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POWER STATION
– Located 5 Kms south of Aqaba
town. Swim over fringing reef which drops down to 5m with sand and
patch reef, from where reef slopes down to 20m and drops away to
200m! Swim down over the wall edge to depth of 30m and swim south.
Pelagics are seen "in the deep blue". There are overhangs at 25m
with excellent fan corals, with large Yellow Mouth Morays. Ascending
to top of wall and travel back northwards at 15/18m with a nice
pinnacle at 16m with lots of glass fish, Frog Fish, Scorpion Fish.
Turtles and Napoleon Wrasse also frequent this area. Still ascending
and working back to entry point at 10m depth look out for green-blue
Devil Scorpion Fish, Frog Fish and Octopus. Safety stop at 5m with
lots to see at edge of the fringing reef. |
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FIRST BAY
- Entry point is 200 m north of Club Murjan (10 Kms south of Aqaba
town), through the lagoon until you are in waist deep water. Snorkel
out to the fringing reef and drop through a gap to 3m. Continue
finning North through patch coral to an area of white sand with small
coral outcrops scattered around inhabited by many different species of
Morays. Continue further north to a pinnacle covered in red soft
corals, move out to 12-15m depth and begin to drift south towards
Cazar Reef. This open area many Lunar Tail Grouper and large slipper
lobsters and above at around 5m are often seen Great Barracuda. As the
bottom drops away to over 30m head inland and around 10-12m you will
often find Frog Fish and Stone Fish. Continue down to the entrance of
Cazar Reef for safety stop and exit. Once out of the water is a short
walk into the Club. |
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CAZAR REEF-
Next to the Marine Reserve and also the location of Club Murjan, the
Alcazar's beach club. Enter at south side of gully edging down to 18m,
lots of Cornet fish and Fusiliers, a cabbage coral marks the corner of
the reef. Swim northwards over some large black corals to a pinnacle
at 17m covered in soft coral. Lots of Lunar Tail Grouper and nice
Table Coral and cleaning stations. Head up to 10/12m and move
southwards, often Barracuda are seen in the shallower water, plus Grey
Morays and Lion Fish and cleaner Wrasse Stations. On sandy areas Moses
Sole, Dragonets and Flounders. Turn left into the gully for safety
stop at 5m where you will often see Puffer Fish and Whitebait. |
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EEL GARDEN
– This another site located at the Club Murjan area. Enter on left
side of gully and edge down and south to 10m swimming over grass to a
pinnacle at 19m covered in Christmas Tree worms of al colours.
Continue south at 25m through a forest of black coral, ascend the sand
slope to coral outcrops surrounded by Banner Fish and Lion Fish and up
to
a pinnacle at 7m
that is a photographer's dream...
The pinnacle is covered in an array of soft corals, a home for many
different species of Morays, rare Harlequin Shrimp and Ghost Pipe
Fish. Plus lots of Glass Fish protected by a Red Toothed Grouper and
Lion Fish. Head back over the Ell Grass home, to hundreds of eels,
disappearing and reappearing as divers swim over, back to sandy area
in the gully at 5m for safety stop. |
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ABDULLAH REEF
– Approx 5 mins drive from the Club in an area known as the Tourist
Camp. Enter the site through a maze of fringing reef with fantastic
displays of Fire coral. Drop down to 5m and follow slope down to 12m
to a large pinnacle full of a variety of marine life. Head across the
sand to a large circular reef with a Gorgonia Fan coral in centre.
Continue down to 24m where shoaling Pennant Fish have a "permanent"
home. Ascend slowly in a circle and watch territorial displays Parrot
Fish till you reach 10m. Following the reef south you encounter many
Clown fish and anemones, plus occasional Ghost Pipe fish in the
anemones, Scorpion Fish in the purple acropora coral. Approaching the
safety stop area at the base of the fringing reef, many Burr Fish and
the occasional Toad Fish. |
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BLACK ROCK
– The northern side of Wreck Bay, adjacent to the former Tourist Camp.
Entry at a gravel and shingle point, swim out and pick up the reef on
the right and swim down to the planned depth, usually around 25m.
Heading north there are immense coral slopes and valleys with large
black coral "bushes". This are is frequented by Hawksbill turtles.
Ascend slowly to 10m and swim south again back to the entry point.
Shoaling Fusiliers, cruising Parrot fish are common, as well electric
Torpedo Rays. At safety stop watch out for Moses Sole and flounders in
the sand and gravel as well as grey morays. |
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THE WRECK OF THE CEDAR PRIDE
A Lebanese freighter scuttled in 1983 which now hosts a wide
variety of hard and soft corals. She is intact and lies across two
reefs on her port side. Divers can swim under her at 27m. She can take
several dives to fully appreciate and is an excellent night dive. It
is also the site for beautiful sea horses.
