click on map to see the Barra dive sites on offer

 

NEW PADI PROTOCOL

Due to a change in PADI standards, we may only do deep training as the 3rd dive of the Advanced course, therefore, for divers to dive all our deep reefs (deeper than 18m), they will need at least Advanced Qualification, or complete the Advanced programme here (NOT JUST THE DEEP ADVENTURE DIVE)

Manta Reef

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification: 

 

Maximum Depth
Average Depth:
Dive Time:

24km

Advanced Diver

 

30m

21m
A multilevel dive profile, that gives you a dive time of 45mins, if done correctly.

This is the world famous Manta Reef on everyone’s must dive list. Not only is the topography of the actual reef absolutely stunning but also close encounters with Manta rays are practically guaranteed at the three cleaning stations, making this a phenomenal dive site. 

We have a north and south drop depending on the current. Our North drop is onto Manta Pinnacles, the first cleaning station and a massive pinnacle of rock that rises from 26m on the sand to 18m on top. The wall is a steep drop of 8m with a swim thru and huge overhang, which hides a resident Potato Bass. Red Fang Trigger fish cover the reef along with huge schools of Yellow Snappers, Bigeyes, Fusiliers and Trumpet fish. This is also the place to see Spanish Dancers swimming midwater during the day, quite a rare sight. From here we swim along the top of the reef over colourful soft corals to the second cleaning station. We’ll stop and make ourselves negatively buoyant and let the Manta’s swim up to and over us (we think they like our bubbles tickling their bellies) and just take in this amazing sight, being careful not to touch them. Then depending on the dive time we either carry on to
Manta Canyon
, the third cleaning station, or start our ascent to the safety stop.  The Manta’s carry on being cleaned by Cleaner Wrasse, Goldies and Butterfly fish below us and sometimes we encounter curious Devil rays on the way up.

Our South drop is onto Manta Canyon, a huge wall that drops down to 30m on the sand, with lots of cracks and ledges to look into for Eggshell Cowries, Long nose hawk fish and giant Moray eels. We hide behind the ledge at 24m to let the Manta’s come over us, and when we carry on the dive we head over the reef to Manta Pinnacles.

General Info: This reef is rarely affected by strong currents or surge.Because of the distance to, and the quality of, this reef we like to ‘double tank’ this dive site and the boat ride there and back gives us plenty of opportunity to find dolphins and whale sharks to swim with.

The Office

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:
Dive Time:

10km

Advanced Diver

 

30m

23m
Our slow ascent to our safety stop so we can watch for Devil Rays means we have a total dive time of 40 mins.


This dive site brings a whole new meaning to the phrase ‘this is my office’ and our divemasters love it!

The topography is reminiscent of Manta Reef and Office even has its own Manta cleaning station, so encounters with Manta’s are very common.

The actual site is a rock shelf that rises from the sea floor 70metres below. And our Northern drop puts us at the top of a 3m high, huge ‘S’ shaped wall. This wall has ledges and overhangs that provide homes to huge resident Honeycomb Moray, Turtle and Potato Bass. Pinnacles of rock also jut out from the wall where multitudes of Goldies, Butterfly fish and Moorish Idols congregate to add lots of moving colour! At the bottom of the ‘S’, three huge rocks come up from the sand, and provide you divers with slim gullies and crevices to swim through while looking for Devil Firefish and sleeping White tip and Black tip reef sharks. We have also seen the rarely spotted Bowmouth Guitar and Leopard Sharks at this reef and you must also look out for two very inquisitive Old Woman Angelfish who come up very close to check you out then follow you on your dive playing in your bubble trail!


General info:
This dive usually has a north/south current that varies between slight and express, so you will be thoroughly briefed on negative entry and drift diving procedures, sometimes your visit to the office can be beautiful, quick and lots of fun!

Giants Castle

 

 

Distance

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:
Dive Time:

7km

Advanced

 

35m

28m
Bottom time is 20mins, and total dive time is 30mins due to our nice slow ascent


This reef earned its name, when every creature spotted here was twice the size than normal! So be ready for encounters with huge Potato Bass, Moray’s and massive Manta’s (bigger than Mother from Manta Reef!) at the cleaning stations.
The reef is a 7m high wall that runs for 300metres and because of the currents, can be an excellent and exciting drift dive.

