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- From: awatkins@mullara.met.unimelb.edu.au (Andrew B. Watkins)
- Newsgroups: rec.scuba
- Subject: Solomon Islands.
- Date: 22 Jan 1993 11:05:05 +1100
- Organization: University of Melbourne Dept of Meteorology
- Lines: 41
- Sender: met@ariel.ucs.unimelb.EDU.AU
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1jndnhINNjbj@ariel.ucs.unimelb.EDU.AU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au
-
-
- Hello world.
- After reading all this stuff about diving elsewhere in the world,
- I thought I should just give a big plug for the Southern Hemisphere
- (well, just), and in particular the Solomons. I am a novice,
- (I actually did my NAUI OW1 while I was working over there), and
- all the diving I have done so far has been in the "Happy Isles",
- though I have done a lot of snorkelling, both around Melbourne
- and on the Barrier reef. Anyway, the dives in the Solomons are mostly
- wreck dives on ships and planes that were downed in WWII. The added
- benefit is that they are now encrusted with all types of coral, and
- all have thousands of tropical fish swarming over them. The locals carry
- on a bit about sharks (makos) but my dive instructor and his mates had
- never seen any. One of the dives you can do is to a B17 bomber, and you
- can actually sit in the cockpit still. The brilliant parrot fish,
- a large purple coloured grouper and a BIG barracuda were the highlights
- for me, as well as manouvering through the holds etc of one of the
- beached Japanese transport ships. Which is another thing; a number of the
- wrecks (in particular Boneghi I & II) are only 20-30 metres off the
- beach so access is amazingly easy. And they drop down to about 30+ metres,
- as the ships are long and the bottom contour steep. Then of course there
- is the water itself; visibility generally was about 10-15+ metres, and
- the water temp; a balmy 27 - 30 C! No need for wetsuits even at a bit of
- depth. Other divers I spoke to said that there was even better diving out
- at an island called Gizo, but unfortunately my work prevented me getting
- over there so I have to take their word for it.
- The people i dived and learnt with were from Island Dive Services at the
- Mendana Hotel in Honiara, Guadalcanal. They were excellent, and I would
- recommend them to anyone. They take out a dive group at 9:00am and at
- 2:00pm, and generally there is very few people (they can all fit easily
- into an 10 seater minibus).
- Anyway, enough of my raving. I loved it. I loved the Solomons.
- I want to go back ....
-
-
-
-
- Andrew B. Watkins | `To strive, to seek, to find and
- awatkins@mullara.met.unimelb.edu.au | not to yield'
- awatkins@buster.met.unimelb.edu.au | - Lord Tennyson
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-