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MUDGEE'S ONLY DIVE CENTRE

NSW MID-NORTH COAST


Incorporating:

  1. NELSON BAY / PORT STEPHENS
  2. FORSTER / SEAL ROCKS 
  3. CROWDY HEAD / PORT MACQUARIE

1. NELSON BAY / PORT STEPHENS

Information has been adapted from Lets Go Adventures, Nelson Bay www.letsgoadventures.com.au

 

SHORE DIVES

HALIFAX PARK  

HOW TO FIND IT

Travel through the roundabout past the Information centre in the main part of town, continue along this road with the bay on your left. After about 1-1.5 kms, the road takes a 90 degree turn right, keep going till you come to a left turn just past the ovals but before the RSL club. Turn left here and follow this down to another beach and a boat ramp. This is Little Beach. Just before the road turns right towards the Halifax Caravan Park, there is a turn to the left into the parking areas, turn left and then proceed to the right and through the car park, a road heads up the hill, before this, turn left towards the bay and follow the dirt/sand track around to the right along the shore.

DIVE SITE DESCRIPTION

Located to the north of the Little Beach boat ramp, enter the site only in the cleared entry/ exit area. Boulders and sea urchins dominate the shallow area giving way to sponge gardens from about ten metres as you swim down the hill towards the north. The fish life in shallow water is extensive with big schools of luderick, bream and mullet swirling around in the shallow water. They are most active when high tide is late in the afternoon as the resident dolphin wait just out of sight of the diver.

The most prolific sponge garden and the most intense fish life is due north of the entry area in about twenty metres and at eighteen metres due west of the entry. Interesting ledges from five metres are an ideal safety stop area.

A safety stop is generally recommended at Halifax as it is more than likely that you would have descended past 18 m. Halifax is also a very good location for a night dive - but remember that you must dive it on the high slack tide.

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WARNING!
This dive must be done on a SLACK tide as the currents here are
VERY STRONG!
It is always recommended to dive here on the high slack tide as it produces the best visibility. It can also be dived on the low slack tide but the visibility is generally very poor. Another safety point, if you need to head  for the surface for some reason, please make sure you swim in close to the shore  as boats frequently cruise above this dive site.
Ideally, you should have an SMB (Surface Marker Buoy) and deploy it from 5m depth.

If you surface from deep water there is a very good chance you could become struck by a boat. If you must surface try and head into shore before hand!

 FLY POINT

HOW TO FIND IT

From the Information Centre in Nelsons Bay, drive further along the road for approx. 1-1.5 kms and the road will take a 90 degree right turn away from the beach. Just as this turn starts, a road continues to follow the beach to the left, take this road, and as it climbs the hill it turns to the right, park anywhere here. As you have to dive on the slack high tide you will generally find that are other divers in the car park gearing up, particularly on weekends. And during the Christmas and Easter holidays, turn up early to get a car park! There is a well defined access path to a set of concrete steps at the waters edge, this is the usual starting point

DIVE SITE DESCRIPTION

Located west of Little Beach this a prime training site with flat sandy areas and a prolific sponge garden from twelve metres. Large schools of bream, tarwhine and mullet are on the lookout for food at the entrance and huge flathead can be found in the shallow sea grass.

Further down, prolific nudibranchs, decorator crabs, pipefish and seahorse hide among the sponges and schools of baitfish, pineapple fish, bream, wrasse, pike as well as wobbegong sharks abound. A series of ledges provide protection for all sorts of small species.

While the site is normally dived on high tide a drift dive from Fly to the fisherman's co-op is available for the more experienced. As you have to dive on the slack high tide you will generally find that are other divers in the car park gearing up, particularly on weekends. During the Christmas and Easter holidays, turn up VERY early to get a car park! There is a well defined access path to a set of concrete steps at the waters edge, this is the usual starting point.

