deacon's in various books I'd read before coming, and I was
    shocked to see the difference between the present day Deacon's and the
    pictures I'd seen. It seemed like 50% of the fantastic profusion of red whips,
    sea fans, and other coral formations had died off, leaving scars of dead coral
    pieces lying about. This seemed to be diving heaven! Frogfish, eels, mantis
    shrip, octopus, ocellated epaulette sharks, cuttlefish...simply everything was
    here! And the best part about Deacon's/Dinah's is the shallowness, which meant
    some marathon 100+ minute dives. All told, I was underwater nearly 7 hours
    that day!



Basilisk Point -- Basilisk was the worst sites of the trip, a wall dive
where some mantas occasionally pass by.




more info about Paradise Sport including maps, reviews, and ratings...Liveaboardwreckwallbigsmallsharksturtlescoralshoalsstingingairguidedfriendlymacrowideanglepfriendly

Reefs and wrecks

   Solomon islands  Pacific


  • Leru Cut is a geologic formation where the solid
    limestone of an island has a section cut into it. The top of the cut was open
    to the sky, but it was only about 5 meters across at the widest. We dropped
    down to about 15 meters and swam into the cut. It was like going into an unlit
    alleyway between two large buildings at night. Although there was light
    outside on the reef and up above at the top of the cut, down in the cut itself
    it was quite dark. This made for some interesting lighting effects.


  • The Toa Maru is a 400ft+ Japanese cargo ship that was attacked and
    sunk during WWII. The ship rests on its starboard side on a slope with the bow
    in the shallows starting at about 25ft and the stern ending below 120ft.
    Artifacts included fuel drums, ammo, saki bottles, and a motorcycle. The big
    surprise was the condoms that Danny had previously found on one of his many
    dives there. To preserve them, he placed them in a jar and hid them in the
    wreck to show to his guests. I never laughed so hard through a reg when the
    divemaster pulled that jar out of its hiding place.


  • One Tree I caught this dive at a good time as a school of Spotted
    Eagle Rays performed an acrobatic display for over twenty minutes with a few
    of them checking me out at very close distance.


  • The Hell Cat - A shallow dive; 30ft, this American fighter plane was
    perfectly intact. Ammo still found in its wings. Amazingly, this fighter was
    accidentally shot down (pilot survived and was rescued) by WWII ace Greg
    'Pappy' Boyington of the Black Sheep Squadron. One of Pappy's
    bullets hit the engine and the fighter had to ditch due to loss of oil
    pressure.


  • Japanese Zero This is a shallow dive that is only a stones throw from
    the market in Gizo. It is an intact plane that, although interesting on its
    own, had a beautiful florescent red anemone. The two anemone fish that called
    it home were 'tinted' in the same color of red. A few fin strokes
    away are the broken pieces of a Japanese Float plane.




more info about Reefs and wrecks including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwreckcavebigsmallsharkscoralairguidedfriendlymacrowideangle

Tortola

   Virgin Islands (British)  Caribbean Sea

The reef diving in the Francis Drake Channel area is very extensive. The dive
at the Indians is not to be missed as well as Rainbow Reef and Painted
Walls
. Each sight has its own character, and as is my custom, I prefer the
dive crew to pick the sights based on weather conditions and experience.
Visibility at all sights were never less than 60 feet with some sights having
80+ feet viz. Water temps were in the high 70's but my hooded vest was worn
under my 5 mm wetsuit for all dives since we were averaging about an hour per
dive.


Overall I would have to say the reefs that we visited were very healthy, with
no sign of abuse, overfishing, or bleaching. The National Park fees assessed to
dive certain areas were modest and were apparently well spent on multiple secure
moorings at each sight. Although there was an apparent lack of the 'big
stuff' like sharks and rays, we were blessed with several sightings of
smaller, but equally interesting critters.


We happened to locate two sailfin blennies in separate unattached pieces of
coral and when placed in close proximity, the show they put on for us lasted
almost 15 minutes. With sails out fully, they took turns posturing and chasing
each other in and out of the holes they called home. We finally had to separate
them as we laughed through our regs and their behavior. We also sighted several
male Jawfish (complete with a mouthful of eggs). A black spotted nudibranch was
also spotted and duly photographed and captured on video.



RMS Rhone This wreck is probably one of the most famous wrecks in the
Caribbean and has SO MUCH life on it. She sank in 1867 when she was pounded onto
a sharp rock during a hurricane. Almost everyone on board died.