Entry through a narrow path through the reef to drop into 5m
of water where a small pinnacle sits with a myriad of life, an
excellent safety stop on the return. Follow Rainbow Reef down to the
wreck, explore from bow to stern, working your way to the top of the
superstructure. The mast is covered in large red soft coral, large
snappers and cruising Yellow Bar Bream. Leave the wreck with air
enough to explore Rainbow Reef as you make your way back to the entry
point. |
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JAPANESE GARDENS
Also in Wreck Bay but to the southern end. Entry is through a
narrow gully in the fringing reef and then descend to an eel grass
bed, where you will find Snowflake Morays. The main reef is
encountered at 5m then follow it down through shoals of Orange
Basselets and Sergeant Majors. Keep at a 20m depth and swim along edge
of reef over bushes of black coral. If sharks are to be seen (White
Tip Reef sharks) this is where you will see them in the deep blue of
the Gulf to your right. At 23m at the head of a gully there is a large
Gorgonia Fan coral. From here start working your way into the
shallows, keeping an eye out for resident turtles. At 15 there is a
pinnacle with a large Yellow Mouth moray and large Cornet Fish hunting
in the shoals. Continue up to 2 pinnacles at 6m filed with Lion Fish
and shoaling Basselets and the occasional Barracuda. |
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GORGONE ONE
– Approx 8 mins drive from the Club. Named after the huge Gorgonia fan
coral at 16m. After a zig zag entrance thru' fringing reef you are
confronted with a huge Cabbage coral, the size of a house, there is
also a resident turtle. This site is known for its 3 pinnacles teeming
with life, Lion Fish, golden anthias, occasional Jacks and Cornet
fish, plus a resident Arabian Angel and Yellow Mouth Moray. Good easy,
shallow dive. From the first pinnacle continuing at 16m due west you
arrive at a massive double Gorgonia Fan coral. Continue on to a small
pinnacle with a number of Morays and hanging soft coral "gardens".
Move slowly up the reef to another pinnacle at 9 metres, with an
overhang full of Glass fish, Coral Grouper and Stone fish. Plus lots
of cleaner shrimps providing a popular cleaning station. Swim back to
the large Cabbage coral marking the entry point through the coral and
the exit. |
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GORGONE 2
– Approx 500m south from Gorgone
1. Easy entry onto a shallow grassy area, swim out a distance of 30m
to where the reef starts at 2m - 3m depth, often Scorpion Fish, Stone
Fish and Crocodile Fish are seen at the base of the reef. At 6 m there
are 2 large pinnacles fronted by Broccoli coral and then across a
solid reef of Rose coral which drops down to 20m and a large Gorgonia
Fan coral. Lots of Lion Fish and eels. |
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7 SISTERS
- Here 7 pinnacles of coral vie for your attention over a solid coral
reef. Luckily the depth is only 8-9m so you can enjoy the wonders each
has to offer. Big Eye Emperor and shoals of Fusiliers live around
these pinnacles. This area is full of marine life and worthy of a dive
on its own, shallow with lots of bottom time. Superb for the
photographer. |
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7 SISTERS TO TANK
- Easy entry over grass to where
reef starts at 2-3 m. Lots of interesting invertebrate life in the
shallows... Swim through the pinnacles and then turn in towards the
shore to another set of pinnacles "the Fairy Ring".... Continue south
at 8 m where patchy coral makes way for grass and sand till you will
see in 6m an M40 anti aircraft tracked vehicle ("The
Tank") scuttled in September 1999 to create an artificial reef. Play
around it, but not on it as corals are beginning to colonise and
Seastar is recording the colonisation process. From here make your way
to the safety stop and out. |
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OLIVER'S CANYON
- A little more care is needed on entry as the terrain is rather
rugged between the corals. Swimming through the fringing reef Surgeon
Fish are seen here, to a small pinnacle and then continue down a gully
with corals rising steeply on either side. Black coral and wire coral
sprouts from the canyon sides. A max. depth on this dive is 30m, turn
and follow the reef back up to the top at 12m with 2 pinnacles and a
variety of Grouper and Angel fish. Closer look often reveals Frog
fish, Crocodile fish and giant Scorpion fish. The reef starts at 12m
and drops to 30m plus. Large squid are founding feeding in shoals
around the shallow corals and octopus abound on the fringing reef.
Young turtles are often seen finding their ground around the reef.
