This article is intended to provide the already qualified Scuba diver with information which will help to plan dives in the waters around Port Elizabeth, whether as a local resident or a visitor. Information is provided without prejudice, and is not guaranteed accurate or complete. Use it at your own risk.
Understand
editGeneral Topography
editPort Elizabeth is situated on the west side of Algoa Bay, which is a wide indentation on the South African east coast, some 683 km east of the Cape of Good Hope. The bay is bounded in the west by Cape Recife and in the east by Cape Padrone, and much of the shoreline is sandy beaches. The greater metropolitan area extends some distance to the west of Cape Recife, and this rocky part of the coastline includes a number of the most popular dive sites.
Climate, Weather and Sea conditions
edit"The Windy City" has a subtropical climate with light rain throughout the year. The area lies between the winter rainfall, Mediterranean climate zones of the Western Cape and the summer rainfall regions of eastern South Africa. The proximity to the ocean has a moderating effect on the climate, so winters are cool but mild and summers are warm but considerably less humid and hot than more northerly parts of South Africa's east coast. Jan Max: 25°C, Min: 18°C; Jul Max: 20°C, Min: 9°C
The Marine Ecology
editPort Elizabeth is within the warm temperate Agulhas ecoregion, which extends from Cape Point to the Mbashe River. It is some 360 km from Mbashe mouth and 660 km from Cape Point, so is somewhat towards the warmer side of the region. Upwelling on the south coast of South Africa is largely driven by the Agulhas current and the continental shelf. This form of upwelling forces cold deep water up onto the continental shelf, but not necessarily above the thermocline. In the region east of the Agulhas bank, wind enhanced upwelling, occurring mainly in summer, augments the current driven upwelling bringing the colder deeper waters to the surface. This enhances biological productivity by supply of nutrients to the euphotic zone (where plants have sufficient light to flourish) which fuels phytoplankton production, and rocky shores that are supplied with the nutrient rich water support rich algal biomass. The annual chokka (squid) spawning takes place largely in this region.
Equipment
editNo special equipment is required for most of the sites. Wet or semi-dry suits will be adequate for most divers most of the time, though for those who wish to do multiple dives of longer duration, or are sensitive to the cold, a dry suit is recommended. If you intend to dive autonomously, rather than follow the divemaster, a DSMB (Delayed/deployable Surface Marker Buoy) and reel or spool is recommended, so the boat will know where you are surfacing, particularly if there is a current running. This will also help alert other vessels of your proximity to the surface so they can avoid you in time.
Nitrox is available at some filling stations, but your choice of mix may be limited.
Respect
editSome of the dive sites of Port Elizabeth are in the Addo Elephant National Park Marine Protected Area. A permit is required to scuba dive in any MPA. The permits are valid for a year and are available at some branches of the Post Office. Temporary permits, valid for a month, may be available at dive shops or from dive boat operators. The permits are valid for all South African MPAs.
Boundaries of the Addo Elephant National Park Marine Protected Area are shown in the image, which also shows the Restricted zones, where in theory, no fishing or harvesting activities are allowed.
Get help
editEmergency services
- . Police.
- . Ambulance service
- National Sea Rescue Institute. Station ?. Sea rescue
- . Recompression chamber
- . DAN hotline
Get service
editLearn
edit- Ocean Divers International
- Prodive
Buy
edit- Ocean Divers International
- Prodive
- Mike's Dive Shop
Rent
edit- Ocean Divers International
- Prodive
Do
editAnnual Noordhoek Wildside Dive Festival
The Noordhoek Dive Festival is held every June at the Noordhoek dive and boating club on Marine drive, which has a slipway a short distance to the east of Cape Recife, just outside of Summerstrand, Port Elizabeth, towards Schoenmakerskop.
Divers from all over South Africa gather for a three-day festival of Scuba diving. Several boats make strictly scheduled launches several times per day depending on conditions, and dives are generally limited to 30 minutes to allow schedules to be kept.
Dive operators and other sponsors from Port Elizabeth and surrounding areas support this festival of diving which was started in 1999 and has grown to be the best known and probably largest event of its kind in South Africa. The organisers and crew are all unpaid volunteers, and the takings go to charities: deposits are not refundable.
The festival is well organised, but can be disrupted by adverse weather conditions.
Features offered include:
- Dives on about 9 different dive sites with maximum depths from 10 to 26 meters.
- Colourful reefs with hard and soft coral and a wide range of other organisms.
- On site tank refills, basic equipment hire, shuttle service from parking area...and secure parking.
- Online booking and payment.
- Stalls with leading brands of dive gear for sale.
- Refreshment stalls and bar facilities.
- Ablution facilities with showers.
- Lucky draws and prizes every day (your dive booking tickets go into the draw).
- On site entertainment sideshows. Details vary from year to year, but have included powerlifting displays, rescue competitions, aerobatic displays and the like.
The rest of the year
- Ocean Divers International
- Prodive
- Wildside diving
Fix
edit- Mike's Dive Shop — Cylinder service, inspection and testing. Importer and agent for some brands of Scuba equipment.