The wreck of the Beata which is a tug boat sunk intentionally, where
you'll probably see sting rays as they feed on the garden eels living in the
sand.




more info about Tortola including maps, reviews, and ratings...Liveaboarddayboatsmallairmacro

The wreck of the Antilla

   Aruba  Caribbean Sea

The Antilla was a German freighter that was sunk in
1940. The ship is 400 feet long and there is one large compartment that you can
penetrate. The viz was still low and there were tons of people and boats at this
site. The snorkel boats were there along with every dive company on the island.
The ship was neat to see but this site is way too crowded. There were groups of
divers going in all directions and it was pretty had to even figure out which
group you were with! Our DM did manage to keep our group together on this dive,
but again, we were not overly impressed with the crew. The most personality they
showed was when the boat got back to the dock and they were pointing out the tip
jar to all of us! Well, after these first 2 days of diving, we were about to
cancel some of the rest of our dives and put the money towards something else.

Fortunately, the next day we did a "South Coast" 2 -tank dive. WOW….
What a difference. The dive was great with beautiful reefs and much better
visibility. The boat left at 8:30am so you had none of the cruise ship crowd or
the resort course divers. There were only 8 divers on the whole boat. Our dive
master and boat captains on these trips were much better. We dove at a site
called The Fingers . It was a drift dive (we had never done one of these!)
The reef comes down like a finger and we went to 100 ft. There were beautiful
coral formations, sea fans, and a diverse amount of fish. The second dive was at
a site called Gino's Choice, max. depth was 60 ft. There was a neat drop
off at this site but we couldn't follow it too far down since this was our
second dive. There were large brain coral and star coral at this site. We saw
many moray eels on this dive.




more info about The wreck of the Antilla including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwreckbigsmallairmacrowideangle

Navy Pier at Exmouth

   Australia  Pacific
The Navy Pier at Exmouth is a must if you can only do a day or two. The only company with a licence for it is the one opposite the Tourist info office in Exmouth. I was a bit suspicious when they said that a pier dive was one of the best in Oz but it is a mindblow. Only 10-12m or so but more fish than I imagined possible, sharks, huge groupers, wobbegongs and dense packed shoals of many species.

UPDATE
Kristin Anderson reports the Navy Pier at Exmouth has been closed to divers since 01 August 2006 and there are no plans to reopen it in the near future. We are hopeful that the Pier will be re-opened at some stage, but there's no information on that yet. Currently they are doing maintenance so it will likely be at least several more months before any decisions are even considered.

more info about Navy Pier at Exmouth including maps, reviews, and ratings...shorebigsmallairmacrowideangle

Reefs, Key Largo

   United States  Caribbean Sea


  • Snapper Ledge: aptly named reef with more
    snappers, grunts, and Goatfish than I've ever seen in one place. Visibility
    was much better than other dive sites, with lots less sand and particulates in
    the water. There are lots of other species here too. I spent some of the dive
    watching a bunch of neon Gobies on a large brain coral cleaning a Parrotfish.



  • French Reef is a shallow, relatively high-relief reef with some swim-throughs
    under the coral. There were several medium size barracuda on this reef that
    were not shy at all. I found a black grouper being cleaned, and a southern
    stingray was disturbed by the divers and sailed over the reef. I attempted a
    picture of a pale blue parrotfish but the color captured by the camera just
    doesn't do justice to the beautiful, soft blue that I saw on the reef.



  • Racetrack: An unmoored dive spot consisting of a very pretty, shallow
    reef surrounded by a sandy "racetrack." There are lots of soft and
    hard coral with lot of varied species of fish. We found three little
    nudibranchs Tritonia hamnerorum on a sea fan! I looked at about a
    zillion other sea fans and didn't find any more.



  • Freighter Reef: a shallow, low reef...how many reefs are named after
    the wrecks of ships? There were fewer fish on this site, but lots of stuff to
    look at. I spotted a Parrotfish lying on the bottom and went over to
    investigate. The fish swam off as I approached and I saw why it was there;
    underneath were at least three cleaning shrimp in a corkscrew anemone. The
    Parrotfish was getting as close to the bottom as it could to get cleaned of
    parasites and detritus. Under the corkscrew anemone I spotted the red and
    white striped antennae of a pistol shrimp, but he wouldn't come out to get his
    picture taken.