After entering the water and snorkelling out to where the water starts to deepen (around 4-5 metres), descend and head to your left (north-west) and a few minutes later (about 30 metres) you will come across the first of 2 ledges that run in parallel with the shore. You can follow these ledges to the left for quite some time and if you look carefully you may find the school of pineapple fish that are known to frequent this area. The school of pineapple fish can be found near the ledge where the plaque and garden gnomes are located! There is good sponge life right along this area. After following these ledges for some time, you can head out into the deeper water where the larger sponge gardens are. Out in the deeper water (17-22 m) there are prolific sponge gardens and the colours are amazing. There is a very large old deck winch that can be found out in this area in about 20 metres.

Another way to dive Fly Point is instead of heading left (west) to the ledges, enter the water and follow the sand ridge around to the right. This is an excellent spot to find macro life   including tiger pipe fish. You can normally find a number of wobbegongs here too.

Fly Point is also an excellent night dive, at night the place just comes alive with critters that you didn't even know were present during your day time visits, such as rose bubble shells, decorator and spider crabs.

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WARNING! This dive must be done on a SLACK tide as the currents here are VERY STRONG! It is always recommended to dive here on the high slack tide as it produces the best visibility. It can also be dived on the low slack tide but the visibility is generally very poor. Fly Point is considered a very easy and safe dive site, hence it is a very popular training ground for Open Water courses and many dive shops come up from Sydney to teach here. It can get very crowded at times with dive courses, especially over summer and the Easter break.

THE PIPELINE

[Featured in the 'Australasia Scuba Diver' magazine as one of THE TOP 13 Shore Dives in the Asia Pacific!] Issue 3/2009 (Vol.5 No.2)

09DEC-7

HOW TO FIND IT

Turn left at the Information Centre roundabout, and follow this road past the marina all the way to the end to where the fish co-op is. There is parking here, but it can get packed if you choose the wrong weekend to dive here. Once geared up, walk towards the fish co-op and you will see a cement path that follows the shoreline. Follow the shore along further and will find some concreted rock steps at the entry. You will notice the pipe entering the water from the shore. Just follow the line out.

DIVE SITE DESCRIPTION

The pipeline is arguably the best macro dive in NSW. You can find many weird and unusual critters. The pipeline is tide affected so it always best to dive it on the slack high tide. Visibility is not always the greatest here, on average you would be looking at about 5 metres. The best visibility I have had at the pipeline would be about   an outstanding 15 to 20m, the worst easily being less than a metre!

The easiest way to dive this site is to follow the pipeline out to sea in a northerly direction. If you ever lose the pipeline, it's always easy to find your way back to shore or the break wall if you swim on a bearing of 330 degrees. Actually, a bearing of 330 degrees will get you back to shore on all the dives sites in Nelson Bay!

Along the pipeline you'll find sponges, soft corals, sea horses, decorator crabs along the pipeline, other critters you will find are morays eels, eastern rock lobsters, tropical fish during the summer period, many different (and rare) nudibranchs species, cuttlefish, blue ring octopus, angler fish, sea pens, pipefish, bubble shells and on and on! There are so many different species to find at the pipeline, it will keep you busy for hours after the dive studying your marine books trying to identify everything you saw.

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LITTLE BEACH

HOW TO FIND IT

Travel through the roundabout past the Information Centre in the main part of town, continue along this road with the bay on your left. After about 1-1.5kms, the road takes a 90 degree turn right, keep going till you come to a left turn just past the ovals but before the RSL club. Turn left here and follow this down to another beach and a boat ramp. This is Little Beach.

DIVE SITE DESCRIPTION

A suitable macro and diver training site dived at high tide south of the boat ramp between the two white posts which mark the swimming area. Playground equipment is located in six metres and an old houseboat is about twenty metres west of the southern post. From the houseboat a line leads further out to a barge and A frame which provide a haven for lots of small critters.    

  BOAT DIVES

Broughton Island

Pics below are copyright www.letsgoadventures.com.au 

 Twenty kilometres north of Port Stephens is beautiful Broughton Island. Diving is diverse, ranging from 40 metre walls to the 15 metre swim through at the Looking Glass, spider cave, bubble cave and the resident grey nurse shark family on the north side of the island.

