Looking for a great dive site to encounter numerous turtles? Then explore Cook Island, northern New South Wales. Surrounded by rocky reefs and home to a wonderful array of subtropical marine life, Cook Island is most famous for its large turtle population.
South of Krabi in the Andaman Sea, the island of Koh Ha, Thailand, is a hidden gem. This is where the Thai Royal family choose to dive.
The Conflict Islands Conservation Initiative is researching and protecting the turtles, sharks and rays, and the incredible biodiversity of Conflict Island Atoll in PNG
This page is for Nautilus Scuba Club Cairns members to read about the 2020 Club Trip to the Tubbataha Reefs in the Philippines. On this page you can download the Brochure, in the carousel below, you can see the pages of the Brochure; and below that is the cabin map showing the cabin types and […]
Adventure cruise company True North’s Andy Lewis explains why Melanesia’s women are the key to saving Papua New Guinea’s world class coral reefs.
Australia’s New South Wales coastline has many fabulous dive sites, from the subtropical waters of Byron Bay to the cooler temperate waters of Sydney and the South Coast. The state also has many amazing shore diving sites and one of the best is the incredible Merimbula Wharf.
On each Dive with A Purpose week, divers can join the marine expeditions and get involved in COTS removal and collect valuable data on the diverse reef fish communities and larger megafauna such as sharks, manta rays and turtles.
Gold Coast Divers are about to start the longest continuous Project Aware Foundation Dive for Debris survey: 365 Diveable Days of Debris.
Looking for the best Sydney dive sites? Here are a few easily accessible shore dives in Sydney’s Northern Beaches, Sydney Harbour and Botany Bay.
Throughout the year Diveplanit has brought you news about the Marine Environment and as the year comes to a close, here’s a summary of ocean related news for the marine environment 2017 – the good, the bad and the ugly, the heroes and the villains.