PALAU LAGOON offers 100
different dive sites and 1,000 incredible diving adventures. The
following are random field notes on seven of the better known
locations, where I have always had good luck and great dives. I
call them my lucky seven because they have always produced stunning
photos and marine life discoveries.
BLUE CORNER:
This 3-sided drop-off juts out into the open ocean like a finger
pushed out into the blue abyss. Top of the wall is 50 feet and the
bottom is 3,000 feet. It is a great place to dive when the current
is running. Shark packs of 10 to 20 animals cruise by every few
minutes, coming close to the wall. You always see tons of fish
schools. What I like best is the school of 80 Pacific barracuda
that hang at the top of the wall, just back from the lip.
BLUE HOLES:
Definitely a very different wall dive, even for Palau. Three holes
in the top of the reef lead to three vertical tunnels that go
straight down to 135 feet. The walls of the caves are bathed in an
eerie blue light coming from the sunlight above. Upon exiting the
cave you are likely to encounter schools of fish and sometimes a
leopard shark sleeping on a sand ledge.

NEW DROP-OFF:
A comparatively new dive site and one of Sam's favorites. The upper
zone is loaded with large anemones and very colorful clownfish.
Several schools of bluelined snapper cruise along the top of the
wall and every now and then a school of yellowbacked fuseliers
sweep past the divers. This wall is home to a pair of clown
triggerfish that display a wild color pattern. There is also a pair
of rare blueface angelfish, one of the most elegant members of the
angelfish family. There is one place on this wall called ''The
Well'' where divers can experience an upwelling current. A semi
circular vertical shaft drops straight down from 15 to 130 feet and
is filled with huge schools of black snapper and bigeye
trevally.

BIG DROP-OFF:
One of Palau's classic drop-offs, this site begins at the
incredibly shallow depth of 3 feet and drops straight away to 3,000
feet. The top of the wall is a garden of hard corals tightly packed
together. Marine life includes tridacna clams with electric blue
colored mantles. There are huge mats of rubbery brown soft coral
and small hard corals in pastel blue and pink hues. The face of the
vertical wall is covered with sea fans, soft corals and black coral
trees. It is an explosion of colors so vivid that it boggles the
mind. Every crevice and ledge is occupied with resident tropical
reef fish that are both inquisitive and coy.

SHARK CITY:
This is one of the wildest dive sites along Palau's western barrier
reef. It juts far out into the currents of the Philippine Sea and
requires good diving skills for safe exploration. Originally named
for its abundance of gray reef sharks, this is the spot for
encountering unusual pelagics. Divers have seen gigantic bumphead
wrasse weighing 200 pounds. Other exciting visitors include manta
rays, wahoo, yellowfin tuna and blue marlin.

SIAES TUNNEL:
A right angle turn in the wall line forms a sharp vertical corner
in the reef at a depth of approximately 90 feet, a huge tunnel
passes horizontal through a corner of the reef. It is about 30 feet
in diameter and more than 100 feet long. Several small windows on
the ocean side of the tunnel wall allow sunlight to stream in. The
interior of the walls of the tunnel are lined with huge black coral
trees, some measuring 10 feet in length. Giant gorgonian fans of
brilliant yellow or reddish orange hues punctuate this forest of
marine life. The fish action is lively, with schools of jacks,
large dogtooth tuna, turtles and manta rays.

CORAL GARDENS
OUTSIDE:
This is a double dive site (outside and inside) and while both are
fantastic, I have a personal preference for outside. The reef
profile begins at 35 feet and cascades down to a vertical drop-off
that plummets to 900 feet. It is my favorite spot for photographing
giant tridacna clams that measure 3 feet across and weigh more than
500 pounds. One is located at a depth of 35 feet and the other at
70 feet. The reef terrain is a magnificent garden of tightly packed
hard corals that include huge table corals, sharp pointed staghorn
corals that are pastel blue and huge dome like formations of
knobbed coral. Schools of tropical reef fish cruise over the top of
the corals in slow moving formations. It is a great spot for
photographing blue streaked fusiliers, yellowtail fusiliers and the
big nose unicorn fish.
Whether you are diving with one of Palau's land based dive operators or from a live-aboard, Palau Lagoon and surrounding drop-offs is an experience of a lifetime.













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