- 17:11
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1) May seem an obvious one to start with but it’s amazing how many people don’t – LISTEN TO THE BRIEFING.
The dive guide isn’t giving a briefing to hear their own voice (although with the length of some guides briefings, you might doubt that), they’re trying to impart to you some of their local knowledge and expertise about the next dive and the potential risks and challenges the site may present to you. You should be listening anyway, but if the guide mentions “possibly very strong currents” you should give them your undivided attention and learn how that can affect your dive and what procedures you should use in those conditions. You should also understand any possible signals the guide will use and a lot of guides will only introduce drift related signals when they make their first briefing for a drift dive.
- 17:08
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I’ve met people who dislike dogs (although usually they’ll tell you that it is the dogs that don’t like them), I’ve met people who dislike cats with a passion (they are strange little people and they have my sympathy) but I’ve never met anyone who hates the tortoise. How can you? They’re one of the most inoffensive creatures on the planet. Slow moving, posing a threat to nothing (unless you’re a lettuce and then, whoa, you are in trouble), with a generally contented look upon their countenance; it’s hard not to like a tortoise, let alone harbor any misgivings about them.
- 17:05
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Amongst my many diving related books is a copy of “Coral Reef Guide Red Sea” by Ewald Lieske & Robert F. Meyers (published by Collins). This book helps me to identify new sightings, relive memorable encounters and acts as a wish-list, showing me lots of wonderful creatures that I have yet to see, such as the Helmeted Gurnard or the Dragon Sea moth (amongst many others).
- 17:00
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A lot of people are scared of the moray eel. A lot of people will tell you that they (the moray eel not the people themselves) are aggressive, dangerous and, above all, real ugly.
It is easy to understand these misconceptions (with the exception of the aesthetic value of the moray, after all beauty is in the eye of the beholder); morays are a snakelike fish (most humans have a fear of snakes or anything that slightly resembles a snake), are often “seen” demonstrating an aggressive posture (constantly flashing their fearsome teeth by opening and closing their mouths) and, thanks to movies such as Pete Yates’ The Deep, have a reputation for liking nothing better than to chow down on an unsuspecting diver.
- 14:48
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They look like organic dirigibles of the sea, have a cute smiley face and pose no threat to humans, yet each year these wonderful and diverse fish are subjected to abuse by divers, snorklers and swimmers alike. At the best, they are caught and handled until they inflate themselves in to an almost spherical shape and, at the worst, they are caught, cleaned, dried and then inflated to make “attractive and unusual” lamp shades which, were they to know their ultimate fate would be as a talking point on someone’s coffee table, would probably provided them with little comfort.
What are we talking about? Puffer fish and porcupine fish of course.
- 22:59
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We’ve picked 5 of our favourite dive sites for your perusal. We’ve also given a list of the pro’s and con’s of each site so, hopefully, you can get the most from each site without too much effort. Enjoy!
SHARK & YOLANDA REEFS, RAS MOHAMMED NATIONAL PARK
SHARK & YOLANDA REEFS, RAS MOHAMMED NATIONAL PARK
Shark Reef is the Red Sea’s most famous and most popular dive site. It is easy to understand why, especially if you have dived there in the summer, with its rich and varied corals, and abundance of reef & pelagic fish.
- 22:57
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Shark Reef is the Red Sea’s most famous and most popular dive site. It is easy to understand why, especially if you have dived there in the summer, with its rich and varied corals, and an abundance of reef & pelagic fish.
Due to its geographic location, the Sinai Peninsula enjoys a rich source of plankton and other food stuffs that are transported to the area by the strong and massive currents of the Red Sea. Due to their geographic location, the Shark & Yolanda reefs being at the very tip of the peninsula, it is advisably that only experienced drift divers dive here as the currents can be strong, very strong. You can also have large surface swells, especially in the winter, that make exiting the water rather tricky. Having said that, on a bad day Shark Reef is a great dive, on a good day Shark Reef can blow your mind.
Due to its geographic location, the Sinai Peninsula enjoys a rich source of plankton and other food stuffs that are transported to the area by the strong and massive currents of the Red Sea. Due to their geographic location, the Shark & Yolanda reefs being at the very tip of the peninsula, it is advisably that only experienced drift divers dive here as the currents can be strong, very strong. You can also have large surface swells, especially in the winter, that make exiting the water rather tricky. Having said that, on a bad day Shark Reef is a great dive, on a good day Shark Reef can blow your mind.