  • Molasses Reef, "winch hole": This probably the most
    heavily dived reef off of Key Largo. There were a dozen boats scattered over
    the many moorings on this large site. I dropped in and stayed under the boat
    for most of the dive until, alas, my hour was up and it was time to return
    to the boat, climb the ladder and put away my gear, not a bad dive to finish
    up the trip.




more info about Reefs, Key Largo including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatsmallairnitroxrepairshireinstructionguidedfriendlymacrowideangleprocessingfilmpfriendlyrepairsphireinstruction

Wrecks, Key Largo

   United States  Caribbean Sea


  • Pickles: The wreck was carrying pickle barrels
    full of cement when she went down. The barrels have all rotted away, but the
    concrete "barrels" are still there. This place is "sea fan
    city;" they're everywhere. I spotted a school of eight Midnight
    Parrotfish, but couldn't get close enough for a picture. Lots of juvenile
    barracuda hovered over the reef watching for some fish to limp. If you wave
    your hand in the water, the Barries are curious enough to swim over to you for
    a closer look. Other divers reported finding a couple of nurse sharks under
    the ledges near the wreck and one big green moray.


  • Duane: a Coast Guard cutter that was put down as an artificial reef in
    the 80's. She's upright on the sand at 125 feet with the main deck at 100
    feet. We had great conditions, no current and good visibility. I was the first
    diver in the water, as I wanted to be first on the wreck with my camera. One
    of the dive masters went in with his, gasp, film camera! There were many, many
    big barracuda stationed above the wreck; a school of jacks breezed through,
    scattering the smaller fish. I looked down on the sand off the port side of
    the wreck and spied a six-foot bull shark cruising towards the stern. It was
    too far away for me to get close, but I could see the dive master had gone
    down to try and get a picture, but the shark wasn't having anything to do with
    him. I took some wide-angle shots of the wreck itself and some of the other
    divers in our group. With no current, I was able to do a blue water safety
    stop just below the boat. I thoroughly enjoyed this most excellent wreck dive.


  • Wreck of the Benwood: a WWII British freighter that collided with
    another boat running without lights and was run aground in shallow water where
    she sank. She was used as target practice by the Navy and is pretty busted up,
    but is still a very nice wreck with lots of fish, Nassau groupers, black
    groupers, schools of grunts, schools of Goatfish, a few angels, Parrotfish,
    juvenile fish of all kinds, et al. This must be a really nice dive in good
    visibility.


  • Spiegel Grove: The Spiegel Grove was sunk as a huge artificial reef
    and is very popular dive spot. The wreck is over 500 feet long and lies on its
    port side in one hundred thirty five feet of water to the sand. To complicate
    what is a deep dive, the current is usually strong here. The tanks supplied
    for this dive were overfilled to 3500 PSI. The dive boat used a "granny
    line" to the mooring line on the wreck and asked divers to go no deeper
    than 100 feet and to return to the mooring line after no more than twenty
    minutes on the wreck. We were moored amid ships and were able to see the
    anti-aircraft guns and look into the open hatches on the deck. A few large
    Jacks cruised the wreck and a school of Baitfish exploded past us, getting out
    of the way of some unseen predator.




more info about Wrecks, Key Largo including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwrecksmallcoralairnitroxrepairshireinstructionguidedfriendlymacrowideangleprocessingfilmpfriendlyrepairsphireinstruction

Rarotanga

   Cook islands  Pacific
Rarotonga is lovely, a great place to get over your jet lag if flying west to NZ or Oz. The diving is easy and pleasant. Think Malta with coral. There are four dive outfits on the island - Cook Island Divers caters for the young backpacker crowd; Pacific Resort is follow-my-leader diving; we dived with Rarotongan Dive Centre (RDC); and I forget the fourth one. RDC was fine and I recommend it. It's run by Huw & Sheryl John, and Steve Grant (Welsh, Kiwi & Kiwi respectively). RDC respected our qualifications and we dived unguided.
All the diving is from RIB’s or similar (we saw the other dive outfits' boats about). There are only about 3 launch points on the island, but they are fairly evenly spread around the island, and since it's only about 30km in circumference you can nearly always get in somewhere. There are plenty of fish, we saw one shark, the drop-offs are steep but not vertical and there is some coral bleaching. We did six dives and always had the site to ourselves.
Don't travel round the world just for the diving in Rarotonga, but do give it a whirl if you are in the area.


more info about Rarotanga including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwallbigsmallsharksairguidedmacrowideangle

Canyons

   Dominican Republic  Caribbean Sea


  • Canyons . This site ranges in depth from 35 to 80 feet with crevices
    hosting moray eels, spiny lobster and a variety of invertebrates. Atlantic
    Spadefish commonly cruise the water column above these coral canyons




  • Catalina Island. Catalina Island is a longish boat ride from the Bayahibe
    area, maybe 30 minutes but many people consider it one of the highlights of
    their week. There is a true wall on the north side of the island, dropping
    from 15 to 130 feet. The shallow reef flat is rich with pillar and boulder
    corals, while the drop-off is filter feeder heaven, with black coral, vase
    sponge and large elephant ears. On the south side is a shallow reef known as
    the Aquarium. Here, pillar corals rule, and schooling grunts hide in coral
    recesses.


