Each
of the 3 regions of the Philippines - Visayas, Lozon (including
PAlawan, and Mindanao, has its own unique dive environment.
There are many dive operators in and around Manila that
service visitor stopping over for the day or for longer
visits to outer islands. Anilao in nearby Batangas is a
favourite local dive area. The bay has good coral reefs
that are made up of gentle slopes and coral gardens. Fish
can be fed at the Cathedral where a manmade cross is surrounded
by small reef fish. Layag-layag is a nearby reef noted for
its strong currents, which produces beautiful soft corals
and encourages the presence of schooling pelagic fish.
The island of Mindoro has its dive activity centered around
"Puerto Galera and sites rich in both hard and soft
corals enchant divers and snorkellers alike. Drift dives
are popular at Escarceo Point and at the Apo Reef National
Park southwest of Mindoro, where the strong currents carry
divers along steep walls that are home to small reef sharks,
large rays, and schools of trevally.
The Visayas group to the south includes the islands of
Cebu, Bohol, Panay, Negros, Leyte, Samar, and Masbte. Cebu
is particularly famous for its reef dives with both hard
and soft corals providing a luscious backdrop to schools
of reef fish. Bohol, just to the south and east has similar
terrain. Panglao Island, off its southwest tip, has 50-metres
deep walls with swirling schools of trevally that surround
divers as they drift along the underwater cliffs. The rugged
east coast of Mindanao and its associated island borders
one of the deepest parts of the ocean, the Mindanao Trench.
To the southwest, the Sulu Archipelago stretches toward
Borneo. This area is only available to liveboard dive boat.
Such remote areas are renowned for their clear water, big
fish, and untouched marine life.
Firther west in Luzon, is the Palawan group. From Palawan,
the Tubbataha reefs at the southwestern tip of the Sulu
Sea are accessed only by live boards.
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