- 22:52
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The body’s blood runs slow and deep at 4am. Outside it’s cold, dark and the sun will not show herself for another couple of hours. Most people, the sensible ones at least, are still in bed, wrapped in their duvets, wrapped in the arms of loved ones, wrapped in the bliss of sleep and dreams. And yet across Sharm numerous guests are shuffling bleary eyed to their hotels lobbies, breakfast boxes in hand and the feeling that somewhere someone is having laugh at their expense.
Why are people forsaking their beauty sleep and the warmth of their beds then? Easy. To dive the SS Thistlegorm.
Laying at 30 meters in the Strait of Gubal and forty kilometers as the crow flies from Sharm el-Sheikh (hence the early start), this British merchant navy ship has become, in a relatively short time, an icon of diving in the Red Sea, and is without doubt Egypt’s most famous wreck, if not one of the world’s most famous.
- 22:50
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Why go night diving?
Night diving is one the best ways for a diver to experience some of their favorite Sharm dive sites in a whole new light (if you’ll excuse the pun) with the chance to see strange and wonderful creatures that they rarely, if ever, get the chance to see in daylight. There is also the adrenaline rush of venturing in to the unknown for those making their first night dive.
A site that someone knows like the back of their hand in the day becomes a completely different place once the sun goes down.The colours of the reef are so much more vibrant (admittedly with the aid of a torch) and, as Whodini sung, the freaks really do come out at night.
- 22:43
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One of our favourite sites around Sharm el-Sheikh is Shark’s Bay. At first glance it seems little more than a vast tundra of rocks and sand. On closer inspection though it has a lot to offer, especially if you enjoy macro. One of the most exciting discoveries we have made there recently is a small colony of urchin mantis shrimps. Admittedly we didn’t know what creature we’d stumbled upon until we’d compared our photos to others on the Internet but even before we were able to positively identify the shrimps, we knew we’d spotted something a little rare and unusual. The shrimp has a telson (in laymans terms, it’s arse) that resembles a rock-boring urchin which it blocks the entrance to its cavity (lair) to avoid detection (both from predators and divers). We only initially noticed the shrimps because one just happened to move whilst we were photographing the coral it inhabits. On the same day we saw an eagle ray which is enough to make most divers happy, yet this 30mm shrimp was the highlight of the dive.
- 21:55
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Okay, with dive sites such as Shark Reef, Thomas Reef or Ras Umm Sid to choose from, why would anyone in their right mind say “One of my favourite dive sites is Shark’s Bay”?
You’ll probably never see hundreds of snappers there, or a shiver of sharks, and no wrecks (except for sun-wizened dive guides), so why, oh why! (do girls love horses?), would anyone cite Shark’s Bay as one of their favourite dive sites?
- 21:51
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Hammerhead Shark from Cigdem Cooper on Vimeo.
The hammerhead sharks are a group of sharks in the family Sphyrnidae, so named for the unusual and distinctive structure of their heads, which are flattened and laterally extended into a “hammer” shape called a “cephalofoil”. Most hammerhead species are placed in the genus Sphyrna; some authorities place the winghead shark in its own genus, Eusphyra. Many, not necessarily mutually exclusive, functions have been proposed for the cephalofoil, including sensory reception, maneuvering, and prey manipulation.
- 21:42
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Length: up to 0.4 mDistribution: Pacific and Indian Ocean, ranging from the Red Sea to Great Barrier Reef
Synanceja verrucosa is a fish species, sometimes lethal to humans, which is known as the reef stonefish or simply stonefish. They are carnivorous ray-finned fish with venomous spines that lives on reef bottoms, camouflaged as a rock. They are the most venomous known fish in the world.
- 21:39
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Gordon Reef is the first of four reefs lying in a north-east line in the Strait of Tiran and is easily identified by the wreck of the Louilla, a Panamanian cargo ship, that ran aground on the reef in 1981. The “classic” dive here runs along the north side of the reef, however the reef on the southern and western side is, for me, far prettier, more pristine and has a lot more variation.
My favourite dive here (which can be done as a fixed mooring dive or drift dive), starting from one of the westerly moorings, takes you east to the drop-off where you encounter numerous giant sea fans. From here, proceeding in a south-westerly direction, you follow a large extensive plateau (approixmately 24m), skirting around the outside of what is known as the Amphitheater (a large circular sandy depression). In this area you generally find hundreds of schooling bannerfish, numerous twin-spotted snappers and trevally (orange-spotted and barred). If you are fortunate, you may encounter turtles, large rays (such as the spotted eagle ray) or even sharks (such as the leopard shark, grey reef shark or white tip reef shark). Eventually the plateau turns north leading you back to the mooring area (a sandy area full of fire corals as well as a pile of cables and metal bars). If conditions are favourable, you can continue the dive as a drift along the western side of the reef which has an extensive area of pinnacles.
- 21:35
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