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Red anemone with sparkling dust above.
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Red anemone with sparkling dust above.
By Diogo Benchimol
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Morena   shrimp
By Iñaki Bravo Carmona
posted Yesterday

Underwater Photo Location: Paradise Sport

Underwater Photo Location: Paradise Sport

How Hot is this Dive Site? click a star to rate it

It doesn’t get any better than this! The diving left us speechless. From
the untouched beauty of the bommies to the tiny, weird creatures in the muck, to
the B-17 Blackjack bomber, everything was superlative. We saw everything from a
Harlequin Ghost Pipefish to a Hammerhead. Be careful of the Panda Anemonefish–they
are quite aggressive and they bite hard!


There is even a Nautilus dive where a cage is sent down with bait and several
Nautilus are brought up for the divers to see and hold. The crew then takes the
animals back down to 200’ where they are released unharmed.




  • The Ranch --So called because of its resident pygmy seahorses, at about
    20 m.


  • Silver & Black --A fun dive site, where a flutemouth hovered over
    me to hide as it stalked prey. The main attraction is a sandy plain with
    hundreds of garden eels, bobbing and weaving in the current. Schools of
    triggerfish and other reef fish. At night, we saw two ocellated epaullette
    sharks, an enormous grouper, blue spotted rays, and even a dime sized octopus
    free swimming in the blue.


  • Jason's Reef --Two bommies where Rhinopeus have frequently been
    spotted.


  • Bunama Beach --A muck dive site, filled with fantastic creatures! A
    pair of harlequin ghost pipefish, numerous porcelain crabs, eels, seahorses,
    lots of shrimpfish flitting through the seagrass, double ended pipefish, red
    tailed pipefish, a variety of outrageously colored gobies, and much more. At
    night, we watched a color show put on by a cuttlefish, a swarming ball of
    catfish feeding, a shy little cowfish, and ghost spider crabs. Fantastic!


  • Ayers Rock --Again looking for Rhinopeus, again failed. A great
    consolation was a mature blue ribbon eel as well as the black, juvenile
    version.


  • Observation Point --Billed by the divemaster as a great muck diving
    site, it was a bit disappointing. Nobody could find much of anything.


  • Wreck of the B-17 "Blackjack"-- Lying at 48.5 meters. It is
    almost perfectly intact, with very little encrustation to mar the beautiful
    lines of this enormous airplane. Such is the condition of this plane that the
    twin cannons in the tail turret still move in their mounts, and the belt of
    bullets is still clearly visible. Reach into the cockpit, and you'll find that
    the pilot's yoke still moves. The nose of the plane is caved in from the
    impact, and the propeller tips are bent back, but it still looks like the
    plane is ready to fly


  • Kearst Reef --A blue water dive, this was a bit disappointing. We did
    three dives, and only managed to spot one very shy gray reef shark, a small
    school of barracuda, and the occasional moray.


  • Deacon's Reef and Dinah's Beach --Two dive sites close to each other.
    The boat tied up at Dinah's Beach with two tenders running divers over to
    Deacon's. I'd seen Deacon's in various books I'd read before coming, and I was
    shocked to see the difference between the present day Deacon's and the
    pictures I'd seen. It seemed like 50% of the fantastic profusion of red whips,
    sea fans, and other coral formations had died off, leaving scars of dead coral
    pieces lying about. This seemed to be diving heaven! Frogfish, eels, mantis
    shrip, octopus, ocellated epaulette sharks, cuttlefish...simply everything was
    here! And the best part about Deacon's/Dinah's is the shallowness, which meant
    some marathon 100+ minute dives. All told, I was underwater nearly 7 hours
    that day!



Basilisk Point -- Basilisk was the worst sites of the trip, a wall dive
where some mantas occasionally pass by.



Facts about Paradise Sport
  • It is in Papua New Guinea
  • Paradise Sport is in the South China Sea.
  • The typical depth is 0-30 Metres 0-100 Feet.
  • The typical visibility is 10-30 Metres 30-100 Feet.
Dive types
Liveaboardwreckwall

Marine Life
bigsmallsharksturtlescoralshoalsstinging

Diving facilities
airguidedfriendly

Photo facilities
macrowideanglepfriendly
underwater photos Papua New Guinea
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