  • Sea Pro Reef. A fascinating coral ridge at about 55 feet, absolutely
    chock-full of sea fans, tube sponges and Gorgonians. The ridge drops off seaward
    to nearly 130 feet, although the slope is gradual.



  • The Tower (Cabo Cabron). Depth: 130+ feet. The boat drops you into the
    churning channel between rock and mainland. Keep your eyes peeled for dolphins,
    which frequent this spot. A giant pinnacle formation emerges from 165 feet,
    encrusted with sponge and cascading coral where lobster and crab are often
    found. The best way to see it all: drop down to 90 feet and slowly swim up and
    around the peak.



On Land…



Hike Pico Duarte , the tallest peak in the Caribbean. Cross Lake
Enriquillo
, the Caribbean's largest salt water lake; try rafting on the
clear waters of the Yaque del Norte river; or get close up to a school of
Humpback whales cavorting in Samaná Bay .



Beaches. Discover the breaking fun waves of Playa Grande , or
frolic in the pristine waters of Sosúa Beach , the mild surf of Playa
Dorada
or the calm waters of Boca Chica . Indulge in the caress of Punta
Cana's
coconut-dotted beaches on the East Coast.

more info about Canyons including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatshorebigsmallairhireinstructionguidedmacrowideanglepfriendly


Wrecks

   Dominican Republic  Caribbean Sea
The Dominican Republic is good value for your
money.
More than 45,000 hotel rooms are located throughout the length
and breadth of the island. The competition keeps hoteliers on their toes,
and the traveler benefits from great vacation prices. There are small beach inns
to small hotels atop hills colonial city hostels to adventure traveler hotels,
all-inclusive beach resorts to deluxe metropolitan hotels.




  • St. George. The St. George is a large freighter, about 200 feet in
    length, sunk in early 1999 as a dive attraction. Now she sits upright along a
    reef slope with her bow at 140 feet and her propellers in the sand at 100
    feet. The wheelhouse and stack remain very much intact.


  • Hickory. The Hickory was purposely sunk as a dive attraction in 1986
    and now sits perfectly upright on the sand seafloor at 65 feet. The 135-foot
    freighter got hammered by Hurricane George, but still hosts a massive amount
    of fish, particularly sergeant majors (obviously used to being hand-fed) and
    Blackbar Soldierfish. The sponge encrustation and marine life make this a
    must-do for underwater photographers.


  • El Limon. El Limon is a 120-foot tugboat sunk near the Hickory. Given
    their proximity and reasonably shallow depth, both ships can be easily visited
    on the same two-tank dive trip.


  • La Sirena Cave . This particular site can only be dived with Treasure
    Divers as they have an arrangement with the landowner, but it's an example of
    the numerous freshwater caves and caverns that are found throughout the DR.
    Here, an iron spiral staircase leads to a cavernous opening in the jungle
    canopy. Stunning water clarity washes a cave system decorated with perfectly
    intact stalactites and stalagmites. This dive is not done as a deep
    penetration and avoids long overhead obstructions, so it is safe for those
    without cave certification. But make no mistake; there is world-class cave
    diving in the Dominican Republic that is yet to be explored.


  • Tanya V. Purposely sunk as a dive attraction by the owner of the
    nearby Coral Costa Caribe Resort; the Tanya V is a 120-foot cargo ship sent to
    the bottom Oct. 22, 1999. Already the stern is home to large schools of grunts
    and Goatfish. She sits in 110 feet of water.



more info about Wrecks including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwreckbigsmallairmacrowideangle

Nova Scotia

   Canada

Nova Scotia has some awesome wreck
diving, gin clear but cold water and a tremendous value for your diving dollar
given the exchange rate. If you are thinking about a family holiday, a club
expedition or simply some awesome diving then check out our website:

website


and website


Related link: Dive
Nova Scotia - Canada



more info about Nova Scotia including maps, reviews, and ratings...Liveaboarddayboatwreckbigsmallsharkswhalesdolphinsairinstructionguidedfriendlymacrowideangle

Key West

   United States  Caribbean Sea

Unless the speed limits have been lifted it will take about 2 hours to drive
between Key West and Key Largo on US 1.