The top of the wall is at 27m and has ledges, overhangs and little craters, which hide smaller geometric and white mouth morays. The top of the wall is decorated at various intervals by delicate green tree corals providing refuge to lots of sea goldies. Lobster, Surgeon and Scorpion fish are in abundance too. And look out for rarely noticed, large Frogfish. Ascents can be a bit special too so look out for game fish such as Barracuda and Kingfish and Devil rays on the way up.


General Info:
The current at this site is predominantly north/south, but can reverse as well and quite quick, therefore divers need to be quite competent at negative entry and drift diving procedures.

Salon

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:
Dive Time

6km

O/W

 

18m

16m
50mins


Salon is a small in-shore reef that is a favourite of photographers and divers alike because of all the special small creatures that are resident here, and the odd behaviour of the Trumpetfish. The actual reef is a 25m long ridge like pinnacle that juts from the sand and is surrounded by boulders at the sides. We slowly swim around looking under overhangs and into caves for geometric, honeycomb and black cheek morays, broad barred firefish, the five different coloured paperfish (white, brown, pink, black and yellow) and for the cleaner shrimp that give this site its name.

Once you’ve located the cleaner shrimp, place your hand flat on the sand and wait for the shrimp to come out and give you a bit of a manicure. Watch for the Trumpetfish though, that use divers as decoys to try and grab the shrimp, a phenomena that has only been seen at this reef. The Trumpetfish come so close to your mask that you can see their intricate gill and mouth movements. Don’t forget to look out onto the sand and around the boulders for octopus and bluespotted and round ribbontailed rays.

This is a wonderful dive site that reminds people of the beauty of the little things, and tempers visitors’ fixation on Manta’s if just for 50 minutes!


General info:
This dive is quite gentle as it is rarely affected by current and is great even in low visibility, because you get so up close and personal, however if the surge is too strong we will suggest another site. 

Mike’s Cupboard

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

5km

O/W

 

17m

15m

50 mins


This is a huge plinth of rock that comes up from the sand at 17m to the top at 14m. It would be quite flat if it wasn’t for the huge craters or potholes that have been gouged out of the rock, giving this dive some incredible topography to cover.

Our drop is onto the first pothole, which is about 5m wide. In here is a boulder that you can swim around while looking at the nine or so Flutemouth fish that live here. From this hole we swim to the next giant crater which is about 3m deep, in here you see all the usual tropical reef fish, from snappers to lizardfish, but also look out for the Crocodile fish, which are nicely camouflaged around the ledges. Look under overhangs for Devil Firefish and Box banded shrimp, and beneath one of the many swim thru ledges, lives a loggerhead turtle. Inside a small hole surrounded by leather coral, there are four black cheek morays that seem to have a special relationship with the juvenile goldies they protect and the colourful assortment of soft coral dotting the whole area makes you think that Mike has dropped his clothes all over his cupboard!

There is also always a huge shoal of fusiliers that hover over the reef, which get chased almost into a bait ball when the resident gang of Bluefin Kingfish come charging through like a band of thugs.

This is a fantastic dive that can be nice and slow but with action everywhere, and we’ve also seen dolphins on scuba here.


General info:

We can usually dive this reef in a current because we can hide in the potholes, however lots of surge can reduce visibility dramatically, and we may suggest another site in big swells.

NEW PADI PROTOCOL

Due to a change in PADI standards, we may only do deep training as the 3rd dive of the Advanced course, therefore, for divers to dive all our deep reefs (deeper than 18m), they will need at least Advanced Qualification, or complete the Advanced programme here (NOT JUST THE DEEP ADVENTURE DIVE)

 

Anchor Bay

 

Distance:

Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

1km

DSD

12m

9m

50mins


This is one of our shallowest dive sites just off Barra beach. Perfect for training and for a nice gentle, slow and relaxing dive. The reef is large and quite flat with a few small pinnacles rising up here and there. Look out for the big ships anchor that gives this site its name. There are lots of assorted colours over the reef, staghorn and porous corals, plus anemones and sea urchins. These are home to many juvenile fish, look for beautiful Emperor Angelfish, baby Lionfish, Butterfly and Clown fish. There are also Crocodile, Stone and Scorpionfish around and a family of three Titan Triggerfish, also look out for round and bluespotted ribbontail rays and octopus. As a nice bonus this is one of the only in-shore reefs where you can see Manta’s, usually frolicking on the surface. 
 
General info:This is a very pleasant site and we can dive here with all experience levels and in most conditions.