Looking Glass 15-18 m

A narrow channel through the middle of the island. Sheer walls covered with bait fish and small sponges, patrolled by large black rays and grey nurse sharks during the warmer months. A spectacular dive and even more exciting with a little surge.

Looking Glass Wall 15-40 m

Sheer walls to a boulder bottom which slopes way down to 40 metres. Several small caves and overhangs feature colourful sponges. Good fish life including the rare ( for the north coast ) blue devil fish. A good alternative when the surge through the Looking Glass is too strong.

Shark Gutters 12 m

Narrow gutters on North Broughton are home to as many as 25 grey nurse sharks during summer. Mainly females and juveniles they were at first apparently nervous with divers but now appear to be more relaxed with small groups of intruders.

Spider Cave 12 m

Small, low cave in shallow water with two narrow entrances. Home to wobbegong and port jackson sharks during breeding season and large wobbegongs later in spring when the travelling crayfish are also encountered.

Bubble Cave 12 m

A large entrance funnels up to an air space well below sea level. An interesting non challenging cave dive. Large cod are encountered at the entrance as well as schools of baitfish.

North Rock 10-22 m

Kelp covered bommies, sheer walls and extensive sponge gardens to the east. Plenty of fish during summer and the occasional grey nurse. A pleasant alternative when the southerly's are blowing.

Cod Rock 12-18 m

An interesting dive for the fossicker, with gutters, crevices and a small cave at the eastern corner and a swim through lava tube.   An easy swim except with a south east swell.

Fingal Island

Only fifteen minutes from Nelson Bay, Fingal Island features pinnacles, drop offs and abundantly colourful sponge gardens. Fish and invertebrate life is extensive, ranging from tiny nudibranchs to schooling baitfish, morwong, friendly grouper and turtles. Fingal also has quiet rocky bays dive able in almost all conditions and haven for breeding Port Jackson sharks in late winter and spring.

The Pinnacle
Plunging from five to 35 metres this is best in summer when yellow tail kingfish, cobia and mulloway move in to take advantage of schools of baitfish which come in with the warmer weather.

Boondelbah Island

Boondelbah offers protected waters with sheer walls, tight swim throughs and caves which provide a haven for bream, drummer and the inevitable blue groper. During summer you will also encounter large schools of mulloway and big snapper.

A colourful sponge garden on the south west corner drops away into deep water. While offshore winds during winter encourage us to dive the sheer walls on the eastern side of the island, Safety Bay on the southern end of the island is a perfect summer training location with total protection from the prevailing north-easterly winds.

Little Island

The most exposed dive sites in the area with sheer walls on all sides and attractive sponge gardens in the deep gutters to the north and east of the island. Our favourite site if you are into deeper diving. You can encounter anything out there, from cobia, snapper, small whalers and in summer schools of eagle rays. Port Jackson sharks breed close to the island and who knows what lurks out in the deep.

Cabbage Tree Island

A calm, and safe training location. Shallow rock walls drop off to sand in no more than twelve metres on the south western side making it a comfortable dive for the inexperienced and a safe location for diving when the strong northeasters blow during summer.

WRECKS

Satara

The Steamship Satara sank in 1910 and now lies in 45 metres of water just south of Seal Rocks. The wreck is approximately 125 metres long, 9 metres high and has a beam of about 15 metres. The boilers and the stern are the most interesting parts of the wreck and has an abundance of fish life including species such as snapper and morwongs. It is a deep dive with limited bottom time and is for experienced divers only. It is a long boat trip from Nelson Bay (2 hours) and charters can be arranged through Pro Dive Nelson Bay.

Oakland

A 154 feet long collier which sank with the loss of eleven lives in a terrible gale in May 1903. The wreck lies in 27 metres of water north of Cabbage Tree Island an is an interesting dive. the wreck offers protection for huge schools of baitfish, bream, leather jacket.

