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URG10R: Sodwana Bay + Safari + Aliwal Shoal
Day 1
You will be met at Richards Bay Airport and
transferred to Sodwana Bay Marine National Park
in the Greater St Lucia Wetlands, a scenic 2-hour drive
through rural Zululand.
Sodwana Bay is South Africa’s premier scuba
diving location and recognised for its importance in
marine conservation as a World Heritage site.
This southern-most coral reef in the world, which
stretches down from Mozambique, may be dived all year
round although the best conditions are during the warm
summer months (November to May).
Choose between a local dive resort, comprising simple
but comfortable log cabins situated in the indigenous
coastal forest, or upgrade to a luxury dive lodge
situated right on the beach.
Check in, settle in and relax in your remote
surroundings, where monkeys and antelope roam free. Once
you are settled in bid farewell to your host, who will
leave you to enjoy the facilities of your dive resort.
Days 2 to 5
Rise early each morning, to be on the beach by 06h30
when underwater viewing conditions are at their best.
From the wide beach, expect an exhilarating surf entry
into the clear warm waters of the Indian Ocean. Water
temperatures average 20-25°C and visibility is excellent
at 30-50 ft, as no major rivers flow into the sea at
this point
Depending upon prevailing weather conditions, you
have a choice of over 20 different dive sites, with the
reefs named after their distance from the launch site.
Their hard and soft corals, canyons and caves are
teeming with a huge variety of sea life, including over
1,200 species of fish, turtles, bottle-nosed dolphins,
moray eels, ribbon tail rays, mantas, butterfly fish,
angelfish, sharks, migrating whales (April to July),
whale sharks (January to February) and much more.
After breakfast there is time for an optional second
dive, but as the North-Easter tends to blow after 10h00,
all dives should be completed by midday.
Spend the afternoon relaxing by the lodge swimming
pool or on the pristine beach, surrounded by the highest
naturally vegetated sand dunes in the world.
Alternatively enjoy one of the optional activities that
can be arranged for you or your non-diving partner,
including a late evening marine trail to see the
remarkable spectacle of the egg laying and hatching of
loggerhead and leatherback turtles (November to
January).
Day 6
After a last dive at Sodwana Bay, you will be
collected and transferred to the famous Hluhluwe iMfolozi National Park, a drive of just under 2-hours.
Check in to your luxury game lodge situated just
outside the park, relax and settle in to your African
bushveld surroundings. Then enjoy your first game drive
in an open-top game-viewing vehicle into the vast
Hluhluwe iMfolozi National Park, hosted by a lodge
ranger.
We hope to see one or more of the Big 5, before
relaxing with drinks around the campfire in the Boma and
enjoying dinner, which is likely to include several
interesting game dishes.
Day 7
Up early today for a 05h30 game drive in an open-top
vehicle into the great Hluhluwe iMfolozi National Park,
hosted by your lodge ranger. This is one of South
Africa’s most beautiful game parks and home to all the
Big Five and the subcontinent’s largest population of
endangered white and black rhino. We expect to see lion,
buffalo, rhino, elephant, giraffe and many other
interesting species.
Return to the lodge for a full breakfast at approx
09h30. The remainder of the morning is free to relax at
the lodge or enjoy a guided walk on the lodge property
with a ranger to view the smaller trees, insects and
flora of the region. In the afternoon return to Hluhluwe iMfolozi for a full afternoon of game viewing with your
host in his vehicle.
Whilst the sun sets over the park, enjoy sundowners
in the scenic hills and in the evening dine in the
atmosphere that only the African bushveld can provide!
Day 8
This morning enjoy a boat ride on the Lake St
Lucia estuary to see hippos and crocodiles. Part of
the greater St Lucia Wetlands Park, this area has been
declared a World Heritage Site because of its
importance to marine conservation. With over 600
different bird species in the region, including
flamingos and pelicans, it also offers one of the
greatest bird watching experiences in the world.
Continue southwards overland via Durban to the
South Coast. Check in, settle in and relax in your
luxury guest house near the shores of the warm Indian
Ocean.
Days 9 and 10
Aliwal Shoal: Umkomaas
Experienced divers have the option of diving the
Aliwal Shoal, one of the top shark dive sites of the
world. Situated on the inner edge of the warm Mozambique
current, Aliwal Shoal offers wonderfully diverse reef
life, including the annual migration of ragged tooth
sharks from June to December. No cages are used and this
is a unique opportunity to view these ferocious looking
but docile mammals in their natural environment. You
will also see schools of pelagic and game fish, manta
rays, eels, huge brindle bass, hermit crabs, sponges,
starfish, corals, cowries, colourful tropical marine
fish and much more. Dolphins and whales can also be
spotted in season (July to November) on the boat ride
out to the reef, which is situated 3 miles out to sea.
There are also 2 wrecks to dive – the “Produce” and the
“Nebo”.
Each day starts early (around 7 am) with a beach
safety briefing, followed by boat launch and first dive,
an awe-inspiring and surprisingly safe experience!
Return to the beach for breakfast, followed by optional
second dive around 11am when dive conditions are best.
Water temperatures average +24°C in summer and rarely
drops below 20 °C in winter.
Visibility varies from 15 to 120 ft. Depths vary from
20 to 60 ft, with some 100 ft dives for suitable
qualified divers.
Protea Banks Option: Shelly Beach
Very experience divers also have the option of shark
diving at Protea Banks, which combines well with Aliwal
Shoal as these two sites are situated only 1-hr apart by
road.
This is an advanced 4-knot mid-water drift dive,
suitable only for experienced divers who have done at
least 20 dives, with depths varying from 100 to 130 ft.
Protea Banks is situated 1-mile offshore and is one of
the best shark dive sites in the world. It is home to
hammerhead sharks, tiger sharks, Zambezi sharks, ragged
tooth sharks, threshers, bronze whalers, white tips,
coppers, duskies, sand sharks and the occasional great
white shark. Also spotted eagle rays, manta rays and
large schools of pelagic fish. Water temperatures and
visibility are similar to Aliwal Shoal.
Day 11
Return transfer to Durban Airport.
[NB: Remember that it is essential that you do not
fly within 24 hours of your last dive]
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