| R
a n g i r o a (French Polynesia) |
While
Tahiti and Moorea are everyone's dream of the South Pacific, the diving
is a notch below many other destinations. The place to go for diving
in French Polynesia is the island of Rangiroa. Approximately an hour
flight from Tahiti. Rangiroa is the largest atoll in the South Pacific
and one of the largest in the world. Its lagoon is gigantic (40 miles
long and 20 miles wide, a depth up to 150 feet), communicating with
the pacific ocean by the Avatoru and Tiputa channels. Through these
flows a phenomenal quantity of water from the ocean into the lagoon
and vice versa; following the tides are hordes of fish, jacks, tuna,
barracuda, manta rays and eagle rays, turtles, dolphins, etc. A
short distance out into the lagoon, the reef drops to a depth of 1200
meters.
During six hours, the incoming current carries the clear water of the
ocean into the lagoon. Ideal for a drift dive, one can see schools of
sharks, squadrons of eagle rays, or maybe a great hammerhead cruising
with the schools of fish. Six hours later, the lagoon empties itself
through the passes to the ocean.
For
a better visibility, one
may dive on the outside reef next to the pass. You will find small and
big fauna: schools of jacks, barracudas, manta rays, as well as several
species of sharks, and numerous pelagic fish. Although Rangiroa always
has divable sites in any weather, the average conditions are not for
the inexperienced. The ocean normally has a moderate swell near the
passes with a 5 knot current entering in rhythm with the rise and fall
of the tide.
Avatoru
Pass
This area has at least 5 dive spots: Napoleon, Sharks & Manta point,
Tuna point, small caves, small channels.
Motu Fara
Moray eels point, Mahuta point: convergence of two submarine channels
where considerable sea life aggregates: barracuda, jack, surgeons, grouper,
etc. Tiputa Pass, 3 different areas: 1) The wall, 2) Barracudas point,
3) Sharks point. The Nuhi Nuhi motu or the Aquarium: snappers, barracudas,
rays, nurse sharks, multicolored corals.
| Dive
Operators, Resorts & Liveaboards |
The
Six Passengers
Rangiroa
is diveable year-round, with water temperatures of 7983°F.
There
are really only three seasons of interest to the global diver: the manta
ray season, from early September - mid-October; the hammerhead shark
season, January - February; and the rest of the year, during which an
assortment of fish may be seen, with the general exception of the two
just mentioned. If you are particular about land weather conditions,
you should know that the rainy season is November - December, and the
windy season is July - August.
Lonely
Planet Pisces Diving & Snorkeling Tahiti & French Polynesia (Diving
& Snorkeling Guides), Jean-Bernard Carillet & Tony Wheeler| Buy
Lonely
Planet Rangiroa (French Polynesia) :: Online
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