Technology

A Guide to Being Friends With a Scuba Dork

Sometimes it’s hard for non-divers to understand what could possibly be so great about diving that you’d be willing to spend every weekend diving locally and all your vacations in the tropics. You spend too much time and money on diving, and you’re not apologetic about it. To others, it may seem […]

The post A Guide to Being Friends With a Scuba Dork appeared first on .

A Guide to Being Friends With a Scuba Dork Read More »

The World’s Best Destinations for Wreck Diving

Why do the Top 100 Readers Choice Awards, now in their 23rd year, still matter to divers? Because these are your picks, based on thousands of votes from the most experienced dive travelers on the planet. Why do they matter to us? Because every month you hear from our editors on what we think matters in the world of dive travel. For the January/February issue of Scuba Diving we get to listen to you, and we’re taking notes.

Here, we proudly present the No. 1 ranking destinations in the Best Wreck Diving category of the awards. The full list of winning destinations is below.

Pacific and Indian Oceans

1) CHUUCK

Many places boast a few shipwrecks as gee-whiz alternatives to biological reefs, but there’s only one Chuuk, also known as Truk. More than 50 Japanese ships, planes, subs and all manner of machinery, weaponry and fascinating (and sobering) wartime history are on display, the result of America’s deadly aerial barrage on the Japanese fleet in February 1944. This warm, calm lagoon in Micronesia holds a World War II mari- time museum without equal. The 433-foot-long Fujikawa Maru is superb, both for military and marine-life attractions — Zero fighter planes in the hold, deck guns draped in soft corals — and is shallow enough for novices. Tec divers descend 175 feet onto the phenomenal San Francisco to see tanks, trucks and bombs. Shinkoku offers bright invertebrates and school- ing fish; inside, a soldier’s bones rest in sick bay. Chuuk is also a mass grave, a testament to the tragedy of war. — Brandon Cole

Go Now: visittruk.com

2) Red Sea

3) Palau

4) Thailand

5) Hawaii

North America

1) NORTH CAROLINA

Diving North Carolina’s wrecks doesn’t force you to choose between swimming the top deck alongside sand tiger sharks or penetrating. At a handful of sites, including the USS Indra and the tanker Atlas, drop inside tight quarters to navigate alongside these big fish. — Brooke Morton

Go Now: visitnc.com

2) Florida and Florida Springs

3) Washington

4) California

5) Great Lakes

Caribbean and Atlantic

1) BAHAMAS

You might expect that a nation of 700 islands would boast a massive collection of downed ships — and it does. Your favorite might change to whichever one you dived last, be it the shallow and marine-life-rich SS Sapona cargo steamer off Bimini or Edward Williams off New Providence, where you’ll likely come face to face with Caribbean reef sharks and goliath grouper. — Brooke Morton

Go Now: bahamas.com

2) Cayman Islands

3) Bay Islands

4) Curacao

5) Bonaire

The World’s Best Destinations for Wreck Diving Read More »

PADI Pros: 2016 Membership Renewal Offers Extended to 31 January

Renew your 2016 PADI Professional membership before 31 January 2016 and you’ll be able to take advantage of several exciting renewal offers which we’ve extended from the original deadline from the end of last year. #1 – Free PADI Digital … Continue reading

The post PADI Pros: 2016 Membership Renewal Offers Extended to 31 January appeared first on PADIProsEurope.

PADI Pros: 2016 Membership Renewal Offers Extended to 31 January Read More »

Great White Dies After Just Three Days in Japanese Aquarium

great_white_featured During its brief residency at Okinawa Churaumi, the shark appeared to have difficulty adjusting to the confines of its new home and refused food of any kind.

The post Great White Dies After Just Three Days in Japanese Aquarium appeared first on Scuba Diver Life.

Great White Dies After Just Three Days in Japanese Aquarium Read More »

Scroll to Top