"More than a holiday experience, more than an adventure, diving with Deep Ecology is a genuine investment in the protection of Hawaii's marine environment."
69°
5MPH Northwest winds
7:40AM HST
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South East

Boat Dives:

Anglers Reef

Dive and sometimes drift along this chasm cut in the ocean floor and discover a variety of sea creatures and critters. If you see a coral head move or something in a hole wink at you, its probably an octopus. Breathtaking coral formations are a highlight of this site. 47ft max depth.
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Baby Barge

Coral covers this steel barge and delivers a testament of what an artificial reef can do to the marine environment. 80ft max depth.
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Corsair

Oahu's only natural wreck is actually a plane off of Hawaii Kai. The Corsair is a WWII relic. The pilot ran out of fuel on a training mission and was forced to ditch. Thankfully his only injury was pride. The Corsair settled at 107feet among an underwater field of Garden Eels. Don't try to take the cockpit though, Beth the Moray commands it now and will quickly remind you! 107ft max depth.
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Fantasy Reef

Sharks, rays, and tako - oh my! This site lives up to its name. A popular shallow reef site. 45ft max depth
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Maunaloa Ridge

This excellent shallow site has plenty to discover. Tons of endemic fish species, lots of eels, and Cowry shells have been seen here. An excellent follow up dive to the Corsair. 45ft max depth.
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Portlock Wall and Sea Cave

The boat pulls up to a giant cave, you jump in negatively buoyant like you are jumping out of an airplane. You drop down to the bottom and enter the Sea Cave, where two Monk Seals have been seen in the throes of their mating ritual and Whitetips rest in the shadows. After exiting the cave, let your body go and drift with the current along Portlock wall. Turtles glide next to you, riding the same current, tropical fish galore dance around you and the ocean takes you along the beautiful wall. 60ft max depth.
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New Open Water Certified Divers

Saturday, 14th August 2010
Congrats to our newest certified divers: Carrie, Amanda, Morgan and Ethan. [More]

New Divemasters and a new wreck to explore!

Thursday, 3rd December 2009
 Aloha! As the big waves pound the North Shore, we have been enjoying phenominal dives off the South, South East and West shores.  Three Commerson Frogfish, two Spotted Eagle Rays, a huge Green Sea Turtle, and a Sting Ray were seen on the Sea Tiger recently. The Y0-257 & San Pedro... [More]

Congrats to Tessa and Galen! The Deep Ecology Family's Newest Instructors

Sunday, 4th October 2009
   We are very proud to announce that two of our diving family are newly minted PADI Instructors! Tessa Kinney and Galen Housely completed the PADI Instructor Exam on September 27th.
    Tessa has worked at Deep Ecology for over two years now, as Assistant Manager and... [More]