Great Diving at very Affordable Price! "Excellent to spot Macro Critters
A coral slope down to 20 meters makes this an easy dive, except from when currents are running - you can pick up quite a lot of speed here. If you drop in the middle of the bay, you will most likely encounter a wreck at 18 meters, tilted to the side. Many frogfish, especially the black variety, have made this area their home. Look around in the sand and you'll find lots of small holes, most of them inhabited by the shy jaw fish. See anything green running swiftly over the sand from one coral to the next? It's probably a mantis shrimp, they are very common here. Plenty of small reef fish, crinoids and nudibranchs.
The dive starts shallow in 5m, on a beautiful reef with an abundance of stony hard coral and schooling small fish - wherever you look there will be thousands of antheas, butterfly fish and sargent majors staring at you. The reef slopes off to a sandy bottom in about 18m and as you follow the contour of the reef, on a flood the current will help you drift into the channel. The divesite can also be done the opposite way on an ebbing tide. You will be moving past a couple of small walls, covered in the famous "potato coral", and the home to a few large groupers - very well camouflaged though! The walls are also full of large purple gorgonian sea fans and green tree corals. If you leave the walls and venture out in the channel, you will be rewarded with very large barrel sponges and long whip corals which often have commensal shrimps living on them if you look close. The sandy bottom is also home to an abundance of fire urchins and mushroom corals. Cuttlefish are often spotted here, even including the rare flamboyant variety, and lionfish and scorpionfish are guaranteed. There are also a couple of overhangs, where nudibranchs, mantis shrimp and often giant frogfish are found. the shallower reefs. It's a long swim though! This is an excellent dive on nitrox.
On the edge between Big Lalaguna beach and Small Lalaguna dito, extends a small wall with a very healthy reef. Starting at 5 m, it drops down to 15 m where a lush coral slope takes over down to 20 m. The wall has cracks and crevices with an amazing variety of marine life: from colonies of anemone fish to scorpionfish, schools of longfin bannerfish, sweetlips, cardinal fish, trigger fish and hiding lionfish. Look out for the real clown fish, there are a few families here. A big variety of nudibranchs is found here, as well as moray eels and the occasional blue ribbon eel. Between 15 and 20 m there are two large coral covered hills with a sandy channel in between them, a great place to find frog fish, octopus and schools of snappers, as well as big sea fans.
An easy dive site for the very beginners. The white sandy beach extends into the water and makes for a perfect place to start an easy dive. On each side of the beach, reef areas with both hard and soft corals follow along the sandy bottom, to make for a perfect first encounter with the reef. Teeming with reef fish such as antheas, parrot fish, surgeon fish, and the home of many species of anemonies with different kinds of anemone fish, the reef is mainly made up of staghorn or fire coral, as well as some table corals. This is also a good area to snorkel. Look closely in the sand. Flounders, shrimps with their gobies, pufferfish, pipefish hiding in the grass, schools of juvenile cat fish and many other critters will not make you disappointed. If lucky, you may also come upon the wreck of a small speed boat in laying in 12 m of water.
A fantastic dive for the diversity of the fish and coral found here. Starting in shallow water, the dive site consists of flat areas broken up by small walls - ridges - at all depths, with the deepest one in 30 meters. The reef is letterally teeming with life, with schools of antheas, surgeonfish, angel fish, butterfly fish, parrot fish and all the other common reef fishes. Moray eels are very common here, and you will find one or two under most coral heads or rocks, often different species sharing a hole. Frogfish and banded sea snakes, turtles and octopus also frequent the area. A school of batfish tends to hang around in 18 meters and a big school of hunting longnose emperor fish very often speed past on their way to find a pray. Pygmy seahorses have always been common here and this is the only plave in Puerto Galera where yoo can admire the beautiful pallette surgeonfish (or "Dory" in the movie "Finding Nemo") By the deeper walls, schools of red tooth triggerfish will appear above you as you cruise along. This dive has to be done on a flood tide, or it will turn into the infamous Kilima Drift, a whole different story…
Situated on a flat sandy bottom, all that remains of this WWII Japanese patrol boat is the engine block and propeller shaft with the propeller. Two very large moray eels are resident, along with many sweetlips and a wealth of small invertebrates. A flashlight and a good dive guide make for a good dive,since the dive site can be hard to find. This is a dive preferably done on nitrox and can only be done on a flood tide. Follow the slope up towards Boulders after you've finished admiring the propeller, and make your way between the rocks into shallow water.
