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Dive-In is Ready to Explore New Depths in Limassol, Cyprus

By Jonathan Wilson | Updated On January 4, 2024
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Dive-In is Ready to Explore New Depths in Limassol, Cyprus

The deployment of the new artificial reef (AR) program around Cyprus could not have come at a better time for the Dive-In diving centre in Limassol, by coinciding with their 20-year anniversary as a PADI Dive Centre at The Four Seasons Hotel. As part of the Dive-In celebrations, Jonathan Wilson, owner and managing director, invited VIP guests and fellow divers to board MY SONS motor yacht, courtesy of Selene Dream Cruises, for a tour of Limassol Bay to witness the sinking of two significant wrecks in the AR schedule on Feb. 22, 2014.

MY SONS was skippered by Capt. Savvas Costa, director of Selene Dream Cruises, and on board were Chris Curry, owner and director of Boatshed Cyprus.com, international boat and yacht brokers, and Jez Clarke from Tui travel operators. Staff from the Four Seasons Hotel, where Dive-In is based, also joined the party. Leaving from St. Rafael Marina, the trip covered 10 nautical miles to the wreck site just off Dasoudi Beach and back.

Wilson said, “This is one of the most important programs that Cyprus has initiated in terms of diving. Though the island already has numerous wrecks, including the Zenobia, one of the top 10 wreck dive sites in the world, this heralds a new era for Cyprus as a diving destination.”

Over the course of 2014, several organizations are involved in creating four new diving sites and fish reserves across the south coast of Cyprus: Amathus Ancient Harbour in Limassol; the two Dasoudi wrecks; a submerged vessel in Protaras; and another scheduled for Paphos later in the year. Costa said, “The protected boundaries and the wrecks will ensure that divers will experience the amazing fish life of the Mediterranean.” Wilson added, “At the Dasoudi site, the two wrecks were cleaned according to the UNEP/MAP and holes cut for divers’ routes. Later, amphora pots are also being placed to attract more fish and encourage marine habitats. We are looking forward to seeing which species make this site their new home.”

The Dasoudi wrecks are the vessels Lady Thetis, a 30-meter German cruise ship sunk at 23m, and Constandis, a 23-meter Russian bottom trawler sunk at 25-meter depth. Each will give divers a challenge both in depth and difficulty of routes around the vessels. The site was organized by the Cyprus Dive Centre Association, in association with the Department of Fisheries and Marine Research (DFMR) of the Ministry of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Environment (MANRE) and the Municipalities of Limassol, Yermasoyia and Ayios Athanasios. The project is co-funded by the European Union, European Fisheries Fund 2007-2013: Investing in sustainable fisheries, with the support of Cyprus Tourism Organization, the Limassol and Yermasoyia Municipalities, and the Cyprus Dive Centre Association.

Wilson invites all divers who wish to see the birth of a new reef to join him: “The Dive-In centre is fortunate enough to be so close that we will be taking divers down to explore as soon as possible. This season as the Mediterranean waters warm up, organisms will start to flourish on the wrecks; this will be the invitation to the fish to feed. Fish tend to colonize quite quickly, so it will not be long before the site will be teeming, and with the protected boundaries against fishing, the two wrecks will become a hive of activity for both divers and marine life.”

For more information please contact Jonathan Wilson, Dive-In.

Email jonathan@dive-in-limassol.com

Tel +357 99444 283

www.dive-in-limassol.com

This fishing vessel Costandis was a bottom trawler and was built in the former Soviet Union in 1989. Its original Russian name was Zolotets.

Jonathan Wilson

The deployment of the new artificial reef (AR) program around Cyprus could not have come at a better time for the Dive-In diving centre in Limassol, by coinciding with their 20-year anniversary as a PADI Dive Centre at The Four Seasons Hotel. As part of the Dive-In celebrations, Jonathan Wilson, owner and managing director, invited VIP guests and fellow divers to board MY SONS motor yacht, courtesy of Selene Dream Cruises, for a tour of Limassol Bay to witness the sinking of two significant wrecks in the AR schedule on Feb. 22, 2014.

MY SONS was skippered by Capt. Savvas Costa, director of Selene Dream Cruises, and on board were Chris Curry, owner and director of Boatshed Cyprus.com, international boat and yacht brokers, and Jez Clarke from Tui travel operators. Staff from the Four Seasons Hotel, where Dive-In is based, also joined the party. Leaving from St. Rafael Marina, the trip covered 10 nautical miles to the wreck site just off Dasoudi Beach and back.

Wilson said, “This is one of the most important programs that Cyprus has initiated in terms of diving. Though the island already has numerous wrecks, including the Zenobia, one of the top 10 wreck dive sites in the world, this heralds a new era for Cyprus as a diving destination.”

Over the course of 2014, several organizations are involved in creating four new diving sites and fish reserves across the south coast of Cyprus: Amathus Ancient Harbour in Limassol; the two Dasoudi wrecks; a submerged vessel in Protaras; and another scheduled for Paphos later in the year. Costa said, “The protected boundaries and the wrecks will ensure that divers will experience the amazing fish life of the Mediterranean.” Wilson added, “At the Dasoudi site, the two wrecks were cleaned according to the UNEP/MAP and holes cut for divers’ routes. Later, amphora pots are also being placed to attract more fish and encourage marine habitats. We are looking forward to seeing which species make this site their new home.”

The Lady Thetis is a former pleasure boat.

Jonathan Wilson

The Dasoudi wrecks are the vessels Lady Thetis, a 30-meter German cruise ship sunk at 23m, and Constandis, a 23-meter Russian bottom trawler sunk at 25-meter depth. Each will give divers a challenge both in depth and difficulty of routes around the vessels. The site was organized by the Cyprus Dive Centre Association, in association with the Department of Fisheries and Marine Research (DFMR) of the Ministry of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Environment (MANRE) and the Municipalities of Limassol, Yermasoyia and Ayios Athanasios. The project is co-funded by the European Union, European Fisheries Fund 2007-2013: Investing in sustainable fisheries, with the support of Cyprus Tourism Organization, the Limassol and Yermasoyia Municipalities, and the Cyprus Dive Centre Association.

Wilson invites all divers who wish to see the birth of a new reef to join him: “The Dive-In centre is fortunate enough to be so close that we will be taking divers down to explore as soon as possible. This season as the Mediterranean waters warm up, organisms will start to flourish on the wrecks; this will be the invitation to the fish to feed. Fish tend to colonize quite quickly, so it will not be long before the site will be teeming, and with the protected boundaries against fishing, the two wrecks will become a hive of activity for both divers and marine life.”

For more information please contact Jonathan Wilson, Dive-In.

Email jonathan@dive-in-limassol.com

Tel +357 99444 283

www.dive-in-limassol.com