Philippines scuba diving offers some of the best
diving in the world and it can be done on a Shoestring budget if you go
at the right time of the year.
There are not too many places in
the world where you can do 2 dives for under $40, but the Philippines
offers many places where this is possible, and if you have your own
dive gear, and dive more than 5 times, you might even bring the price
down lower.
My two favorites while I was there was Puerto Galera
and Cebu –Bohol. Both dive areas are very easy to get to. For Puerto
Galera I went using local buses and a local ferry an easy cheap trip
from either Angeles City where Clark Air base is located and even
easier from Manila. Getting to Cebu-Bohol was equally easy and cheap
with a few regional airlines like Cebu Pacific and the Philippines
national air carrier, Philippines Air offering lots of cheap flights
from either Manila or Clark.
The diving at Puerto Galera was a
real treat seeing numerous butterfly species including tear drops,
saddle backs and lots of different noses including orange nose, blue
nose, and hump nose. There were also a lot of angel fish including
everyone’s favorite the regal and some great pipefish and nudibrachs
action as well. Puerto Galera also has some wreck diving, with 3 wrecks
doable in one dive at Sabang Beach. These wrecks are shallow enough
that open water divers can swim around the outside of them without a
advanced open water card or wreck diving specialty rating.
Cebu
is one of the larger islands in the Philippines. Bohol is attached to
Cebu by a bridge. Alona beach is on Bohol, and is the main jumping off
point for Balicasag, which is where the best diving is located, roughly
a 25 minute boat ride on the local catamarans from Alona Beach. Shore
dives are also possible off of Alona Beach. I was rewarded with a sea
snake and a hoard of schooling catfish, as well as some very beautiful
pipefish when I first arrived, and did a free diving snorkeling sortie.
From the beach it took about 10 minutes to swim too and went down to
over 40 meters. The main place for the divers that go to Cebu -Bohol is
Balicasag island which is a marine park, while I was there we had some
high winds, so were on the lee ward side for two days of wall action
that was great!. A highlight of the trip was swimming right into a
large group of tunas in 40 meters of water, who swim by close enough
for me to see all of the beautiful coloration. Balicasag Island had a
few different types of nudibrachs as well that were quite beautiful to
behold in their outrageous fluorescent color schemes. There is also
some real good shallow reef that held at least 4 different types of
clown fish, finding Nemo here is a snap
For all our dives in the
Philippines we had local dive masters. I must point out that they were
not very good at briefings, and I found it a little disconcerting not
getting a boat safety brief, especially when the life preservers were
not in sight. English was the language that was spoken mostly on the
dive boats that I scuba dived off of. All in all I will go back and
dive there as it is a great value in the off season.
Fred
Tittle has lived and worked in holiday vacation resorts his entire
life, from Lake Geneva’s Playboy Club, as a rock jock for KSPN FM in
Aspen Colorado, he became a PADI Pro Scuba Diver in Hawaii, diving on
Maui, Kauai, Kona on the big island, and Waikiki on Oahu. He now owns
EcoSea Dive in Sihanoukville Cambodia where he teaches SSI and PADI
scuba diving courses and runs liveaboards in the gulf of Thailand and
Asia adventure tours, http://www.ecosea.com