40 Steps, the name comes from all the awful stairs you have to lug your gear up and down. It is an easy entry, small pebbles on the shore, not a sandy beach. Typical New England sea life here. I tend to dive to the right side of the cove. You can find some interesting rock formations out there. There is no parking here.
| Facts about 40 Steps Nahant, MA |
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BEAUTIFUL SHORE DIVE.
| Facts about EL NATURAL, AGUADILLA |
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Easy shore dive.
| Facts about Old garden Beach, Cape Ann |
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I can't recall the exact dive this picture was taken at. I know I was diving off South Florida at the time, between Ft. Lauderdale adn Key Largo March 2010.
| Facts about South Florida |
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Great dive site to view baracuda and goliath grouper, also lots of jacks, box fish, and gobies when I dove it. Must be an advanced diver to dive this site due to the depth and this being a large wreck. Must make more than one trip to cover this large ship. Countless variety of coral, sponges and other life on this wreck. Overall, great dive with lots of photo opportunities. You should have a flash if you want to take good pictures since the depth, clarity, and possibility of wanting to take a photo while swimming through part of the structure necessitates better lighting.
| Facts about Speigel Grove : Key Largo, Florida |
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Nice little wreck dive. Nothing to crazy to report.
| Facts about Key Largo, Florida |
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You are guaranteed at least one turtle sighting, if not more. Large ledge with abundant marine life: many tropicals, rays, sharks, turtles, corals, sponges and our newest resident, the lionfish.
| Facts about Loggerhead Reef -- Jupiter, FL |
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This can be done from the beach. Nice reef to see
| Facts about Pompano Drop Off |
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i did not use any flash and used natural light. caught off the reef
| Facts about caral reef off the florida keys |
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This is a beach dive. Depth is 22 feet or less. Wild life is very good I have seen eels, crabs, sting rays, manatees, sponges and more. The only down side to this site is that it needs to be done at high tide, and you have to watch out for fishermen. ( trying to get that changed )
| Facts about Blue Heron Bridge |
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Feeding the Fish!
| Facts about Key Largo, FL |
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French Reef is a great reef to dive. You'll see turtles, lots of marine life, coral, and once in a while a shark or two.
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Most amazing place to do a beach dive not knowning what you may see.
| Facts about Blue Heron Bridge Phil Forster Park Riviera Beach |
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Dive stop out of N Miami Beach go here often. This is an easy dive with lots of life. The trench is part of an old run off dranage pipe that is no longer in use.
| Facts about Deep trench, Miami, FL |
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Empire Mica is a freighter sunk during WWII by two torpedoes from the German submarine U67, 33 seamen perished during the sinking. Horrified residents on the shore could see the ship as it drifted in flames for more than 24 hours. Exact location is 29° 18' 54.8 N 085° 21' 11.69 . One of the giant propellers from the ship was salvaged and sits in front of a popular seafood restaurant in Panama City, FL--Capt Anderson's. A spare prop was located on the deck of the ship, but that portion has since collapsed, and it is much more difficult to find.
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This is a site Stuart Cove's used for shark feeding.
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Located due south of Providenciales, French Cay offers untouched diving with large, healthy coral and sponge life. Near Rock N Roll, another site that lies along the wall off the western tip of French Cay. The Southern Cays, including French Cay, is the name given to the islands and rocks that lie on the Caicos Bank to the south, some 15 miles southeast of West Caicos. These cays are uninhabited, unspoiled and extremely beautiful as little has changed since Richard Owen's visit on the HMS Blossom in 1829. Approximately a 60 minute boat ride out of Provo.
| Facts about Shoots at French Cay |
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This is a metal structure that was part of an Air Force navigational system. The top of the structre is at 20 feet (7 meters) with a depth of 100 feet (30 meters). The site can be subject to strong currents and visibility can range from near zero to 50 feet (15 meters). Fish life moves in and out of the area and may include cloud-obscuring shoals of menhaden and cigar minnows, groupers, snappers, spadefish, flounder, Goliath groupers, barracuda, turtles, blue angelfish, damselfish, and makeral. The top of the structure is home to at least three types of blennies - Molly Miller, seaweed, and tessalated. This area has even been visited by a whale shark.
| Facts about Air Force Tower |
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