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El
Queasier and Brothers Dive Site |
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The offshore
islands in this area have recently been reopened for diving after a
long closure by the Egyptian Government and have been designated as
a Marine Park. Now suitable moorings are installed for dive boats
visiting this area. The Brothers are really the tops of two undersea
mountains, these islands rise from the depths and the coral clad
walls offer outstanding diving with plenty of big fish action due to
their remote location some 80km offshore.
D: offered as daily
diving trips from Marsa Alam
L: available during live aboard trip |
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Big Brother (L)
The northerly of the two islands and has a
small lighthouse. It has two wrecks laying on its walls. At the
northern most tip of the island lays a large freighter named the
Namibia, the other is the Aida II, an Egyptian supply vessel that
struck at night. There is excellent wall diving all along the
southern side of the reef with strong currents promoting the growth
of a spectacular forest of soft corals. Frequent sightings of big
pelagics and an astonishing variety of marine life. |
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Little Brother
(L)
This island is the smaller of the two as the
name implies. At the northern end is a long tongue of reef that
extends seaward and in good weather it is possible to drop in here
and drift. The current runs from east to west and here sharks may be
seen cruising. On the south east side is a superb fan coral forest
but it is deep and starts at 35m, there are also plenty of caves,
overhangs, black coral, and lots of pelagics including sharks, tuna,
barracuda, turtles and schools of reef fish. As you round the
southern corner the slope gives way to a vertical wall where you can
catch a glimpse of a silver tip shark. In summer thresher sharks are
seen here, in October grey reef sharks gather to mate and divers
have also reported schooling hammerheads and groups of sailfish in
this area. Before you know it your computer will tell you it time to
head back to the boat having had the most spectacular diving. |
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Quei Reefs
Four reefs and a number of pinnacles lying in
close proximity. Unfortunately these reefs are quite badly damaged
by the crown of thorns starfish in places, but still offer some
interesting diving. Often sightings of reef sharks and sometimes a
passing eagle ray.
Queasier El Qadim
The bay where the Swiss hotel ‘Movenpick’ has
been built is a natural Harbour used previously in Roman times.
Amphora's can still be seen between the hard corals at different
depths. Large schools of fish, stingrays and turtle. |
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Erg Easel
Big blocks of mountain coral surrounding a
small flat-topped reef can be circumnavigated in one dive. Clouds of
goldfish engulf the reef and swimming through the sandy patches
surrounding the reef white tip sharks may be found sleeping as well
as turtles and barracuda’s.
Mangrove Bay
Mangrove Bay Hotel’ has been recently built
next to this natural Harbour, which offers a good dive on the
northern corner of the fringing reef with a hard coral garden
sloping gently to the deep. Large schools of unicorns, snappers,
surgeons, fusiliers and barracudas. |
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Sharm El Quibli
Bay on the coast offers some decent diving on
its northern corner, with a sloping reef covered in Acropora, fire
coral and other hard corals. Lots of groupers.
Marsa Wizri
Another bay on the coast, the fringing houses
large schools of yellow goat fish, unicorns, barracuda’s and other
reef fish species on both north and south outer extremes. |
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Habili Sheik
Malek
Less than one mile away from the Tomb-Mosque
on the coast, a little reef formation creates a labyrinth of hard
corals, fire and huge tables where lots of fish often concentrate.
Napoleon, barracuda’s and eagle ray.
Ras Torombi (D,L)
Shallow dive around the northern most tip of
the cape’s fringing reef, a great deal of fire coral, giant table
corals scattered over a sandy bottom. Snappers, butterflies, rays
and guitar sharks.
Ras Shouna (D,L)
Bay on
the coast with good dives on the north and south side. Schools of
bat fish, barracuda’s and goat fish around the coral heads
with glass fish which come out from the slope. |
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