- Prodive — Cylinder service, inspection and testing.
Service details
edit- Mike's Dive Shop, 63 Western Road, Port Elizabeth, ☏ +27 41 585-3367. Retail dive equipment, Importer and agent for several brands, Cylinder testing, Air fills.
- Ocean Divers International (ODI), 10 Albert Road, Walmer 6065, Port Elizabeth, ☏ +27 41 581-5121, dive@odipe.co.za. Tu-F 9AM-5PM, Sa-Su 7AM-2PM. Dive charters, Equipment sales (rental?), Air fills, SSI diver training (Open Water Diver to Instructor)
- Prodive, 189 Main Road, Walmer 6065, Port Elizabeth, ☏ +27 41 581-1144, fax: +27 41 581-1144, dive@prodive.co.za. M-F 8AM-5:30PM, Sa 9AM-3PM. Dive charters, Equipment rental and sale, Air and Nitrox 32% fills, Cylinder servicing, PADI diver training (Open Water to Instructor)
- Wildside diving, Noordhoek Ski-boat Club, Marine Drive, Port Elizabeth, ☏ +27 82 729-8062. Scuba diving club — They encourage visitors to join in their social events and invite visitors to dive with them. Wildside also hosts the annual PE Dive festival, which is supported by most of the local dive operators, and attended by visitors from all over the country.
Get around
editDive Sites
editAvalanche
editUnderstand
edit- 1 Avalanche:— S34°03.682' E25°38.792'
- Depth: — 17 to 26 m
- Topography: — A large area of rocky reef with a gorge and a sheer wall
- Conditions: — A Wildside dive, viz may be better than in the bay.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Hard coral, sea fans and brittle stars, Red bait on top of the wall, and Pyjama catsharks
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended. Suitable for advanced divers only due to the depth
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Bell Buoy
editUnderstand
editPopular dive site with the dive shops and local divers.
- 2 Bell Buoy: — S33°58.934' E25°41.631'
- Depth: — 12 to 18m
- Topography: — Overhangs, arches and pinnacles and a rocky bottom.
Get in
edit- Boat dive — ten minutes from the harbour or five minutes from Hobie beach
See
editQuite a large area to explore.
- Marine life: — Colourful soft coral and sea fans, nudibranchs, hydroids and anemones. Large pods of red bait in the shallower areas. A common resting place for seals. Ragged tooth sharks often seen in the gullies. Reef fish residents and occasional pelagic visitors.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Bell 41
editBermuda
editBird Island
editBrenton Island
editCapele
editChelsea
editCracker
edit- 9 Cracker: — S34°03.248' E25°37.260'
- Depth: — 10-18 m
- Topography: — Noted for its pinnacle.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Known for sightings of mussel cracker and shoals of other large fish. Soft corals on the reef.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Crossroads
editUnderstand
edit- Crossroads: —
- Depth: — 14-18 m
- Topography: — Extensive reef of gulleys that cross each other and the pinnacles between them.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — The reef is covered with soft corals and seafans. Rays can sometimes be seen on the sandy bottom. Moray eels have been seen but are not common. Resident reef fish include Cape knifejaw, Yellowbelly rock cod, Roman and Red stumpnose, also known as Miss Lucy. Pyjama and Leopard catsharks, and shysharks are fairly common, and Ragged-tooth sharks can occasionally be seen.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Devil's Reef
editUnderstand
edit- 10 Devil's Reef: — About 100 m off the shore opposite the Marine Hotel
- Depth: — 9 m with pinnacles up to 2 m
- Topography: — A few pinnacles rise to just below the surface.
- Conditions: — Dive at high tide to avoid waves breaking over the reef.
Get in
edit- Shore dive — Follow the storm water drain pipe opposite the Marine Hotel straight out to sea.
See
edit- Marine life: — Gorganians, soft corals and sponges on the reef and some resident reef fish. Pyjama catsharks are fairly common. Large starfish can be found.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills required. The site is recommended for snorkeling.
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
The Doddington
editUnderstand
editA historical wreck site. This vessel was wrecked in 1755 with valuable cargo.
- 11 The Doddington: — Near Bird Island. Landing on the island is prohibited.
- Depth: — 4 to 6 m
- Topography: —
- Conditions: — Visibility is usually good due to the Agulhas current.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Near the Bird Island seal colony and consequently is visited by Cape fur seals and Great White sharks.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — Great White sharks may be present, and there are usually strong currents at the wreck
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Evans Peak
editUnderstand
edit- 12 Evan's Peak: — S33°50.584' E25°48.995'. Close to St. Croix island
- Depth: — 14 to 40m
- Topography: — Large pinnacle with spectacular drop-offs.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Abundant fish life and sharks
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
The SS Fidela
editGasmic Gorge
editUnderstand
edit- 14 Gasmic Gorge: — Approximately S34°03.48' E025°38.79'. At the north side of a rocky reef shown on the SAN charts about 2.3 km south of the Noordhoek/Wildside slipway.
- Depth: — About 29 m on the sand at the base of the reef, about 20 m at the top of the reef.