Situated on Escarceo Point, the actual hole in the wall is a short tunnel at 12 meters through a mini mountain that constitutes the dividing range between ebb and tide. This makes for a very beautiful - and sometimes exciting - dive. As is common in an area where currents meet, you can expect lots of schooling fish: Drummers, sweetlips, travellies and snappers. The occasional pair of giant travelly can be seen hovering high above the rocky outcropping. Whilst you swim through the hole, be ware of the lionfish and scorpionfish that are common here, as well as the feather like hydroids growing on the walls - they sting! Good boyancy is a must. The top of the wall is covered in colorful soft coral attracting many colorful fish. Octopus, frogfish, turtles, sea snakes, anything can appear here. On the other side of the wall lies another wall, definitely worth exploring if the current allows it: Covered in soft coral, sponges, green tree coral and fans, it is the hiding place for many morays and puffers and it drops off into a flat lunar like landscape with whole gardens of whip corals, vibrating in the current. This can be a very easy dive, even novices - with good buoyancy control - can dive it. Be aware however that on strong floods, the current can get very tough and down currents are common, making you bounce up and down as a yoyo on your way to the surface. Stay close to your guide and to the bottom!
Further past the Fish Bowl lies the Horse Head, also a dive for divers with training deeper than 30 meters. The reef covers a very large area with an average depth of about 35m/115ft. The site takes its name from one of the rock formations that resembles - guess what - a horse's head, but there are other numerous rock formations that make the topography of the site really interesting. Soft tree corals dominate the substrate, along with areas of large whip corals and big gorgonian fans. During strong flood tides shoals of tuna, shoals of trevally and giant trevally are regularly seen, making this a great drift dive. At the end of the reef is a wall that drops down to 55meters, making this a good site for technical divers. The current here can be very strong, so it is a site recommended only for advanced divers.
The top of the hill lies in 5 m of water, covered with coral heads, sponges, large green tree corals and lush fields of soft coral. It then slopes down in all directions to a maximum of 15 m where a sandy bottom takes over scattered with hard coral and a proper treasure chest for finding unusual critters. The dive site is well protected between three islands, but the current can get quite strong on the wrong tide, so make sure to ask your dive master - or you might miss the dive site. This is one of the dive sites where the shy but beautiful mandarin fish lives. They come out of their fire coral home around dusk to play, or if you're lucky, to mate. Blue ringed octopus and flamboyant cuttlefish have been sighted here, as well as giant cuttlefish and lots of moray eels. If you come here at dusk, you're also likely to find shrimps, crabs and lots of brittle stars crawling over the reef.
If you have training for deeper dives than 30 meters, the Fish Bowl should be on your wish list. The dive requires a blue water descent to the top of the Fish Bowl in 35-40 meters. The rocky reef top is stadium-shaped, and is covered with long whip corals and soft tree corals. It drops off to a sandy bottom in deep water. In the bowl you may see whitetip reef sharks, sweetlips and rainbow runners. Looking out into blue water tuna and jacks are common. After a few minutes in the bowl, you will be swimming up the contour of the reef to the Canyons. Technical divers can venture into the fish bowl and work their way down. Here rocky coral formations, gorgonians and black whip corals break up the sandy bottom, and it is possible to get close to some of the larger fish life when there is a mild current. This dive can be done on a stronger current, but the fish bowl is a difficult place to stop in when a current is running and
Email Add: mark@seariderdivecenter.com
Contact Nos.: +63921 588 5994 / +63906 4545 602
Small La laguna, Sabang, Puerto Galera
Oriental Mindoro, Philippines, 5203
Ernie's point owes its name to Ernie's cave, a small cavern in 21 meters where once lived Ernie the grouper. Ernie moved out many years ago but the dive site kept its name. The tiny cave is at the bottom of a large rocky outcrop, adorned with sea fans and often visited by smaller groupers. Look for tube shaped holes around the mouth of the cave, large mantis shrimps often build their nests here. Deeper, at 27 meters, lies another small cave with abundant marine life around it. None of the caves are large enough to penetrate. Schools of trevally are common here, as are schools of mackerel. Be ware that during big tidal changes, strong cross currents (eddys) often happen here, and you might be stuck in a very small area between conflicting currents.