The bow of the SS Oakland
Scuba diver exploring the Oakland
Scuba diver exploring the Oakland

Macleay

A similar vessel, the Macleay sank with the loss of fifteen lives after crashing onto rocks at Little Island in 1911. The Macleay lies in 42 metres off the south east corner of the island. With often limited visibility, it is a more challenging dive than the Oakland. The engine and boiler are in good condition, while the partially collapsed bow offers protection for large mulloway while the rest of the wreck is covered by a large school of morwong.        

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2. FORSTER / SEAL ROCKS  

When we dive at Forster, we choose to stay and travel with Ron Hunter at Dive Forster. www.diveforster.com.au/index.html

Other dive shops in the area include Forster Dive: www.forsterdivecentre.com.au/

Undoubtedly, Forster is famous for its Shark Diving (Grey Nurse Sharks); best between approximately February and May. However, Forster has many outstanding dives.

Photo: Dive Forster Fisherman's Wharf.

 

FORSTER

Information provided here is adapted from Dive Forster www.diveforster.com.au

The Pinnacle   The Pinnacle is rated in the top ten dive sites in the World.

The Pinnacle is an advanced dive, depth 24 to 33m (and deeper).

Roberto Rinaldi, a well-known Italian underwater photojournalist gave this top ten rating. Roberto spent ten years with Jacques Cousteau on-board the "Calypso" as the vessel's resident underwater photographer.

This is the site that many divers experience their best dive ever, anywhere in the world.

Grey Nurse Sharks up to 4m long in aggregations of 50 and more. Big kingfish, jewfish, trevally and stingrays are all seen here. When the "Pinnacle" is at its best there is no better dive in the world. This is the only place where you are liable to see big fish being eaten by big sharks. Located in the middle of the ocean, many other types of marine life is also seen here, such as blue and black marlin, bronze whaler sharks, seals, manta rays, white pointer sharks, cobia, Spanish mackerel and tuna.

On rare occasions seen you could be lucky enough to see pilot whales, humpback whales, fairy penguins, mako sharks and at one time, a very impressive, 5m long great hammerhead shark.

During the summer to early winter months, hundreds of jewfish (mulloway) "whirlpool" around the site. This whirlpool usually contains ten to twenty kilo jewfish. Around the outside of the whirlpool even bigger yellowtail kingfish circle the school. These kingfish act like sheep dogs, bumping into and pushing the jewfish around and ensuring that individual jewfish do not stray from the school.

Around the outside of the school, two or three grey nurse sharks will swim in the same circular pattern, snapping up any unwary individual who ventures too close. Underneath the school, resident giant black rays swoop in to clean up the scraps.

The grey nurse sharks cooperatively feed on the jewfish, the two or three attendant sharks sink back down to ocean floor after a few minutes of swimming with the school, to be replaced by the next sharks in line. 

Forster1091

Spot A

Depth 9 to 21m, Open Water level.

Spot A is one of the most popular dive sites at Forster, it is situated below Cape Hawk headland and is an easy 10 minuet boat ride from the dive shop.

The reef is the eastern most finger of rock extending from Latitude Rock and is some 400m in length.

This dive is basically a wall dive with the top of the reef in 9m of water dropping down on the northern side to 19 m, (21m on the sand). The southern side gently slopes down to 17 m and is covered in kelp. Many varieties of kelp fish and wrasses live in this area.

The eastern end of the reef slopes down to a depth of 21 m and this is where Spot A finishes. This area is very colourful and is known as the sponge gardens and is home to an amazing amount of soft corals and sponges, nudibranchs and a host of tiny little critters hiding amongst the sponges.

The western end of the reef is the closest to Latitude Rock and is similar in topography with the main reef breaking into gutters and shallower bommies. The depth here is from 10 m to 18 m and is where you can often see Grey Nurse Sharks, large Cray fish, schools of bait fish and Eagle Rays.

The northern wall about half way along the rock is where the boat is usually moored at a spot called the Amphitheatre. Here the wall is at its steepest and the biggest concentration of fish life occurs, you will see everything here from Grey Nurse Sharks, huge Wobbegongs, Port Jackson Sharks, large Cobia (black Kingfish) schools of bait fish, Tailor and Bonito to large Blue Fin Tuna.