Buddies Reef

 

 

Distance:

Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

1km

DSD

11m

8m

50mins


This is lovely shallow dive site just down from
Anchor Bay, full of fantastic small marine creatures. The reef is flat and oval shaped, but cut through all over the place with channels and gullies, study these for they hide so much life. We’ve found Paperfish, a juvenile Rockmover wrasse and Emperor Angelfish. Also Periclimenes and Harlequin shrimp are found when you look closely.

We drop onto the southern edge of Buddies and start swimming slowly round and north. All over the reef are masses of Dusky Sweepers, they hover like a huge cloud and you can actually swim through them, they just part gently to let you pass.  There is also a specific crack where you find five Longfin Batfish, they can be quite inquisitive and come up close even nibbling on our buoy-line once!

Towards the end of the dive you come to a massive area covered in Daisy coral, a real underwater field of Daisies! It is a stunning sight with Chocolate dips, Domino’s, Goldies and Butterfly fish all over and in and between the coral. We love this dive and use it for training and for ocean night dives.


General info:

This is a very gentle site, suitable for all experience levels. We have placed a permanent block on the sand to attach a buoy, for DSD and Open Water training. We can also dive here when other sites are adversely affected by sea conditions because currents or surge do not usually affect it.

Barra Lagoon

 

 

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

5m

3m


This is a very, very special place for us, and a completely different dive to any you’ll experience out to sea. When we take divers here, they usually have a 90-minute dive and still don’t want to come out! It is a paradise for macro photographers and good buoyancy skills are essential, because of this sites sensitivity.

We dive a small area of the lagoon at slack low tide, it is only 4m deep and at first just looks like an oyster shell bed, but if you stop and watch, you notice that there is movement everywhere. This place is like a nursery with juvenile broad barred and devil firefish, baby long horn cowfish, and emperor angelfish, paperfish, flounder and the rarely seen Pipefish! I could go on and on! One of the best things about this place though is the promise of seeing Sea Horses, they are quite big here and are usually found wrapped around a colourful sea fan. There have also been extremely rare Dugongs seen swimming along the channels, we also have pictures of creatures we’ve never seen before and have had trouble identifying, please help us! (include photo’s) Here we also conduct night dives when the tide is right and this opens up another world and more mystery, sea hares now cover the floor, the urchins are dazzlingly bright and the octopus more confident.


General info:

Because of the fragility of this dive environment and the sea horses (kicked up sand particles can cause them to go blind), we only take experienced divers or we ask that you complete a Peak Performance Buoyancy course with us before you dive this site. We can only dive here when the tide is right, and we also conduct night dives and Barra Lagoon distinctive specialities at this unique place.

Chamber of Secrets

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:
Dive Time:

15km

Advanced Diver

 

21m

16m

50mins (as long as you don’t spend more than 20 minutes with your face in the sand!)


This is a serious quality dive for those of you that love testing your buoyancy skills and getting in to tight spots.

The reef is shaped like a massive double-walled horseshoe and on either side the walls reach a height of about 7m high. On the sand it is 21m deep and on the top it varies between 14m and 16m. We drop onto the left side of this reef and you have two choices: you can circle the two huge boulders that spring up from the floor, all the while checking the sand for Bluespotted, Whip-tail and Blue Stingrays and looking at the vast array of colour that covers these boulders. Or you can head into the chamber, a huge gully that encircles the entire horseshoe, and has, in all, six wicked swim thru’s. Make sure you look around you and under all the ledges and overhangs for Morays, Scorpionfish, Devil Firefish and brightly coloured Nudibranchs. Head off down the tunnels single file never knowing what is around the next corner. This dive site is so much fun and a brilliant test of your diving skill! Then at the southern end to finish off the dive there is a big, big archway, with Trumpet and Surgeon fish all swimming in, out and around with all the other usual reef fish.


General info:

This is a fantastic dive and lots of fun too. However if there is surge we may suggest another site 

Simon’s Town

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

12km

O/W

 

18m

14m

50 mins


This reef has stunning topography, with huge pillars of rock coming up 8m from the floor, with lots of surrounding life and colour. Goldies and Wrasse are all around them as well as large shoals of Snappers, Fusiliers, and Bigeyes. The reef has deep gullies and holes that head off in all directions. So you must look in each hole and swim along each gully looking for colourful Nudibranchs, Lizardfish, Flutemouth and Goatfish to name a few. This is a very cool dive for the shoals of game fish, so you must remember to look up to see the Barracuda and Kingfish and sometimes, in season, Whale Sharks fly overhead.