The name is derived from the large and unfortunate ship that sunk here in a typhoon many years ago. It is visible from the surface still, and rest in only a meter of water. The shallow parts of the bay are magnificent, the majestic table corals spread to catch the rays of the sun. Amongst them play many of the smaller fish that are so often overlooked. Spectacled hawkfish, standing guard with their brilliant marks around their eyes and the neon damsel fish, fish of such an irridescent blue that it rarely seen in nature, antheas and blue- green chromis all hover over the reef. Here and there a huge brain coral disrupts the landscape. This is an easy dive, but the currents can get strong so be prepared for a beautiful ride along the coral slope.
From a beautiful hard and soft coral slope, you'll find yourself on a pretty wall starting at 12 meters and continuing down to 25 meters. The wall has plenty of cracks and crevices with lionfish, scorpionfish and porcupine fish hiding in them. The wall is also famous for its assortment of nudibranchs and flatworms. Also look around for moray eels: white eyed, clouded, many of f them stay in this area. See a black crinoid looking bulkier than normal? It's probably a frogfish. During the colder months, a big barracuda has often been seen resting close to the wall, Continue deeper from the wall and you will encounter the wreck of an old sailing catamaran. Inside the two hulls hide ringed pipefish, lionfish, puffer fish and juveniles of all sorts. On your way shallower, you will find that big carpet anemonies are common here, many of them inhabited not only by anemone fish but also by poreclain crabs.
The Dry Dock is a large steel and plywood construction which was originally designed to lift small boats out of the water. It was sunk in 1998 to create a man-made reef and it soon became hugely succeessful among the marine life in the area. Today completely covered in coral and colorful sea fans, it has become the home of larger reef ish such as sweetlips, batfish, surgeonfish, groupers and snappers. Stay on top of the structure and you'll find that many lionfish have made it their home too. Large pufferfish and porcupine fish hide between the pylons, and different species of nudibranchs and flat worms adorn the legs of the former dock. The construction lies adjacent to a small coral reef ridge, where octopus, pygmy sea horses and anemone fish colonies can be found. If you don't stay too long on the dock, a short swim can take you past the sandy bottom up to the reef of Lalaguna point. A blue water descent to the bottom at 25 m is required, and because of the sometimes tough currents, the Dry Dock is not a dive for the beginner. It is however a great dive for nitrox
The dive starts shallow in 5m, on a beautiful reef with an abundance of stony hard coral and schooling small fish - wherever you look there will be thousands of antheas, butterfly fish and sargent majors staring at you. The reef slopes off to a sandy bottom in about 18m and as you follow the contour of the reef, on a flood the current will help you drift into the channel. The divesite can also be done the opposite way on an ebbing tide. You will be moving past a couple of small walls, covered in the famous "potato coral", and the home to a few large groupers - very well camouflaged though! The walls are also full of large purple gorgonian sea fans and green tree corals. If you leave the walls and venture out in the channel, you will be rewarded with very large barrel sponges and long whip corals which often have commensal shrimps living on them if you look close. The sandy bottom is also home to an abundance of fire urchins and mushroom corals. Cuttlefish are often spotted here, even including the rare flamboyant variety, and lionfish and scorpionfish are guaranteed. There are also a couple of overhangs, where nudibranchs, mantis shrimp and often giant frogfish are found.
A wonderful dive site for macro lovers. A sloping reef ends in a small wall at 20 meters that follows the reef along for quite some time. On the slope, you will find countless nudibranchs, whip coral, sea fans, puffer fish and very often cuttle fish. The wall and its overhangs is home to some unusual critters - blue and black ribbon eels, juvenile emperor fish, pipefish of all varieties, urangutan crabs hiding in bubble coral, flamboyant cuttlefish and frog fish just to name a few. Banded sea snake is common here, as are blue spotted sting rays on the adjacent sandy bottom. Go deeper and you might find thorny sea horses hiding in the rubble.