Looking closer along the rock you will often find Turtles sleeping under a ledge, huge schools of Bulls Eyes, which often completely block out your view, a Giant Queensland Grouper and 3 or 4 very friendly Blue Grouper as well as up to 4 different types of Eels including the Mosaic and Conga Eel.

Latitude Rock

Latitude Rock is one of our more popular sites, a relatively shallow dive, the maximum depth of 15 metres and average depth of 12 metres allows for extended bottom times.

The mooring sits in 10 metres of water with several shallower ridges of reef at 5 m for a safety stop.

The bottom topography of Latitude is a series of gutters and ridges running parallel with the Rock itself. There is kelp, sponges and colourful marine growth in the shallower parts, graduating to mostly bare granite rock in the 15-metre range.

Small, mainly female, Grey Nurse Sharks aggregate here during the mating season. These sexually immature females travel inshore and away from the sexually aggressive and much larger males that inhabit the "Pinnacle" during October   to December. Grey Nurse Sharks are sighted here all year but in smaller numbers than the spring and early summer periods. Also commonly found all year are loggerhead turtles, Port Jackson Sharks, wobbegong sharks, elegant wrasse and black or estuary cod. All of these species are protected, some endangered and all at risk from some inappropriate fishing practices that occur at Latitude Rock. Latitude Rock is a perfect second dive after the much deeper "Pinnacle". 

Forster1099

Diamond Reef

Maximum depth, 20 metres. Open Water Level.

Diamond reef is a 25-minuet boat ride north of Forster. This site is a macro photographers and divers paradise with an amazing variety of soft and hard corals, sponges and 38 different varieties of Nudibranchs, some of which are endemic to this particular reef.

With an average depth of 16 metres, you have plenty of bottom time to explore and count the different types of Nudibranchs. The colours you will see on this dive will blow you away, from bright yellows to deep purples and everything in between.

This site has many types of Invertebrates including Coral Banded Shrimps, Red Lined Shrimps to large Slipper Crays and Eastern Rock Crays. The fish life you will usually see here is generally quite small but on the odd occasion you may see   Grey Nurse Sharks, small Whaler Sharks and even Marlin.

It’s the Nudibranchs and corals that this dive is famous for. The shapes, sizes and colours of the Nudibranchs is amazing, from bright yellow with white spots, to dark blue with orange spots, you can do a full dive and see up to 10 different types in an area of only 3 or 4 square metres. The bottom composition is quite flat with shallow sandy gutters, with the highest points only rising 2 or 3 metres off the bottom.

This site is quite fragile with all the soft and hard corals covering the entire bottom so good buoyancy control is essential to avoid undue damage to this reef.

SEAL ROCKS

 

Big Seal Rock

Big Seal Rock is the larger of the two islands east of the Seal Rock’s lighthouse.
There are four different dive sites here:

1.The Grotto. 12 to 23 m. Up to forty Grey Nurse Sharks jam the grotto and gutters. This is a great spot for underwater photography as the nurses are often positioned above the divers. A huge loggerhead turtle has his home here.

2.The Wall. 4 to 45 m. This is a sheer wall that lies a little to the east of the Big Rock. There is a shelf of rock at 24 to27 metres that juts out from The Wall before it plummets to a boulder strewn sandy bottom. The Wall can only be dived in calm seas with no current, and when these conditions are available, this is a fantastic wall dive. Soft corals adorn the sheer wall; the coral garden bowl is an inset in the wall and the place to finish your dive allowing divers a beautiful area for ascent up past the soft corals.

3.The Fish Bowl. 8 to 35 m. There is a series of rock shelfs that jut out from the island at   8, 15 and 20 m with the boulders on the sandy bottom at 35 metres. Grey Nurse and Port Jackson Sharks are often seen here, Bronze Whaler Sharks cruise the wall as do huge yellowtail kingfish.