General Info:

This is a very gentle and interesting dive, perfect for a slow and relaxing first foray into the waters of Mozambique. 

Amazon

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

15km

Advanced Diver

 

28m

24m

25min


This is an awesome dive site that is rarely visited in a current because of its size and depth. But it is a stunning inverted ‘V’ shaped reef that promises sightings of resident Leopard and White and Black Tip reef sharks. Sometimes we’ve even seen Tiger Sharks here. We drop onto the west wall that rises about 10m from the sand and the top of the wall is at 23m. As we swim around and along the edge, we have to swim through multitudes of reef fish that seem completely oblivious to our presence and let you get quite close, which is a lovely experience, fish looking you in the eye right next to your mask! There are also two big caves gouged out of the wall and in one of these caves, a resident Loggerhead Turtle lives and in the other, the Sharks are likely to be found.  We’ve also seen Green Turtles and encountered Giant Manta’s with wingspans of over 7m!  And on our ascent Devil and Eagle rays as well as lots of pelagic fish swim by us. We often ‘Double tank’ this site because of the likelihood of seeing Whales in season and because its so good!


General info:

Because of its size we rarely dive this site in a very strong current. And because of its depth and the need for a rapid descent we like all divers to be experienced in deep diving and negative entry procedures.

Sherwood Forest

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

6km

Advanced Diver

 

30m

27m

20min (as long as you don’t go and lie on the bottom for too long!)


This reef is a massive 80m-sized mushroom rock . is covered with beautiful Green Tree coral that provides a home to masses and masses of Goldie’s, there are also plenty of soft and hard corals too. It’s a spectacular sight, and under the eaves of the mushroom, can be found Honeycomb and Black cheek Moray’s, Fire gobies, Coachmen, big Rockcod and Devil firefish. At the mushroom’s base are large Potato Bass and a resident Brindle Bass. Just to add a bit of variety, 10m north of the reef is a large rock that has an interesting swim thru, with Trumpet fish and Red Fang Triggerfish all over it, but usually it’s the big mushroom that takes up your dive time.


General info:

Unfortunately because of its size we don’t dive this reef in a strong current. And because of its depth and the need for a rapid descent we like all divers to be experienced in deep diving and negative entry procedures.

Praia da Rocha (Beach of Rocks)

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

Dive Time:

15km

O/W

 

18m

12m

50mins


This reef is made up of lots of huge pinnacles of rock, scattered about like upturned bowling pins, and covered with lots of colourful hard and soft corals. Some of the rocks are close enough to each other that they form a labyrinth of swim thru’s and gullies, which add to the Indiana Jones style adventure of this dive. There are caves to look into for Devil Firefish, Cleaner Shrimp and Crayfish. And all the usual tropical reef fish suspects are found here. If you look in the nooks and crannies you’ll find Spanish Dancers, multicoloured Nudibranches, Geometric and Zebra morays, and under overhangs and ledges you may find reef sharks, large spiny Lobster, Octopus and Squid.


General info:

This is a very fun dive site that you can explore to you hearts content because of its diver friendly depth and it’s suitability for all levels of experience! This site is also ideal for photographers, because of the light and because no one’s going anywhere! However we don’t dive here if there’s a large swell as surge can take the shine off the fun stuff.

Colosseum

 

 

Distance:

Min Qualification:

Max Depth:

Average Depth:

14km

Advanced Diver

 

30m

23m


This reef forms a huge amphitheatre, and as the name suggests the things you see here are quite a show. The wall around the side is 10m high, and drops down in ledges and layers. As we drop down, the visibility is usually at least 20m so the feeling of falling into the arena is quite sensational and a bit eerie! Our drop puts us on the western inside edge, and we just swim slowly around, inside, hiding from the current. There is a huge Honeycomb Moray on this reef that we have named Russell the Gladiator, and look out for Guitar Sharks on the sand. There are also Potato Bass and a colourful array of fish and it is also quite common to encounter graceful Devil rays on our ascent.


General info:

Because of its size we rarely dive this site in a very strong current. And because of its depth and the need for a rapid descent we like all divers to be experienced in deep diving and negative entry procedures.

 

NEW PADI PROTOCOL

Due to a change in PADI standards, we may only do deep training as the 3rd dive of the Advanced course, therefore, for divers to dive all our deep reefs (deeper than 18m), they will need at least Advanced Qualification, or complete the Advanced programme here (NOT JUST THE DEEP ADVENTURE DIVE)

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