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Türkiye is a diving destination that offers you unforgettable experiences.

Diving

incredible dive sites to visit in the Mediterranean

Mediterranean

Kaş - Kekova/Antalya The southern district of Kaş in the province of Antalya is one of Türkiye's most cherished diving spots. Kaş offers a range of diving options from Kaş to Kalkan further to the east, and as far as Patara. Crystal clear waters allow for near perfect visibility. Fish, marine life, seaweed, seagrass, coral and sea sponges all live among the ruins of ancient cities and await enthusiastic divers.

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At all 15 dive sites in this part of the Mediterranean, there is an abundance of reefs, walls, underwater canyons, and beautiful scenery. Kaş is hailed as one of the world’s Top 10 diving sites, and it offers the bonus of an Ottoman shipwreck, and the mystery of the Sakarya and Duchess of York vessels. The Turkish-built Sakarya was wrecked in the 1940s, while the Duchess of York was a naval trawler built in Glasgow between 1927-1929.

A Dakota makes diving at Kaş even more interesting. The Douglas C-47 Skytrain or Dakota was a military transport aircraft that was sunk in 2009 at a very dividable 22 meters to create an artificial reef. Now, it is covered in a lightly colored alga. It’s a hugely popular dive, not least with photographers, who love the chance to shoot the relatively rare sight of an underwater plane.

Heybeli Island, near Kalkan, offers a rocky landscape for divers to explore. Two small islands form the basis of this relatively shallow and scenic dive with a maximum depth of around 24 meters. Either island may be circumnavigated and there is seagrass, turtles, and the skeletal frame of an unknown wreck on offer.

The cargo vessel Dimitri ran aground on the islet of Kovan in 1968 and offers a 20-meter descent down a narrow crevice known as the Canyon, which is covered in colorful growth. The wreck itself is a twisted mass of metal, the result of a salvage operation that involved the use of dynamite, but it remains a fascinating dive.

Another grand vessel, the TCSG 119 was scuttled in 2011 to provide an artificial reef. It came to rest deeper than planned and now sits at 40 m on a flat, sandy bottom. The reef itself begins at around 15 m and the wreck sits upright, with the deck around the 35-meter mark. It has a substantial covering of growth including large spiral tube worms. Small fish patrol the wheelhouse, while inside the wreck you can see saddled seabream.

Alanya - Antalya

Located in eastern Antalya, Alanya is a touristic district and offers many opportunities for diving enthusiasts.

Aquarium is the closest diving location to Alanya harbor, situated at a 5-minute sailing distance. The depth here ranges from 4 to 25 meters, and the location is mainly used for educational diving.

Amphora owes its name to many shards from ancient amphoras that are found here. The depth limit is maximum 29 m, and you’ll find groupers, moray eels, octopuses, thornback rays, and pigfishes.

The Pirate Cave (Korsan Mağarası) is a multipurpose diving site for both inexperienced and experienced divers with a minimum depth of 10 m and a maximum of 32 m. There is also a wreck at 25 meters. Pirate Cave is an open and large cave, and inside divers can ascent and observe bats with flashlights.

Lovers Cave is located 15 minutes sailing distance from Alanya harbor. It is suitable for both educational diving for inexperienced divers and for experienced divers. The seabed is mainly rocky, and the site has a lively underwater life – there is even an ancient anchor at a depth of 21 meters.

Mersin

 

Mersin is a popular diving site further east on the Mediterranean coast. The area has an interesting history: it was part of many states and civilizations including the Hittites, Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Armenians, Seljuks and eventually, Ottomans. The area has numerous bays and inlets where ancient artifacts and ruins offer glimpses into the past. Dana Island, Sancak Bay, and the area near Taşucu are worth investigating.

Aegean Türkiye Bodrum

There are several unique bays around the Bodrum Peninsula. The seas swiftly change from shallow to astonishingly deep with an abundance of fishes, octopuses, seaweed, seagrasses, and sea sponges.

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There are around 20 dive sites off the Bodrum Peninsula featuring two shipwrecks, a plane, walls, caverns, and pinnacles. With dive depths up to 30 meters, you will be well-placed to see the likes of stingrays, barracudas, tunas, moray eels, and octopuses.

In Bodrum’s underwater world, you’ll come across a big and a small reef. These two reefs between Bodrum and Kara Ada (Black Island) are separated by only 200 meters. The reef walls are packed with marine life and extend from 5 m all the way down to 32 m on the south side and 36 m on the north. 

From Wolf’s Point to Kargı Adası (Kargı Island), dive sites offer something for everyone, including a 29-meter shipwreck of the SG115 cargo ship; Pınar 1, a 37-meter former Turkish Navy water tanker; and the Douglas C-47 Skytrain or Dakota plane, an ex-Turkish Air Force parachute airplane that was sunk to create an artificial reef.

In fact, it was during a sponge diving expedition when a local stumbled upon the wreck of the Uluburun, a Bronze Age vessel dating back to 1400 BC. Now, the shipwreck is on display at the Bodrum Museum of Underwater Archaeology.