4.The Cavern (western gutter). This is   shallow dive, 8 to 12 m. The Cavern in the western gutter is one of the most important areas in Australia for Grey Nurse Sharks breeding. The gutter is 6 metres wide and this amazing dive site can be packed with up to 40 Grey Nurse Sharks at a time. This is the perfect spot for underwater photography of the Grey Nurses, as they will come within touching distance of divers. This is a highly controlled dive site, no more than six divers at a time in the gutter, and all divers must be against the sides of the gutter so as not to disturb or frighten the sharks. The diving just outside the western gutter is also very good; schools of big yellowtail kingfish will swoop in and feed on the baitfish that congregate here.

Photo Loa Wu

                      

Little Seal Rock

The Little Rock is the smaller of the two islands east of the Seal Rocks’ lighthouse. 
There are two different ways to dive here:

1. Diving a Quadrant of the Island. The northwest side of the island is 12 to 20 m deep with huge boulders dominating the bottom. There are a lot of swim throughs under these boulders; a torch will reveal masses of fish sheltering there. These boulders are home to "Bicentennial" a massive resident black cod, about 1.8 m long. This is the area where in the past we have seen the greatest aggregations of Grey Nurse Sharks anywhere The most nurses encountered here was estimated at over 200, before they fell prey to improper fishing practices. There were so many sharks they were literally four deep in the gutters. These days you will only encounter twenty to thirty sharks in the same area.

2. Guided Island Circumnavigation. Maximum depth is under 20 m,   mostly in the 15 m or shallower. There is a gutter here that the small Grey Nurse Sharks inhabit, a sanctuary in which   you see brand new pups. At a very steady rate of progress divers should be able to swim right around the island, carefully monitoring their depth, in around 30 minutes. The Little Rock, around the northwest quadrant, is a very prolific location for fish life. Yellowtail kingfish, snapper, bonito, tuna and jewfish (mulloway) are all seen here. They arrive in schools to predate upon the clouds of baitfish, yellowtail and slimy mackerel that are found here. 

                              Sketch by Ron Hunter

Jimmy's Cave

Jimmy’s Cave is one of the most fantastic underwater tours you can experience. Advanced divers only and everyone must have a torch. There is very good diving to be had here outside of the cave system, so those that are not qualified or would rather not experience the cave can still enjoy a sensational dive.

The dive boat anchors on a rock ridge 10 m deep and you drop down through a vertical entrance into the cave system. The depth in the cave is 33 to 34 m. Spend a little time here exploring the cracks and crevices, huge "spider" lobsters are often seen. Take care in this section of the cave as big wobbegong sharks lurk here.

Moving along   you drop onto a sandy bottom and here you turn left into a dark tunnel rather than taking the first of the exits through which the light streams into the cave. This tunnel leads you into the "ballroom" filled with the ladder-finned pomfreds, bullseyes, and nannygai that shelter here. This is a great spot for photography with these fish silhouetted in the second and third exits from the cave system.

Once you exit the cave ascend up an open chimney to around 14 m and a short swim from the anchor chain, which is draped across the ridge in 10 metres. If you have sufficient air, proceed from here along the wall, ducking under a swim through, to emerge in the "trench", a sandy bottomed, square cut gutter 29 m deep, looking up you may see Grey Nurse Sharks hovering above.

Ascend to around 20 m for a short mid-water swim to a series of large boulders that lie in the “trench”. Duck under these boulders into two swim throughs, finally emerging under and to the right of a magnificent black coral tree, standing around 2 metres tall and festooned with brittle stars and wrapping worms. This is a great photographic subject, take care where you land here, as there are often wobbegong and Port Jackson sharks carpeting the bottom.

The Interlinked Caves

The Interlinked Caves are located next to a 12 m deep rock ridge, located in the same area as Jimmy's Cave. The depth is 33 m. This however is a very different dive site. Impossible to find on your own it is a guided tour through a series of short caves and swim-throughs.

