Doljo

DOLJO POINT

Drift along this scenic wall and be impressed by the many giant sea fans and basket sponges. The steep slope is mainly occupied by green elephant ear sponges where giant green frogfish hide inside while luring for prey. The current can sometimes be pretty fierce but brings many large pelagic fish to be spotted by divers’ “quick” eyes. We have had tresher shark and mobula rays sightings there before, not too long ago there was a mola mola as well.

NAPALING

Great for shallow-water photography. Here you can find anthias in schools, small stingrays and moray eels. The sardines are the main attraction though. Lots of snorkelers come here to swim around in the vast school. On their turn they attract the usual crowd of predators like the blackfin barracuda and jackfish. Usually we do the last twenty minutes with the sardines because the walls have a lot of interesting marine life as well, hidden in the small cracks and crevices.

MOMO BEACH

The dive starts as a shallow coral reef crest from 4m to 7m, then drops as a vertical wall to 45m. There is a beautiful coral gar- den, good for snorkelers where large acropora table corals, pillar and leathery corals make up the scene. The colorful soft corals, large sponges and crinoids make this site a fantastic place to visit and look for ghostpipefish in the shallows. There are plenty of little overhangs and caverns in the wall to look for moray eels and dragonets. We can find all kinds of interesting smaller marine life in the corals such as fusiliers, razorfish, peacock mantis shrimps, coral groupers, flat worms, sea cucumbers, nudibranchs etc.

ANANYANA

Great for shallow-water photography. Here you can find anthias in schools, small stingrays and moray eels. The sardines are the main attraction though. Lots of snorkelers come here to swim around in the vast school. On their turn they attract the usual crowd of predators like the blackfin barracuda and jackfish. Usually we do the last twenty minutes with the sardines because the walls have a lot of interesting marine life as well, hidden in the small cracks and crevices.