Swimming up to 6m we will find The Tank, for an excellent long safety
stop. |
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EEL CANYON
– Located in what is referred to as “Big Bay” approx 10 mins drive
from the Club. A spectacular canyon dropping between 2 reefs with an
eel garden at the bottom. An easy entry of shingle descending to 6m to
a pinnacle of covered in Fire Coral, anthias and Lion fish. Follow a
coral edge at 7m dropping down to 10m with lots of Morays and
Goatfish. The main reef then commences with Black corals bushes with a
steep canyon off to the left. Follow the top of this reef down to 23m
where there is a magnificent Table coral. Swim along the bottom to
another canyon crossing at 25m, swim through and round the corner into
a dozen or more Garden eels leading up the narrow canyon. Swim back up
over the tops of the canyons at about 15m with shoaling Fusiliers,
Jacks and Tuna. Eagle Rays and Stingrays populate this area in the
mating season. On reaching again the canyon with the Table coral at
the bottom, swim across the ledge to a depth of 6m for a safety stop,
then travel slightly left towards the exit. |
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YELLOWSTONE REEF
– Also in Big Bay, care is needed
at the entrance as there is sharp rubble and urchins. Once over this
you pass over a large mountain coral (Yellowstone) at 5 m a good place
for a safety stop at the end of the dive.. At 10m there is an old oil
drum, now home to a host of Morays and coral reef colonisation, which
is why it has been left there! Swim south to a reef spur with a
pinnacle at the end at 18m with lots of Red Fire sponge and 4 colour
nudibranchs. Passing over a gully you reach the main reef and follow
the contour down to the planned max. depth, usually 25 - 30m. Across
this reef it is one of the few places to see groups of Bat fish and at
27m there is a massive Black coral bush, which marks the turn around
point. Move up the reef to a depth of 12-15m. Look into the blue as
there are often large Jacks and Tuna. On reaching the reef spur with
the pinnacle head up across the grass to the Yellowstone coral for the
safety stop, watch out for lines of squid in formation across the
grass. |
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BLUE CORAL
- A flat piece of "slab" marks the entrance of this unusual site. Care
is needed on entry as the slab and flat stones can often be slippery
and there are urchins lurking. Once over this area swim across the
grass down to 12m where the reef starts. This a long finger of coral
like a lava flow reaching into the depths fringed with blue acropora
coral.. Excellent for macro shots, many unusual nudibranchs. Working
your way down the south side of the reef there are some nice pinnacles
with Lion fish and Grouper. At 30m the reef changes perspective and
looks more like a lava flow. Swim 15m south to the next reef and start
to work your way back up to 20m, where there is a narrow canyon, which
offers a spectacular swim through to the top of the reef. Here you can
explore the many bommies of Blue coral for morays and other marine
life. Finally continue over the grass to 5m for a safety stop and a
site for Seahorses and Pipefish. |
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KALLI'S PLACE
– At the southern end of Big Bay.
Named after one of Seastar's original instructors, Dr Kalli de Meyer,
now head of the Coral Reef Alliance in the Caribbean. After an easy
entry over shingle descend down a grassy spur to 7m and there on the
right is a spectacular small reef with a mountain coral on top. Shoals
of Glass fish, Lion fish hunting, cleaner stations and a wide variety
of Morays. Take care for the Scorpion fish and Stone fish. 15m away
another reef drops away from 15 to 20m again covered with a huge array
of marine life.
Beyond there is a
deep gully for more experienced divers, but these 2 pinnacles offer
more than you could want and is a must for any underwater
photographer. Great care must be taken though as careless fins can
easily and quickly reduce visibility over the sand and grass areas.
Time to leave.. follow the grass spur up to 5m for the safety stop,
where there is still always a lot to see. |
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SHIPS PLACE
- Named after ship was pushed up onto the reef but successfully towed
off with little damage to the reef! An easy entry on sand and grass
down a slope to 10m where a narrow canyon steeply drops to great
depths. Cross the south side of the canyon through shoals of Blue
Fusiliers and follow the top edge down to 30m. Unicorn fish, Humped
Wrasse, Giant Grouper and the occasional reef shark! At 30m turn south
and follow the top edge of a wall that drops away.. keep an eye out in
the blue for deeper pelagic fish. Slowly ascend to 15m across the
grass and work your way around the spur and groove reefs, eventually
reaching the original canyon. Cross to the grass slope at 5m for the
safety stop. Look out for Seahorses and Pipefish in the grass. Finally
if the surf is up, remove fins before mask and regulator. |
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PARADISE
- Named for all the beautiful soft red coral in the area. The dive can
only be made at High Tide, wading out over the reef plateau. Fit on
fins in 0.5m, we advise to sit down, but although awkward it is worth
the effort. The reef drops to 6m straight away and you head out over
grass with coral bommies. As you go deeper the coral gets more dense
until at 30m you reach a wall. Here a promontory sticks out into the
blue with a huge tree of black coral in the centre surrounded by a
mass of red soft coral. A grotto full of Glass fish makes it more
interesting. Be careful with your fins! Follow the reef through to a
depth of 18m to a Red Soft Coral Garden with some spectacular small
pinnacles. Watch out for Stingrays and Eagle rays. Return back at
between 10/12m until opposite the entry point and make a safety stop.
Before exiting we advise remove one fin it makes standing up easier.
This site recommended for experienced divers only. |
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SAUDI BORDER DROP-OFF
- A few hundred metres from the
Saudi Arabian border with Jordan, this dive site offers something for
all levels of experience. An easy sheltered entry through some pretty
shallow corals. Swim slowly down to 6m where there is a reef covered
with Broccoli coral and cruising Parrot fish. Drop down to sand at 10m
and follow the reef to the right as you stay on top of the wall to a
pinnacle on the edge at 12 m after this you drop slowly down to 30m
where there are massive Cabbage coral formations continuing down in to
the depths, with spectacular wall overhangs. Swim to the max. planned
depth, looking for a turtle who lives over the reef. Check out a
spectacular double pinnacle on the edge of the wall at 18m. Return
along the top edge of the wall. Look out for Napoleons and Jacks
coming out of the blue. Following the top edge of the wall leads back
to the starting point and lots of small corals in 3 - 6m of water
ideal for safety stop before exiting. |