CREATE YOUR VACATION


Package Type:
From:
To:
Depart:
Return:
Adults: 
Children: 
Promotion code (Optional):
More Kids? More Rooms?
View Expanded Search
 

SEARCH

Antigua Resorts
Other Resorts
Special Interest Deals
Weddings/Honeymoons
Groups/Tours
Cruises
Passport Requirements

CARIBBEAN
   Anguilla
   Antigua
   Aruba
   Bahamas
   Barbados
   Bermuda
   Bonaire
   British Virgin Islands
   Cayman Islands
   Costa Rica
   Curacao
   Dominican Republic
   Grenada
   Grenadines
   Guadeloupe
   Jamaica
   Puerto Rico
   St. Kitts & Nevis
   St. Lucia
   St. Martin/Maarten
   Turks & Caicos
   U.S. Virgin Islands
EUROPE
MEXICO
USA
   Florida
   Hawaii
   New York

For Reservations: 1-888-330-8272
Diving in Antigua

AntiguaBoth Antigua and Barbuda are almost completely surrounded by well-preserved coral reefs, walls, and shipwrecks. The southern and eastern coasts of Antigua and virtually the entire coast of Barbuda are surrounded by shelfs, providing excellent conditions for spectacular shallow diving and snorkeling. There is little or no current in most places, and the water temperature averages about 80 F (25 C). Underwater visibility ranges from 50 to 140 feet, and tropical marine plants and animals are diverse and plentiful. Snorkeling is possible at many of both islands' most beautiful beaches; one of Antigua's best-known offshore sites, Cades Reef, is now partly contained in a designated underwater park. Another popular destination is the wreck of the Andes, a three-masted merchant ship that sank in 1905 and now rests in less than thirty feet of water in (ironically enough) Deep Bay. Antigua's dive facilities are far superior to those available on smaller Barbuda, and so most of the sites that have been established as dive destinations are Antiguan. The southern and eastern coasts are considered to offer the most consistent diving; for more advanced divers, the ledge of Sunken Rock on the south coast is a popular site. Dive depths generally range from 25 to 80 feet and can reach 180 feet; distances from shore to site are in some cases no more than five minutes and at most 40 minutes away.

Barbuda's encircling reefs contain an enormous number of wrecks, most of which are yet to be explored; in fact, the Codrington fortunes on Barbuda were intimately linked to their acquisition of rights to the wreckage in the 17th-century. To dive off Barbuda, it is best to make arrangements with a dive shop on Antigua to have the necessary equipment taken over by air or boat.