Datça

Datça is a beautiful area with hot springs, glorious coves, and beaches. It is also a key marine center as it is the most important nesting site in Türkiye for loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta carettas). Tha Datça Peninsula boasts many beautiful coves and areas for snorkeling and diving, with dolphins, sharks, and other marine life spotted regularly in the region. Datça promises diving enthusiasts many unforgettable underwater experiences! 

Marmaris

The underwater world of Marmaris is very attractive, offering excellent visibility and many dive sites in well-protected bays – perfect for some gentle, stress-free holiday diving! Both shore and boat diving are available, and larger centers offer a range of courses and night dives. As with the diving around Bodrum, expect a variety of sites from caverns to reefs and plenty of opportunities to spot some of Türkiye’s ancient amphoras.

Kadırga Cove is one of the most popular diving spots in Marmaris. This site could be renamed “Amphoras and Eels”- such is the prevalence of both at this dive. Opposite the Kadirga Lighthouse and stretching down some 40 meters, this rocky site is suitable for most levels of diving experience. Other than the field of amphoras, at a depth of 15 meters, the remains of a ship from the Hellenistic period also await divers. 

Fethiye

The sea floor of Fethiye is made up of swim-through arches coated in soft corals, mysterious tunnels, and plunging slopes!

Red Island in Fethiye is a natural amphitheater measuring 20 meters. Head here at night with a torch to reveal a plethora of vivid sponge. Investigate the engine bays of the 40-meter-long TSCG (Turkish Coast Guard) ship that sits 27 meters below land.

Aquarium Bay, one of the best diving sites in Türkiye, near Fethiye, became a protected site in recent years. It is a suitable diving site for both less experienced and more advanced divers. Aquarium Bay is also a great spot for night diving.

Don’t leave Fethiye before diving in Aladdin’s Cave! This unique dive takes you to a cavern at 29 m where divers can view delicate colorful corals and the resident grouper. After a few minutes you ascend to 12 m and then fin to another cavern known as the “hammam” where natural light falls through two openings in the ceiling.

Çeşme (İzmir)

Çeşme offers a clarity of water very rarely found and a diverse range of marine species. Dive sites include the Bedroom, a spectacular cave particularly loved by underwater photographers, and Split Rock at Eşek Island where experienced divers can go down 45 meters.

Suitable for all divers, Fener Island is in northeast of Çeşme, in İzmir’s popular holiday spot. Fener Island is a great spot for those seeking an underwater adventure in a colorful site that extends 18 meters below water.

At Fener Island, you can swim with streams of sargos (or white seabreams) and breams surrounded by yellow marine sponges and coral flowers. In an old seal cave, you can even come across some seals!

Kuşadası & Didim (Aydın)

Kuşadası, a popular holiday spot on Türkiye’s Aegean coast, has one of the more unusual dive sites in the form of an A300 Airbus. With a 44-meter wingspan and a length of 54 meters, the local council sank the 36-year-old aircraft to attract international divers. Perhaps, the highlight of the dive is a flight through the interior of the A300 to visit the cockpit. The fittings, cables, and switches have all been removed but it’s a unique feeling to sit in one of the cockpit seats and to look beyond, into the impenetrable blue of the Mediterranean.

The Aegean underwater world around Didim creates amazing opportunities to explore marine life and the chance to explore a deliberately sunken former coastal guard ship.

Ayvalık (Balıkesir)

Ayvalık, a beautiful location on the north Aegean coast, has a variety of diving spots and islands, making it a popular spot for divers. Deli Mehmet is one of the best diving spots in Ayvalık with two underwater islands. One of them, Deli Mehmet 1, is 18-70 meters deep and favored by intermediate divers. The second island, Deli Mehmet 2, is 27-70 meters deep. Unlike Deli Mehmet 1, this is preferred by professional divers. There are stunning coral reefs from 27 meters up to 50 meters. You can see the red corals on each island, and swim with moray eels and a variety of colorful fish.

In addition to Deli Mehmet, İlyosta Island is another popular and beautiful diving spot of Ayvalık. İlyosta is a lively, vibrant spot with plenty of sea creatures – once you dive, you will find yourself surrounded by them and you can photograph them to your heart’s content.

Gavur Port is the most popular diving site on İlyosta Island. It extends between 3 and 35 meters, and is suitable for both experienced and inexperienced divers. You can observe many great underwater creatures here: aquatic insects, moray eels, and even sea bunnies (Jorunna parva), so don’t forget to take a flashlight with you. 

Saros Bay (Çanakkale)

Its underwater treasures make Saros Bay a prominent diving spot on the northern Aegean coast of Türkiye.

Saros Bay has strong sea currents and is untouched by the effects of large urbanization and industrialization. As a result, it is one of the cleanest, purest parts of the Aegean Sea. The bay self-cleans three times a year: it rids itself of waste through currents and the mixture of warm and cold water.

