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The Best Red Sea Dive Spots

Written by Noreen
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Published on December 3, 2009

The Red Sea for long has been said to have some of the best Scuba diving in the World. With one of the richest underwater environments, the Red Sea offers a total of over 1,000 species of fish, 10% of which are found nowhere else in the World, 500 odd species of soft and hard coral, 44 species of shark along with thousands of invertebrate reef dwellers. The Red Sea is even considered to be one of the 7 Wonders of the underwater world and has an abundance of different types of dive sites from shear drop-offs, sea grass meadows, coral encrusted wrecks and even a blue hole. If you love diving down deep you simply have to visit this unique and interesting Sea.

Here’s a look at the Best Dive Spots of the Red Sea:

Sharm El Sheik and Ras Mohammed, Egypt

Sharm El-Sheik on the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt is one of the most popular dive destinations of the Red Sea and has the best of what the Red Sea has to offer. With lush sandy beaches, tropical climate and exciting nightlife it’s a tourist destination with beautiful dive sites to explore. A couple of dive sites worth noting here are ‘the Light’ and ‘the Point’, where there are 130-foot drop-offs and multitudes of reef and pelagic fish. Shark’s Bay, a shore entry dive site displays a sloping reef and deep canyon offshore and is famous for manta rays. A 196 feet wall drop off into the depths just off shore, just south of Na’ama Bay called ‘The Tower’ is another popular site and is frequented by sea horses and ghost-pipe fish.

There are 20 dive sites within the Ras Mohammed National Park, including the famous Thistlegorm wreck, rated among the World’s Top 10 Wreck Dives. This Red Sea dive site has got plenty to see both inside and out the 400ft long container ship filled with motorbikes, trucks and rifles, with plenty of marine life around. Sightings of hammer-heads, jacks, trevallies and huge napoleon wrasses are reported here.

The Brothers Islands, Egypt

The Brothers or El Akhawein, are two small islands in the middle of the Red Sea. These Islands are for adventurous and advanced divers only and are the Red Sea’s most coveted diving destination. The two islands named Big Brother and Little Brother are a 5 minute boat ride apart . The Big Brother has a small lighthouse and two wrecks lying on its walls rich with marine life and amazing soft corals. However, strong currents are prevalent here. Little brother too has strong currents but it’s sites feature huge fan corals, caves and overhangs. Add the high likelihood of seeing sharks to this, and you’re guaranteed fantastic experiences at the Brothers Islands.

Dahab, Egypt

Dahab meaning “Gold”, is World famous for it’s Blue hole diving. The Dahab Blue Hole, known among diving circles as one the ‘World’s Most Dangerous Dive Sites’ as its inky blue depths have claimed a number of lives. It still continues to draw divers from around the World to its sites like ‘the Bell’ and ‘the arch’. ‘The Canyon’ is another of Dahab’s popular dive sites which starts at a round coral bowl that resembles a fish bowl, with lots of glass fish. It descends as a tube down to around 50 m with access and escape points at various depths. Other dive sites in Dahab include ‘Eel Garden’, ‘Golden Blocks’ and ‘The Islands’.

Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

Most of the Red Sea diving off the coast of Saudi Arabia is carried out from Jeddah. Compared to the more frequented resort areas of Egypt like Sharm El-Sheik and Hurghada, tourists find that Jeddah’s reefs are healthier and not as crowded with dive boats. This dive spot houses a number of wrecks such as ‘Boiler Wreck’, ‘Ann Ann Wreck’ and the ‘Miss Mara Wreck’. The KLM Reef and Ala’s reef offer some unbeatable coral dives. Virtually untouched coral heads covered in soft corals, clusters of Sea Anemones and the most reef fish having the best color are part and parcel of diving here. The undisputed best soft coral wall known to date in all of the waters off Saudi Arabia is unquestionably the 150 m section of the Redmah Wall and is a underwater photographers delight with the sheer choice of photo opportunities.

Aqaba, Jordan

With just a 15 mile stretch of coastline along the Red Sea, Jordan still has some notable Red Sea dives. Mostly shore dives with little chance to see sharks and other pelagic species, it has some beautiful reef dives including ‘Japanese Garden’, ‘the pinnacle’, ‘the tank’, ‘cedar pride’ and ‘Gorgone I’. Fairly shallow dive site with maximum depths ranging from 16 to 20m with a few going down deeper to 40m Jordan is a great place for beginner divers to experience the Red Sea.

Marsa Alam, Egypt

For a truly unique and unspoiled dive spot, Marsa Alam is the dive destination for you. Much of the diving done via liveaboard trips here and focus on eco diving and projects that are set up to preserve the environment and the beauty within the area. Elphinstone is a long, fingerlike reef some 12 miles north of Marsa Alam featuring steep reef walls covered with soft corals.Strong currents and plentiful fish life make it an ideal hang-out for sharks. Legend has it that a large arch in the Elphinstone reef, between 165 to 230 feet down contains a sarcophagus of an unknown pharaoh. The reefs here boast of rich coral gardens with schools of snapper, jacks, goat fish and banners. It’s also an excellent place to spot hammerheads, barracuda, grouper, snapper and yellowmouth moray eels.