As the name suggests, these caves lie adjacent to one another. As you exit one, another entrance presents itself to be explored. There are a number of blind caves in the complex, and caution needs to be exercised if there is any surge.

Photographic opportunities present themselves at every corner. One cave has an exit that opens up into the back of an underwater grotto. It is here that you   often see grey nurse sharks, brilliantly backlit in the mouth of the grotto. Many divers comment that this is the best sea cave dive that they have ever done. 

Photo Ron Hunter


WRECKS

S.S Satara

The Satara was built by W. Denny & Bros, Dumbarton, Scotland in December 1901. She was 410 foot long and was of steel construction with 2 decks, the upper deck sheathed with teak. She had 2 single ended boilers with an auxiliary boiler and was powered by a triple expansion 3-cylinder engine of 383 HP. She displaced 5200 tonnes.

At around 11am on Wednesday the 20th of April 1910 she struck Edith Breaker just south of Seal Rocks and sank shortly after. There were 88 officers and crew and one passenger on board all of whom were rescued.

The Satara now lies in 44 metres of water, lying on her port side with her bow pointing out to sea and her stern inshore resting on a reef.

Descending down the anchor line, the first thing that strikes you is the size of the wreck spread out on the sea floor its huge. From   the anchoring point, which is usually around the boilers, you have the option of either going forward to the bow or rear to the stern.

The stern section by far is the best option, as you arrive at the huge boilers you will start swimming along the stern tube past large pieces of machinery and twisted metal, out on the sand you often see huge Black Rays and large Kingfish patrolling the wreck.

The massive stern section where the accommodation was located will then greet you. This rises up over 12 m off the sea floor with a slight lean to the port side. This area is a mass of fish life with large schools of Bull's eyes and morwong covering the wreck.

Swimming under this section you will swim over the huge propeller measuring over 2 m each blade, over the rudder and under the stern section. This is where you will often encounter Grey Nurse Sharks and a large Black Cod.

Heading back towards the boiler and anchor area, you will swim past more large pieces of machinery, large bollards and sheets of decking. Looking out on the port side on the sand you will see the small auxiliary boiler, which was blown clear when the ship sank.

This is a brief description of a typical dive on the S.S Satara, it is so big that it takes several dives to see everything that it has to offer. Depth 35- 44 m advanced and deep diver training with logged recent deep dives. 

                                           Photo: Ron Hunter Shipwreck, S.S

Catterthun

Built in England in 1881, the 92.5 m Catterthun was powered by steam but also rigged as a schooner. It was one of the first Australian ships to have electric lighting and refrigeration.

The ship sank shortly after hitting the reef behind little seal rock on the 8th of August 1895 with the loss of 55 lives as well as some live stock including horses.

The wreck now lies on a slightly slopping, sandy bottom in 55 - 60 m of water.

The Catterthun was also carrying a large amount of gold coins, which less than a year after it sank was the scene of a record breaking salvage operation. Arthur Briggs and William May, under the supervision of Captain John Hall recovered 7 out of 10 boxes of gold from the specie room using cumbersome hard hat equipment and being supplied with air, hand pumped from the surface. This was an amazing feat for that time. It is still believed that gold still exists on the wreck, but a salvage operation in the 90s failed to recover anything.

Descending onto the wreck it is surprisingly well preserved considering it has been under water for more than 100 years. The steam engine stands proud in the middle of the wreck, standing more than 3 metres tall. The whole wreck is covered in beautiful corals and is home to a mass of fish. The bow section is twisted and tipped to one side, this is home to a large school of Jew fish and a large Black Cod. If you look closely in this area you can still find the odd leg bone from the Horses that were kept in this area.

Swimming back towards the stern, you will make your way over open deck to the large rudder pentile, from here you can still make out the sleek shape of the hull of this once majestic vessel.

Often while doing your compulsory decompression stops you will be joined by Common Dolphins and sometimes Bronze Whaler Sharks, an exciting way to finish a dive on an amazing piece of Australian maritime history.
                                          Photo: Ron Hunter Shipwreck, S.S

NOTE: The Catterthun is a deep wreck and is only available to dive by fully qualified and equipped divers with experience at diving to these depths. The site is also prone to strong currents and bad sea conditions, which make diving this wreck sometimes very difficult.

