Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Diving resort recommendations: What are the good diving places abroad?

Diving resort recommendations: What are the good diving places abroad?

When it comes to diving, what everyone imagines about diving should be that there are a lot of corals, a lot of fish, a good underwater environment, beaches, etc., and then you will have fun with them. For fun, the following places can satisfy all your fantasies.

1. Bonaire

Bonaire is the second largest island in the Leeward Islands of the Netherlands Antilles in the Caribbean. There are many birds on the island. The brilliantly colored flamingos that cluster on the salt flats are one of the highlights of Bonaire.

Bonaire, a Dutch island, has a pink beach. The color of the sand is like salmon flesh, orange with pink. There are also 1,000 steps of beach that are very beautiful and sparsely populated. It is like a private beach. generally.

With free-swimming fish and hundreds of pristine corals, it is the best diving and snorkeling spot in the Caribbean.

2. Ecuador

Want to see marine iguanas, sea lions, whale sharks and hammerhead sharks in one day? Then you must go diving in the Galapagos Islands (Galápagos) .

The Galapagos Islands are located in the eastern Pacific. Because they are far away from the South American continent, their relatively closed environment preserves a large number of rare species.

Here, you can encounter hundreds of hammerhead sharks, as powerful as thousands of troops; thousands of bonitos gather together like a tropical storm cyclone rolling underwater.

The scenery on land is equally charming. Santiag

lsland is one of several islands in the Galapagos Islands. Plants from tropical, subtropical and even frigid zones grow alternately, and various rare birds and monitor lizards lazily enjoy the sun on the rocks. There are also lazy sea lions on the beach and cute penguins standing on the rocks.

3. French Polynesia

The Tuamotu Islands (Tuamotu

Islands) are an island group in the eastern part of French Polynesia in the central and southern Pacific Ocean. The channel between the atoll and the open ocean here acts like an underwater slide, allowing divers to glide along with triggerfish and wrasse, which is great fun.

Fakarava is a coral atoll; as you pass through the Fakarava Lagoon, you will drift past hundreds of blacktip reef sharks. This atoll is known as the "Shark Wall"

and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

4. Australia

Julian Rocks Marine Reserve is located at the easternmost tip of Australia, near Byron Bay, and is a must-pass for the East Australian Current.

Humpback whales, manta rays, sand tiger sharks, you can see a variety of migrating marine life here, as well as resident cuttlefish, bald sharks and sea turtles.

Whether you are a novice or a diving expert, Byron Bay is the preferred destination. A recommended hike to Cape Byron Lighthouse is one of the best places in the world for whale watching.

5. Mexico

The Yucatán Peninsula is on the east coast of Mexico.

There are tens of thousands of meteorite craters hidden here, and the air As transparent as underground water, there are pyramids and Mayan ruins. The pink magical salt lake in the north, everything magical, converges on this land.

Sneak into the mysterious sinkhole and enter the fantasy world, and go to the small pink lake where girls’ hearts will burst to shoot the annual blockbuster. Live in the most beautiful American-style thatched house, drink ice Coke, lie in a hammock, and walk into the Caribbean Sea through the door. This is the real diving paradise...

6. Cuba< /p>

Los Jardines de la Reina Islands are located south of the main island of Cuba. It is a 160-kilometer-long archipelago linked by low-lying coral islands.

The archipelago has many very original coral and marine landscapes, spectacular cliffs, and wide and deep channels. Sharks (especially silky sharks, blacktip reef sharks, and bull sharks) are often sighted here, as are a surprising number of fish, including grouper, kingfisher, tarpon, and northern pike.

7. Canada

British Columbia is famous in the diving community for its shipwrecks, coral reefs and rich marine life. Explore ghostly shipwrecks and encounter huge and mysterious sea creatures. This vast and unknown waters will satisfy all your fantasies.

In the cliff diving resort of Port Hardy, there is Browning Wall (Browning

Wall), known as one of the best cliff diving sites in North America, with underwater visibility as high as 30 meters. , imagine the nearly vertical abyss cliffs in the water, studded with colorful sponges, anemones, starfish and corals, what a magnificent and shocking scenery it is.

Port Hardy’s water world is as vibrant as its underwater world. Queen Charlotte Straight (Queen Charlotte Straight)

Straight is a paradise for wild animals. Killer whales, minke whales, porpoises, sea otters and sea lions are permanent residents. In summer, large groups of gray whales come to feed. You can see them up close on the beach, and sometimes you can see California sea lions and Pacific short-beaked dolphins.

8. United States

Key Largo, Florida, has many underwater fantasy worlds to explore, and the most worthy of exploration is John Pinecamp Coral Reef State Park.

It is the first underwater park in the United States. With beautiful coral reefs, abundant seagrass, and mangrove wetlands, it is a perfect place for fishing, swimming, and diving.

When it comes to diving, of course you have to see the 2.59-meter-high underwater Christ statue here. The bronze statue of Christ has been here since 1966, and even hurricanes have not been able to topple it. This statue of Christ, with his arms outstretched, symbolizes peace and hope, as well as his boundless passion for the sea.

The Coral Conservation Foundation is set up here, and divers can help "plant" corals and monitor the growth of coral reefs.

9. Iceland

Iceland's Great Fissure (SilfraFissure)

Located in Thingvellir National Park, it is a plate crack between the European continent and the American continent. It is a veritable world The place of impact. You can cross two continents by stepping on both sides of the crack!

Here, even if there is no sunlight, the water bottom is still surprisingly colorful. There are no corals and tropical fish. Only bright green seaweed can be seen in front of you. The water is extremely clear. You can see things up to three meters away. If there were no bubbles rising into the sky, you would think you were walking in space.

The lake water here is melted glacier water, flowing down from the distant Hofsjkull

Mountain. The glacier water seeps into the underground volcanic stone crevices, and after a 50-kilometer journey, it is heavily filtered. , the water is so clear that it can’t be any clearer.

10. New Zealand

In the South Island of New Zealand, there is a deep canyon created by the movement and cutting of glaciers two million years ago. The filming location of "The Lord of the Rings" also went deep into it. Here is the fairyland-like Milford Sound (Milford

Sound).

Bottlenose dolphins, New Zealand fur seals and fjord crested penguins live in the fjord, especially at Seal Point where a large number of young seals often gather. On a calm day in Milford Sound, the water reflects the majestic Myrtle Peak.

Diving in Milford Sound, the fiery red corals, indigo ocean, neon yellow angelfish, and metallic silver snappers are as colorful as a kaleidoscope.