| Welcome to Scubadex, the site written by scuba divers, for scuba divers. We bring you the latest on all things scuba diving related: holidays, scuba, wreck dives, technical diving and scuba diving jobs. |

www.onlineaquariumstore.com

www.onlinepondstore.com

www.onlinevivariumstore.com
|
Scuba Diving Holidays In Seychelles
If ever a paradise was created for divers, this is it. A wonderful archipelago,
with some of the best diving facilities in the world.
Country Description
115 islands, the majority of which are only sandy protrusions
much like desert islands depicted in cartoons. As a result
only about 50 are inhabited. The islands themselves are
spread over a huge range. The nation spreads over as staggering
600,000 square kilometres with land only occupying a relatively
minuscule 300 square miles. There is, as you can imagine,
a lot of sea between islands.
There are four main island groups within the Seychelles, the
Amarante group, the Aldabra group, the Farquhur group and
Mahe group. Most of these are atolls however the main islands
are granite based masses left behind when the continents
of Africa and Asia split. This geographic isolation has
resulted in the Seychelles being home to a number of unique
species. Also, it is the only other pace apart from the
Galapagos that boats giant land tortoises.
The tourism industry is based around the regions of Mahe,
Praslin, Silhouette and La Digue. Scuba diving is a mainstay
of the tourism industry, so divers are made to feel very welcome and well catered for.
Diving Description
The life beneath the waters is as rich and varied as on
land. The corals are incredible, the fish life amazing and underwater topography stunning. There are pinnacles,
boulders and overhangs, alongside excellent walls and reef
formation. If this isn't enough, the rocky underwater
formation have resulted in numerous wrecks within safe
diving limits that are all magnets for marine life. Marine
life includes schools of jacks that come into feed when
the currants are strong.
Dive Sites
L'llot Bay
Features an abundance of life similar to what you'd
expect to find in the Indian Ocean. However here they are
so closely packed in together that they are breathtaking.
The Amirantes Chain
Huge pinnacles of coral rise up many hundreds of meters
from the seabed to about 25m from the surface and boast
an abundance of sea life from turtles to sharks, and massive
coral formations to seafans.
The Seychelles Coral Atolls
The Seychelles Coral Atolls are among the best dives in
the world today due to their remoteness and pristine reef
systems. The Aldabra group are the most remote and are
closer to Tanzania than they are to Mahe. Jacques Cousteau
brought them to the world's attention on one of his
earliest Calypso voyages.
Other info
The Seychelles host an underwater photography competition every year
in November when the plankton are in abundance
and the whalesharks come in to feed. The competition attracts
the world's best underwater photographers.
All visitors to the Seychelles are required to buy a gold
card, the proceeds of which get ploughed straight back
into environmental projects. The cards provide access to
all sorts of tourist attractions.
Features an abundance of life similar to what you'd
expect to find in the Indian Ocean. However here they are
so closely packed in together that they are breathtaking.
|
|