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Deep 6 Jervis bay Dive Locations
Being a Marine Park, Jervis Bay has some spectacular and varied diving
sites. Here are just a few:
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The Docks
One of the most popular dives sites, particularly for newly certified
divers and open water students. The topography consists of kelp beds,
large boulders, small caves, mini drop offs and swim throughs. Small sponge
gardens are scattered throughout the sit, with one of the main attractions
being a double decker cave. Maximum depth on this dive site is 20 metres.
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Slot Cave
Slot cave is located on the Northern side of the bay and is protected
from the Nor'Easters that traditionally blow in Summer. Even though the
site is called a cave it is not actually an enclosed overhead environment.
The entry to slot cave is in approximately 16-18 metres of water. The
slot extends back into the cliff face for about 60 metres. The environment
offers very clean water and superb visibility and has plenty of natural
light. Soft corals and small crusteans can be found on the walls of the
cave and under small ledges. The area is wide enough for two divers to
swim side by side.
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Stoney Creek
Stoney Creek is a dive not for the faint hearted. Depth starts in approximately
25 metres and the wall drops down to 50+ metres. Gorgonian Fans and Sea
Whips on the ocean floor make this a spectacular dive. The area is prone
to currents which provides some excellent drift diving. This particular
dive site is for the experienced diver and is quite often done as a twin
tank dive or technical dive. Stoney creek is on the Southern exterior
of the bay.
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Drum and Drumsticks
Drum and Drumsticks is a dive site located outside of the bay heading
North. It is approximately a 40 minute boat ride. There are a number of
different areas to dive when you get to the drum. Depth ranges from 10
metres to 30 metres and are multi-level. Topography is mainly rocky reef
with sponge gardens and soft corals. There is the wreck of the 'Wanderer'
which is in 26 metres of water. Lion's Den you sometimes spot Lion Fish.
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Spider Cave
Spider Cave is a wonderful dive just South of Bowen Island. Infront of
the cave is great diving with a maximum depth of 30 metres, shallowing
up to 16 metres against the cliff face. The cave extends back 70-80 metres
and is an overhead environment. This site is best to do during Winter
when the Westerly winds blow ensuring there is minimal or no swell when
you enter the cave. |
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Seal Colony
This is one of our favourite sites during Winter when the Seals migrate
to a site South of St Georges Headland. The site itself is made up of
large boulders and rock formations and has a maximum depth of 25-30 metres.
Marine life here is not as abundant as other sites, the primary focus
is on diving with the seals. These creatures are very inquisitive and
playful. They will mimic your actions whilst underwater. This is one of
those dives to do for the experience.
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The Streets
As the name suggests, you'll descend to find large boulders much the size
of houses in an almost uniform pattern creating sandy streets and pathways
between them. The boulders are covered with amazing sponge growth, gorgonians
and sea whips line the sandy bottom. Wintertime the giant cuttle fish
can be found, usually tagging along behind groups of divers.
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Point Perpendicular
Point Perp offers many types of diving, from clear shallow water,
schooling fish, deep rocky sponge gardens and reef to grey nurse sharks.
Just 10 metres under the surface you can find schools of mullet, silver
bream, sea sweep and long finned pike. As you swim down to 30 metres and
deeper the reef changes, as does the marine life. Delicate pink and red
gorgonia, purple sponges, hydroids bryozoans, soft and hard southern corals
with coloured tunicates.
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The Labyrinth
Located outside of the bay on the northern headland. This site can be
described as a huge slab of rock covering an area suspended above the
sea floor, which measures in height about one and half metres surrounded
by small tunnels leading in and out from a central open oval chamber.
An easy location for most divers. The Labyrinth has many exit points and
swim throughs, making it an interesting little dive.
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The Arch
An underwater diving experience that should not be missed. For the advance
diver, it drops down to 35 metres. The arch appears as a huge suspended
rock formation, shaped much like an ancient stone bridge. Beneath the
archway that rises more that five metres above the sea floor and spans
a distance of 10 metres, wobbegong and port jackson sharks can be found
covering the bottom. The arch is laden with small sprigs of gorgonia,
white and orange anenomes, pink and blue solitary corals plus schools
of silver pike and butterfly pike.
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Bowen Island
The Island located on the south side of the entrance to the bay has many
different dives located all the way around it. One of the most frequented
spots is The Nursery which is usually protected from the outside sea conditions.
A great open water dive for beginners. Maximum depth 12 metres with a
topography of sandy bottom and groups of rock formations throughout the
site. |
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Bowen Island is where you'll find
schools of juvenile fish finding protection from larger critters. Oceanic
Sun Fish (Mola Mola) have also been sighted here stopping off at the cleaning
stations. Further around from the nursery there is a site which starts
at five metres and drops over a wall to 15 metres and slopes down to 30
metres in the sand. This is an excellent multilevel site for all diver
experience.
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Ten Fathom Drop Off
For the deep diver, this drop off definitely drops off! It starts in 19
metres of water and falls vertically to 34 metres. Visibility is usually
30+ metres and the edge of the wall is decorated by a wide variety of
sponges and fixed growth. The wall runs parallel to the cliff face, then
swings left for about 20 metres and to the right again for 40 metres.
Along the ziz zag off are overhangs, swim throughs and cutbacks into the
rock. Just seaward of Ten Fathom is a large boulder sitting in 40 metres
and rising 12 metres from the bottom, it's covered in sponges and gorgonia
sea fans.
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We would like to thank Tom Byron author
of Scuba Diving and Snorkeling Guide to Jervis Bay for allowing the
use of information and illustrations from his book including the photographs
on this page.
Other publications in the series include:
Scuba Divers Guide to Southern New South Wales
Scuba Divers Guide to Northern New South Wales
Tom's books are available through Deep 6 Diving Jervis Bay.
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do
you want to scuba diving Lessons?
our PADI open water scuba diving lessons offer you the safety and comfort
of small classes and top quality gear.
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regular scuba diving in jervis bay marine park
for qualified divers
pro dive scuba diving has in excess 30 dive sites both inside and outside
the Bay to choice from. shore
dives,wreck dives, mid-week boat
dives and lots more.
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scuba diving your career
do you want to live an extraordinary life, then we have a training programme
to meet your needs, PADI, TDI, SDI scuba diving courses. we offer ongoing
programs designed around your needs and you can either be trained to Divemaster
or instructor level. So if you have not even learned to dive or have been
diving for years then we can design a program around your specific needs.
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scuba diving with seals
diving with seal's is one of the most thrilling underwater experiences imaginable, see our gallery for seal dive footage. All seal's want to do is play with you. If you don’t want to play with them, they will find someone or something else to play with.
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