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Scuba Diving Holidays In Tahiti
Tahiti and her abundant islands provide a wonderfully rewarding diving location for beginners.
Country Description
Tahiti may be relatively small, but along with its islands
(officially known as French Polynesia) it covers a staggering
four million square-kilometres of ocean on the South
Pacific! There are a total of 118 islands and atolls,
although they only add up to 1,544 square miles. These
consist of five archipelagos: the Society Islands, Marquesas
Islands, Austral Islands, Tuamotu Islands and the Gambier
Islands. Tahiti is the largest island,
Diving Description
Great corals, sharks, pelagics and some great undersea
topography make Tahiti and its islands excellent locations
for diving,
Dive sites
Tahiti
Tahiti boasts some of the best diving on the planet for
beginners. The attractions include a sunken schooner,
underwater freshwater springs, a vertical cliff and sealife
that include white-tip sharks, moray eels, eagle rays
and nurse sharks. The less explored area on the backside
of Tahiti however offers conditions far better suited
to advanced divers. The area, known as Tahiti-iti, boats
sheer walls, fantastic corals and many exotic benthic
and pelagic species unique to this island.
Moorea
Tahiti's sister islands promises leopard rays, stingrays,
schools of jackfish, shark and eels feeding, triggerfish
and large Napoleon wrasse. There is also a sunken ship.
Bora Bora
The most famous of the Leeward Islands is renowned for
its abundant sea life. Especially manta rays that can bee
seen swimming in groups of up to ten. Very rare for these
solitary creatures.
Raiatea and Tahaa
These two islands share the same lagoon that has 11 passes
through the coral reef. The area boasts drop-offs, shelves
and caves, most of which are located outside the reef.
Fish-wise you can expect to see schools of pelagics, surgeonfish,
triggerfish, jackfish, leopard rays, tuna, barracuda and
even a few manta rays during the season. The lagoon
also features the wreck of the Nbordby; a three-masted
19th century Danish ship that was sunk by a storm in 1900.
Huahine
Half a dozen dive sites scattered around the lagoon. Expect
to see large schools of barracuda, jackfish, spadefish,
red snapper, tuna, rays, turtles, sharks (which you can
feed) and Napoleons.
Rangiroa
One of the world's most outstanding destinations.
The largest atoll in the South Pacific offers a huge lagoon
77km long and 26km wide. It drops to a depth of 30-40m.
The most famous dive locations are the two passes in the
coral reef, the Avatoru and Tiputa channels. Here you'll
meet schools of sharks, eagle rays, jacks, tuna, barracuda,
manta rays, turtles and dolphins. There are also some small
underwear caves and submarine channels.
Manihi
Manihi promises both lagoon and ocean diving. One site
here is a breathtaking wall that rises from 1,300m deep
to only 4m from the surface. The waters here boasts large
Napoleon wrasse, black-tip sharks, manta and eagle rays,
giant jackfish, gray sharks and a numerous types of coral.
Tikehau
Well known for its huge fish population that live within
a circular lagoon with a diameter of 26km.
The Marquesas Islands
Underwater caves filled with lobster and rare shells, open
water volcanic reefs with large fauna, schools on manta
rays, huge loaches, schools of leopard rays, stingrays,
loads of melon-head whales and even friendly hammerhead
sharks make this a wonderful destination. And if these
creatures aren't attraction enough, there is also
a very friendly dolphin that likes to play with divers.
The Austral Islands
The southernmost location of French Polynesia, the Austral
Islands promise encounter with whales that are as easy
as they are amazing.
Other info
European nationals may visit for up to three months without
a visa. Polio, tetanus and typhoid inoculations are recommended.
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