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Fiji Dive Resort - Scuba Diving Sites
The resort is recognized for providing the best diving this region
in Fiji has to offer. The waters of the Koro Sea are known for their
exceptional diversity, including a large number of identified dive
sites and newer areas we're still exploring. From sites just 10
minutes away to the world-class Namena reefs, we offer a variety
of dives for novices and experts alike.
We think part of a great diving experience is the adventure of the
unknown. Thus, our guests are welcome to join our exploration and
help us name new sites. We also drift dive in some areas never previously
dived.
Dive Fiji: Here are our favorite scuba diving sites:
Namena Island
This small island 20 miles to the south of Savusavu is surrounded
by mile after mile of unexplored reefs. Seemingly bottomless drop-offs,
multi-colored soft corals and perfect coral gardens support an abundance
of marine life. This is the place to see the big fish cruising in
from the depths of the Koro Sea. Barracuda, spanish mackerel, dog-tooth
tuna, mantas and large sharks regularly patrol these reefs.
(Note: Jean-Michel rates Namena as the best dive spot in
Fiji, and one of the 10 best in the world. We are one of the only
diving resorts in Fiji that visits Namena on a regular basis. Weather
permitting, we visit Namena 1-2 times per week.)
Canyons
Swim through beautiful grottos of hard coral extending into vast
unexplored underwater canyons. See Reef Sharks resting in the grottos.
Shark Alley
A maze of swim-throughs, overhangs and chambers hide white tip reef
sharks resting on sandy bottoms. Giant Mouri wrasse and grouper
can be found hiding around the next corner.
Nuggets
The nuggets are two coral heads. One is a myriad of soft corals
surrounded by schools of fairy basslets, masked banner fish, leaf
fish, with jacks and barracuda circling. The second is covered in
golden soft corals. Lionfish, scorpion fish, nesting trigger fish
and moray eels are abundant.
Goldilocks
This site is a favorite because you can swim completely around the
edge of the reef. It offers great diversity of hard and soft corals,
with a very abundant reef fish population.
Jacksons
This spectacular wall features gigantic sea fans at depths of 90
feet. Divers finish among luxurious purple soft corals at 40-60
ft.
Fingers
This site is known for a beautiful spur and groove reef system,
jutting fingers of hard coral alternating with high flow grooves.,
plus painted crayfish, giant tridacna clams, and eagle rays.
Light House
This is a good, deep dive -- 100 feet -- with a large aggregation
of fish, such as groupers and snappers, and octopus. This is an
active spawning site of both these large fish and smaller reef fish.
Mystery Reef
This isolated reef is scattered with coral heads covered in multi-colored
soft corals, spanish mackerel, coral trout and unicorn fish.
Hole in the Wall
This vertical drop off supports huge gorgonian fans. Large tuna,
spotted sweetlips, mackerel, barracuda, with bronze whalers lurk
in the depths below.
Big Blue
This spectacular drop off features giant gorgonians covered with
feather stars. It's a perfect place to watch for sea turtles and
large fish.
Alice in Wonderland
This site is an open water large patch reef, where small reef sharks
often lurk underneath large mushroom-shaped corals. The upcurrent
end has good flow and huge aggregations of reef fish and larger
pelagic life.
Nsonisoni Pass
This is a drift dive along a wall covered with every variety of
pristine hard and soft corals imaginable. Divers can swim across
the passage to the purple bommies, a mass of purple soft corals
fed by the nutrient-rich Koro Sea waters. Large barracuda, circling
gray reef sharks and white tips cruise everywhere.
Barracuda Point
Beginning on a reef wall just off the coast of the resort, this
dive involves swimming along a hard-coral reef finger to join a
school of 50-60 resident barracuda. Be on the lookout for hammerheads
and schools of batfish as well.
Dreadlocks
In the middle of Savusavu Bay, this site is home to a lavish array
of multicolored hard and soft coral as well as lionfish, harlequin
filefish and butterfly fish.
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