Dive Trip: Samal’s Islands, Davao


The Dive Sites
By Blogie Robillo on January 31, 2015
Read more at http://www.wheninmanila.com/dive-trip-samals-islands/#ChGQSSzT7et8zuDa.99

When we invite people to come dive Davao, we actually mean Samal. Yes, there are a couple of notable dive spots off the mainland, but the diving industry of Davao City—where most of the dive shops are located—is concentrated on the islands of Samal.


Samal Dive Map
The Island Garden City of Samal has more than twenty dive sites, but the most frequented ones are around Talikud Island [see dive map]. Student divers are often brought to that area because the sites there offer the easiest diving, especially Coral Gardens and Angel’s Cove.

Coral walls feature in many of Samal’s dive sites: Dizon Wall, Mansuod, Dapia, Balet, Maxima, Mushroom Rock, Big Liguid, Aundanao. You have to try night diving at Mushroom Rock  — see enormous basket sea stars on the reef, feeding with ghostly, outstretched arms (often lived-in by commensal shrimp).

There are sea mounts as well: Marissa 1 & 2, San Juan Reef, Marikit, etc. The Pinnacle site, south of Big Liguid, features three consecutive narrow, cone-shaped mounts, with each peak being deeper than the next. The deepest is at around 200 feet (61 m).
Sandy-bottom or muck-diving sites Dayang, Babusanta, Isla Reta, Kaputian, Canibad, Vanishing Island, East Point are favorites among macro photographers. I saw my first pair of flamboyant cuttlefish (Metasepia pfefferi) at the East Point site, which is volcanic sand blanketed in silt. The rest of the dive sites I’ve just mentioned have white-sand and/or rubble profiles.

My personal favorites are Dayang and Isla Reta, both named after the beaches above them. They’re good spots for overnight trips, especially Isla Reta, which is great for night diving. We’ve spotted blue-ringed octopuses there, one with eggs (possibly Hapalochlaena lunulata).

I love diving at night, and there’s a very productive site off Samal Island to which my friend, dive instructor East Pardillo, introduced me two years ago. By ‘productive’ I mean the site, called “Shipyard” because it used to be one, has a plethora of critters that will delight u/w photographers. For starters, the striped bumblebee shrimp (Gnathophyllum americanum) are in abundance there. On my first dive at Shipyard, we saw seven!

Bumblebee Shrimp
The bumblebee shrimp–holy grail for many divers

Samal Island is still largely underdeveloped. Sure there are lots of small establishments now, but the island still retains its tropical charm. Most beach resorts are white-sand, and have huts or very basic accommodations. There are a number of high-end resort hotels too, such as Pearl Farm Beach Resort and Secdea Beach Resort, and both establishments offer private scuba diving services.

Dive Safari

What many of us here look forward to are the 3-day trips—or “dive safaris”—that some dive outfits organize. It’s when a group of about 10-15 divers load up a big banca with enough supplies and tanks, then go around Samal and Talikud Islands, diving 3 or even 4 times a day. For sleeping arrangements, some don’t mind bunking on the banca, but I like it when we dock at a beach and spend the night comparing notes on critters over a few drinks.

Dive boat
Davao dive boats are pretty big! (Photo by Bing Peña)

There are maybe 30 or so outriggers operating out of Sta. Ana Wharf in Davao City, with an average maximum capacity of 35 pax. The minimum rate for renting a banca here is ₱6,500 for 8-10 hours. It’s cheaper for smaller boats, but there are only a handful of those. My personal favorite is M/Bca Datu Budas, which has a capacity of 40 and is suited well enough for diving — it’s spacious and powerful, and has a sun deck for stretching out after hours under the sea. The people who run Datu Budas can even take care of catering, and their cooking’s not bad at all.

Wreck Diving

It’s worth mentioning that there is wreck diving in Davao and Samal. The most exciting and challenging is off the coast of Talomo Beach in Davao City — Sagami-maru. It’s a WW2-era Japanese warship that was sunk by the American submarine Seawolf in 1944. The ship now rests 300 feet (91 m) below the sea, but is situated vertically, so its shallowest part (the pilot house) is at a depth of 180 feet (55 m). Due to bad visibility during the rainy season, the best time to dive Sagami-maru would be in the summer.

There are two wreck sites in front of Pearl Farm Beach Resort as well, and I’ve been told they’re in shallower waters. Thing is, you’d have to stay at the resort and use their dive facilities to see those wrecks.


Read more at http://www.wheninmanila.com/dive-trip-samals-islands/#ChGQSSzT7et8zuDa.99


No comments:

Post a Comment