I have dived in the UK, Bermuda, Mozambique and Kenya. The best thing I have seen to date was in Mozambique where I saw a green turtle and white tip reef shark just lying next to each other in a little cave.
I dived once in Madagascar in the Mozambique Channel but I did snorkeling in more places (Madagascar too, Brazil, Australia, Mallorca). I saw lots of parrot fish, a trumpet fish and recently a tiny transparent squid with a big orange eye (I’ve no idea what specie that was but it was really cool!)
I have scuba dived lake Bala in central Wales, got rather cold, and only seen the mud near the shore. The best dive I had was in a submersible to the bottom of a Scottish sea-loch. The submersible was made of steel and had a little round window to resist the high pressure of the water. All I saw was mud, rock, and a few little fish swimming past. The sea loch was 140 metres deep and was carved out of the rock during the ice ages by the moving ice of the glaciers that used to flow from central Scotland to the sea,
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Clemence commented on :
I dived once in Madagascar in the Mozambique Channel but I did snorkeling in more places (Madagascar too, Brazil, Australia, Mallorca). I saw lots of parrot fish, a trumpet fish and recently a tiny transparent squid with a big orange eye (I’ve no idea what specie that was but it was really cool!)
Karen E commented on :
I’ve been diving all over the Caribbean, Hawaii, Bermuda and Florida. My best dive was a night dive in Hawaii where we were diving with manta rays!
Anton commented on :
I have scuba dived lake Bala in central Wales, got rather cold, and only seen the mud near the shore. The best dive I had was in a submersible to the bottom of a Scottish sea-loch. The submersible was made of steel and had a little round window to resist the high pressure of the water. All I saw was mud, rock, and a few little fish swimming past. The sea loch was 140 metres deep and was carved out of the rock during the ice ages by the moving ice of the glaciers that used to flow from central Scotland to the sea,