Obey the speed limits - the traffic cops have no sense of humor! If you do
get stopped - stay in the car, hands on the wheel, and wait for the patrolman to
come to you!



At Key Largo I used the Florida State operation that runs the John Pennekamp
Coral Reef State Park. They have first pick of sites inside the reserve (they
run it).



From Key Largo and south down US 1 (the highway) there seems to be a dive
operator at every lamppost, we dived with Amoray and they were good.


Most of the addresses in the Keys have a reference to 'Mile Marker' or 'mm'
on them, so you can work out how far apart they are on US


Dives to do…

The Duane



Purposely sunk Coastguard Cutter. Can have VERY strong surface currents, but
OK on the wreck. Meet Psycho, the 'pet' Barracuda.



Key West

several operators, can't remember offhand who we went with, but we were there at
New Year and it had been a little stormy, but there were a couple of half decent
reefs to dive. I understand that there are some other wrecks accessible from
here, but can't comment on them.


My opinion - do your diving round Key Largo and go down to Key West for the
fun & games on land.



more info about Key West including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwrecksmallcoralairrepairshireinstructionguidedmacrowideangleprocessingfilmpfriendlyrepairsphireinstruction

Maricaban Island Resort

   Philippines  Pacific

Marine Divers SAC - BSAC Special Branch 2292, runs regular trips to this
resort from Hong Kong.


The resort is on the other side of the channel to Puerto Galera ,
offering dives as good if not better with more chance of pelagics, and best of
all LESS DIVERS!!!. Diving is conducted the BSAC way!




more info about Maricaban Island Resort including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatbigsmallcoralairguidedfriendlymacrowideanglepfriendly

Bergen

   Norway  Atlantic

If any of you are coming over to Bergen, or thinking about it, then this

website may be of interest. I'd certainly recommend you take a look at the

"Information for visiting divers" section, and the weather section if
you

want an idea of our above water conditions. (And you can poke and laugh

during the winter)


The photo gallery is of course just for fun, and has been highly compressed

to be "56K" friendly for people who still have to use dial accounts.
This

section will continue to grow weekly. The movies are of course larger, but

only "optional"



Matt Duke

Bergen, Norway


diving in norway

more info about Bergen including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwreckdriftdrysuiticebigsmallwhalesdolphinskelpairmacrowideangle


Rodney Bay

   Saint Lucia  Caribbean Sea

We were in Rodney Bay in May 2002 and the best diving is around the
southern tip of the island in the vicinity of Souffriere where diving is
located around the fantastic piton mountains. The main beach near Rodney Bay is Reduit
beach, which I am sure you can reach within a short walk of your hotel or digs,
or you may actually be located on the beach. The diving outfit we used was Anse
Chastanet's hotel dive operation, which has a booth on the beach at one of the
Reduit beach hotels (either the Papillon or the Rex, I can't quite remember).
You can book there or direct by ringing Anse Chastanet


website



Anse Chastanet will pick you up from your hotel, take you to a short
drive away at a slip where you board a fast boat to take you down to the center
several miles down the coast. There, you will be taken on a very short check out
dive of the usual variety (mask clearing, alternative air source breathing,
buoyancy check), then you have a two-tank dive, one in the morning, and one
after lunch, which is included in the deal. You are then taken back home via the
same means after the dive. The deal was approx. $75 including a great buffet
lunch, which was excellent value.


I was surprisingly impressed with the diving around Souffriere, good viz,
vertiginous walls and healthy corals and fauna. The diving outfit was
professional and the service and deal well presented/pitched.


Have fun in Rodney Bay, don't forget to patronize Spinnakers on the beach,
and the Lime bar and restaurant just off the beach. The Great House restaurant
further up at Pigeon point is first class, if you fancy a bit of 'posh nosh'.


I am sure I don't need to warn you about the 'Aloe Vera' brigade, which you
will find hanging around the shopping mall, trying to sooth your sunburn or
mosquito bites... for the obligatory fistful of dollars. Also, car hire is 'cr.p'.
We turned down 3 cars that were lethal death traps from a very reputable
company. Public transport is cheap and the share ride minibus stops just outside
the mini-mart on the main road. Use that instead! I also wholly recommend a day
sail to Martinique! Whoa, dolphins, manta rays, we saw the lot, and had a nice
French lunch at Josephine's in Marin harbor .




more info about Rodney Bay including maps, reviews, and ratings...dayboatwallnightsmallshoalsairinstructionguidedmacro
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