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 3. CROWDY HEAD / PORT MACQUARIE

Based at Laurieton south of Port Macquarie, SCUBA HAVEN services divers in the northern most section of the mid-north coast. For us southerners, its about 80kms north of the Forster turnoff. Click on their logo below to visit their website. All information is adapted from their website. A must visit just for the available video footage.

www.scubahaven.com

The Google Pic below illustrates the relative distances.

Dive Sites

LAURIETON

Cod Grounds Commonwealth Marine Reserve 

The Cod Grounds is a massive reef area off Point Perpendicular. The main pinnacle comes up to 18 m. One side of the pinnacle drops to 26 m and the other around 32 m. With Grey Nurse sharks on it all year round and attracts large schools of Jew fish and king fish. 

Titan_WreckThe Titan

Was the largest working crane in southern Australia. When being transported up the coast she turned upside down and eventually sunk off Point Perpendicular. Now lying on it's side upside down in 40m of water it is getting covered with soft sponges and corals. Large jewfish, kingfish and giant cuttlefish are seen there.

Mermaid Reef

An area of reef with numerous pinnacles, gutters and bommies. Site ranges from 12m - 30m and attracts grey nurse and whaler sharks. With a bottom of large Gorgonian fans, sea spiders it attacks large school of bait fish, sting rays, morays eels.
OLD Faithful
A rock wall that rises from a depth of 25 meters to 10m With a large cave in the base of the pinnacle around it. Its often home to schools of jewfish, pelagic fish, bait fish and even the rare eastern blue devil. Old Faithful also boasts a large sponge garden that is equally one of the best sponge gardens you will dive anywhere abound with nudibranchs and large starfish.

Others include: Bonnies Reef and Cathie Wall

This reef has numerous gutters and bommies all covered with soft and hard corals. A nudibranchs heaven. Attracts sea spiders, large school of bait fish, sting rays, morays eels, blue groper, star fish. This rock wall comes from a depth of 20 meters to 8m. Covered in hard and soft corals of all types making it the best macro dive in the area. 

PORT MACQUARIE

The Cod Hole

This dive site consists of two bommies submersed in 18m of water, joined together by a natural arch. One bommie rises up to 10m, the other to 6m. There are soft corals, sponges, nudibranchs, wobbegongs, PJ 's and a wide variety of marine life. A photographers macro delight, and a dive to relax and enjoy.

Bird Rock

A great easy dive. Maximum depth of 13m with the rock above the surface, a nice circle around the rock with plenty to look at. For the more adventurous there is a great fly over if there is not too much surge. Marine life is abundant. This dive is popular with the novice and experienced diver.

Yabbies

Thirty minutes south of Port Macquarie you will find a rock plateau that rises from 33m of water levelling off at around the 24m mark. A peak rises up further to 12m. This dive is absolutely spectacular when conditions are good. A swim through or two, offer the more daring divers a chance to strut their stuff. One hundred meters north east of the main rock you will come across a beautiful sponge garden that is well worth a look.

The Wall

This dive has spectacular rock growth and is one of the best dive sites. Every time you go there, you will see something different. Pelagic fish are a certainty, along with the usual nudibranchs, and other marine life. If dived correctly you should get a good bottom time.

Shelley Wide

This dive site is made up of rock ridges and gutters. The reef itself covers a vast area, but is definitely worth having several dives on to examine it extensively. Marine life is abundant in both fish and plant life. You will find soft and hard corals, sponges, nudibranchs and a wide variety of fish.

Barry's Bay

North of Port Macquarie is a spectacular bay with depth ranging from 8m to 20m with several gutters and a variety of dive sites. The marine life is abundant including turtles, octopus, cuttlefish, wobbegongs, and Grey Nurse Sharks. There is always something to talk about at Barry's Bay.

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