- Topography: — High profile reef of sedimentary rock, probably hard quartzitic sandstone of the Ordovician Peninsula formation. Steep sided and fairly narrow gulley referred to as the gorge. Coarse shelly white sand bottom in the gorge.
- Conditions: — Surge can be strong in a large or long period swell, though the bottom of the gorge is to some extent protected. Visibility of more than 5 m is considered good for this area.
Get in
edit- Boat dive — Approximately 2.5km boat trip from Noordhoek slipway. Significantly further from other launch sites.
See
edit- Marine life: — Prolific and very colourful invertebrate cover on the reef. High density of sponges and sea fans. Large numbers of basket stars. Also soft corals, noble corals, false corals, Elegant feather stars, colonial ascidians, nudibranchs, Striped anemones, arborescent bryozoans and hydroids. Fish include Fransmadam, shy sharks and Koester. Horsefish have been seen quite often.
- Photography: — A good site for macro photography, and if conditons are good, also for wide angle work.
- Suggested Routes: — The site is quite deep, and the dive can be extended by spending some time on the shallower parts of the reef. However the main attraction is the gorge, which is small but well worth a visit.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported. Surge over the top of the reef can be strong.
- Skills: — No special skills required. Good buoyancy control recommended, to avoid damaging the reef cover.
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
The Haerlem
editUnderstand
editNavy vessel scuttled in 1987
- 15 SAS Haerlem: — S33°59.333' E25°41.881'
- Depth: — 18 to 21 m
- Topography: — The wreck is about 18 m long
Get in
edit- Boat dive — About ten minutes from the harbour or five minutes from Hobie beach by boat.
See
edit- Marine life: — Coral and sponges grow on the wreck. Pajama sharks are often seen inside the wreckage.
- Suggested Routes: — At times the whole wreck can be seen from the surface. It is a small site and can be comprehensively visited on a single dive.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
The Inchcape Rock
editSS Itzehoe wreck
editMV Kapodistrias
editMark 4 Safepoint/Mark 4 Wall
editUnderstand
editThis site was found by accident when a buoy was being placed to use as a marker for boats approaching and leaving the slipway at Noordhoek.
- 19 Mark 4 Safepoint/Mark 4 Wall: — S34°02.986' E25°38.982'
- Depth: — 10 to 18 m
- Topography: — Rocky outcrops, gullies and interesting rock formations. Lots of nooks and crannies for fish to hide and a small swim through.
- Conditions: — Wildside dive site. Viz can often be better than in the bay area.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Usual reef fish and colourful reef invertebrates.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills required. The site is recommended for novice divers.
- Equipment: — A torch is recommended for looking into the holes and cracks.
Mark 4 Tables
editMoonie
editOrange Reef
editSS Ourimbah wreck
editPadi Reef
editParish wreck
editMV Pati
editPhillip's Reef
editUnderstand
editLarge area of reef 300 to 500 m long. Suitable for night dives.
- 25 Phillip's Reef:' — S33°58.326' E25°40.748', near Bell Buoy and directly offshore from Pollack beach. The reef is easy to locate.
- Depth: — 8 to 17 m
- Topography: —
- Conditions: — Visibility up to 10 m
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Usually abundant reef fish. Also sponges, sea fans, sea-squirts and soft corals.
- Photography: — Good site for macrophotography.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported.
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Pinnacles
editSS Queenmoor wreck
editRaggie Sands
editUnderstand
edit- 28 Raggie Sands: — S34°04.699' E25°41.577', south-west of Cape Recife.
- Depth: — 10 to 15 m
- Topography: — A large open patch of sand with a maze of gullies.
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Ragged-tooth sharks of all sizes frequent the gullies, and as many as 40 sharks have been seen on a single dive, though this would not happen often.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Riy Banks
editUnderstand
editThis is a popular fishing area for game-fish and sharks.
- 29 Riy Banks: — Large shoal area about 21 km east of Cape Recife. One drop point at a pinnacle at S33°59.082' E25°51.704'
- Depth: — 11 to 40 m
- Topography: — Massive walls and pinnacles rise from deeper than 30 m.
- Conditions: — Because of the distance offshore the site usually has good visibility.
Get in
edit- Boat dive — A long trip each way.
See
edit- Marine life: — Coral and game fish, Ragged tooth sharks, rays, pajama sharks and the usual reef fish.
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
Roman Rock
editRoxy's
editSabina wreck
editSantissimo Sacramento
editSt Croix Island Scuba Trails
editSS Strathblane wreck
editSlipway
editSuicide Reef
editThunderbolt Reef
editUnderstand
edit- 36 Thunderbolt Reef: — Large shoal area South of Cape Recife.
- Depth: — 15 to 30m
- Topography: —
Get in
edit- Boat dive —
See
edit- Marine life: — Orange and lilac hard coral
Stay safe
edit- Hazards: — No site-specific hazards reported
- Skills: — No special skills recommended
- Equipment: — No special equipment recommended
SS Western Knight Wreck
editHMS Zeepard Wreck
editStay safe
editConnect
edit