Planning a dive trip means setting aside some extra expenses, including gear rental and crew tips. See your dive trip cost at glance with our dive trip budgeting worksheet!
"Plan your dive vacation based on what you hope to see or accomplish when you get there"
Dive deep from the Bahamas to Egypt with these jaw-dropping sinkholes (and man-made wonders!).
Every fall, Lake Superior’s Silver Harbour Conservation Area becomes the spawning ground for mass aggregations of whitefish under the cover of night.
Three days in Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach chock-full of reefs and wrecks.
Sharks, turtles, barracuda and more are rushing into the waters of Phuket following conservation and pandemic beach.
Anguilla's turquoise waters boast seven marine parks: Dog Island, Prickley Pear, Seal Island Reef System, Little Bay, Sandy Island, Shoal Bay Harbour Reef System and Stoney Bay Marine Park. Dive sites include wreck dives, shore dives, mini wall dives, night dives and heritage diving. Anguilla is known for its intentionally sunk shipwrecks. The island is home to a truly unique attraction, a 960-ton Spanish galleon, El Buen Consejo, that rests on the ocean floor with its cannons and cargo serving as a silent testament to the Caribbean's turbulent past. Anguilla also boasts a healthy double reef system, where a wide variety of corals flourish.
Weather: About 80 degrees year-round.
Average Water Temp: Mid-80Fs in summer in the north, dropping to mid-70Fs in winter. Dive season is year-round.
Average Visibility: 100-plus feet.
Travel Savvy: A passport and onward or return ticket is required. Anguilla is 20 minutes north from French St. Martin by ferry. There are a number of options available for getting to the island. Visitors can fly directly into Anguilla's Wallblake Airport from Puerto Rico via American Eagle/American Airlines and LIAT, or opt to fly directly to St. Maarten, Antigua, St. Thomas or St. Kitts for easy transfer to Anguilla
Destination Links: www.anguilla-vacation.com and www.ahta.ai.
Liveaboard diving is an adjustment, but boat life offers luxuries that make constant diving easy and enjoyable.
Southeast Asia’s Coral Triangle is home to a plethora of WWII wrecks.