A world class exhilarating drift dive, this is "the dive" to do in Puerto Galera if you are an experienced diver with a taste for the fast and furious. Drop in close to Hole In The Wall and let the current take you deeper along the slope until you reach an area where currents and mother natura has formed three spectacular canyons in the reef. The canyons all have sheltering walls and sandy bottoms, where you can kneel down and rest - and watch the big fish fighting in the current above your head. On all sides of the Canyons, the slope quickly drops down to 40 meters plus, so the only way once you get to the Canyons is… up! Try to stay for a while and admire the schooling drums, trevallies, batfish, sweetlips and the big sea fans. Inside the canyons you'll find octopus, scorpionfish, sea snakes and other reef fish. At the end of the third and deepest canyon (30 m), there is an old 1,5 meter anchor embedded in the rock, where divers often meet and hold on before letting go and staring the blue water ascent. This is the one dive site where even bigger animals are sometimes spotted: Manta rays, thresher sharks and hammerhead sharks have all been seen here. This is a dive site that changes every time you experience it, on a slack tide it can be a gorgeous dive for photographers, whereas on a strong ebb it can scare the most jaded of divers. Best done in nitrox of course, the dives ends with a blue water ascent and a safety stop in blue water. By the time you exit you'll find that you'll have drifted far off into the ocean. Make sure that you stay with and behind your guide at all times.
At the surface you face a vertical stone wall and a few large boulders breaking the surface . As you descend underwater, down the slope, the site is covered with different shaped and sized boulders that look like they have rolled from the cliff and have come to rest on the slope, creating swim-throughs and caves and lots of hiding places for marine life. This unusual divesite doesn't sport much of the lush vegetation and colorful corals seen at other dive sites in Puerto Galera. Instead you'll be treated to dramatic rock formations, black coral formations, schools of snappers hovering over the reef, lots of nudibranchs and often ribbon eel and cuttlefish. Bring your torch to light up the overhangs under the rocks and don't forget to ask about the sea horses. This is where we find the thorny sea horse, the one that doesn't need a magnifying glass to be seen unlike its pygmy counterpart. They reside in 28-30 meters, unfortunately hiding in the rubble but a good dive guide will find them for you. This site on flood tide when there is no current as the area has a lot of silt sediment. It is a good site for wide-angle macro photography when the visibility is good.
And excellent and shallow drift dive on the right tide. This dive site has many unusual sponge and coral formations, a strange lunar landscape of twisted shapes and undulating plains. You will see large sponges in all natures colors - as well as a few unnatural colors - whilst you drift past. Some rock formations, adorned with green tree corals and table corals will remind you of big mushrooms under which anything might hide. The dive is best done on an ebbing tide, where you drop in shallow in the channel's mouth and then drift gently along the shore towards the open ocean at a maximum of 15 m. It's a good place to fin unisual critters, look out for pipefish, nudibranchs and frogfish, as well as a big variety of small reef fish.
Rising from 33 meters to 20 meters, this huge rock stands upright on the bottom, with an overhang on one side and lots of small crevices on the deep side. Covered in soft coral, fans and sponges the Atoll is very colorful and home to many fascinating creatures. To explore the overhang - where frogfish, flatworms, nudibranchs and lionfish etc are common, you need a light due to the large depth. Emperor angelfish are common, as are sweetlips and scorpion fish and bigger groupers. The rock face is spotted with moray eels and clouds of small reef fish. This dive is best done on nitrox and with a bit of planning you can extend the dive by swimming over towards Shark Cave or Kilima Steps towards shallower depths. The dive has to be done on a flood, when there is less current.
Perfectly situated in 30 meters depth in close proximity to the dive shop, the wreck of the Almajane was sunk in 2003 (but looks about two decades older). Originally a filipino cargo vessel, she was stripped of dangerous objects before sinking and is today a perfect artificial reef standing upright on the sandy bottom. Follow the moring line down to the rudder, where you will always find groups of sweetlips, batfish and rabbit fish. Along the outline of the wreck, big scorpionfish try to blend in and puffer fish try to hide under the hull. The super structure is fast falling apart, but countless lionfish have made it their home, as well as trumpet fish and large snappers. Frogfish are very often found sitting on the wooden structure and a big variety of shrimps hide bunder the debris. Take a closer look and you will find the wheel among the fallen down objects midship. The Almajane make for a perfect swim through with its wide beam and deep draft, light comes in from several skylights so there is no need for more than a small torch. This is an exellent nitrox dive.