There are over 200 different sea species in the bay such as aquatic insects, lobsters, starfish, and sea snails. You’ll also find a large number of diving sites here: İbrice Port, Cennet, Cehennem, Toplar Burnu, Asker Taşı, Üç Adalar, Kömür Harbor, Bebek, and Minnoş Kayalıkları. Minnoş Kayalıkları is the most well-known site among them. Approximately 15 meters beneath sea level, the cliffs have colorful rocks. After the first few meters, you can see the dolphins and sea turtles, and swim past orange corals. At the end of the cliff, you may encounter anglerfish and huge stingrays.

Saroz Bay is also home to shipwrecks. One of them is the Lundy shipwreck that weighs 188 tons. The ship was built in 1908 and sunk in 1915. The shipwreck is located at Suvla Bay, south of Saros Bay. The ship’s silhouette appears after 13 meters and after 18 meters you can walk around the captain’s hull and watch the bream swim around the deck. Where the ship meets the sand, you can find lots of lobsters and leerfish.

The latest wreck at Saros Bay in the Airbus A330, which was sunk in March 2019, and has been available for viewing since summer 2019. 

Gallipoli (Çanakkale)

At the meeting point of the Aegean and Marmara Seas, Gallipoli is on the Dardanelles Strait, close to Çanakkale, and is positively teeming with marine life and fascinating shipwrecks.

The Gallipoli Peninsula is the site of a World War I battle between the English forces and their allies, and the Turks. Highlights include the wreck of the cargo ship Lundy, which was hit and sunk by a torpedo on April 15, 1915, and the HMS Majestic, which lies 18-28 m below sea level.

There are 216 shipwrecks in and around the Gallipoli Peninsula and Çanakkale. These wrecks cover a large variety of sea vessels except for galleons. Dive depths range from 7 to 30 meters. Normal dive to static line dives can be undertaken. The Milo was partially sunk by the allies in October 1915 to create a water-break to protect the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) in their efforts to harbor at North Beach. It was broken in two by a storm on November 18, 1915 and now lies only 15 cm from its original position. The wreck, which is situated off the shore of North Beach at the ANZAC site, is an underwater testimony to the strength and endurance of the men of Gallipoli.

Çanakkale

The Majestic-class pre-dreadnought battleship HMS Majestic was completed at the Portsmouth Dockyard by the Naval Construction & Armaments Co. of Barrow. She started missions as a flagship in the Channel Fleet, which protected the southern shores of the United Kingdom. In May 1912, she was refitted with radio and fire control equipment. In the planning of the Dardanelles Campaign (the Dardanelles are known as Çanakkale Boğazı in Turkish), Churchill said that the ship was too old for battle duty. Other officers, believing that they could easily pass through Çanakkale and capture İstanbul, enlisted the ship into the Mediterranean Fleet. She was dispatched to Çanakkale on February 1, 1915. Reaching the strait on February 25, 1915, her first mission – just one day after her arrival at Çanakkale on February 26, 1915 – was to destroy the Dardanos and Baykuş Batteries and clear the mines. On March 1 and 4, 1915, she was part of the attack group attempting to pass the strait and, on March 18, 1915, she was assigned to the second Royal Navy Fleet in the Çanakkale Campaign.

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HMS Majestic supported battleships in the Çanakkale Campaign naval operations. The attempt by the Allied fleet failed and was followed by a landing campaign by the British and French forces. Majestic continued her mission in Çanakkale to demonstrate to ground troops that the navy had not abandoned them, and to provide moral support after the landing, which began on April 25, 1915. On May 25, 1915, she relieved Triumph as the flagship to Rear-Admiral Nicholson, commanding the squadrons supporting the troops ashore off Cape Helles. Around 06.30 on May 27, 1915, Majestic was hit by a torpedo from the German submarine U-21, in front of Çanakkale. To avoid the same fate as the Triumph, commanded by Thomas Lawrie Shelford, that had been torpedoed by the U-21 two days earlier, the captain anchored close to the shore and protected HMS Majestic with anti-torpedo nets. However, she was struck by the U-21 after a one-month-long and secretive journey. The U-21 was the first submarine in the history of naval battles to sink a battleship with a torpedo. In fact, the U-21 sank two battleships during her short sojourn in Çanakkale.

HMS Majestic is submerged at a depth of approximately 18-23 meters. The ship’s cannons are lost, but otherwise the vessel is mainly intact.

On 27 May 1915, the HMS Majestic, an armored battleship, was torpedoed and sunk at Cape Helles. (…) A naval officer said it sits at a depth of six fathoms, like an upsidedown whale with her underwater hull up. According to his account, a German submarine targeted the HMS Majestic through a defensive screen of destroyers and cargo ships.

Ian Hamilton 

What to see during the dive:

  • Numerous unexploded cannon balls on the vessel’s deck
  • Blasting wires able to ignite underwater
  • Forward and aft turrets
  • A conning tower that collapsed while sinking
  • Two chimneys onboard, a characteristic feature of Majestic-class battleships, which also provided a target for the U-21
  • Marine flora and fauna in and around the wreck

 

HMS Majestic

Location: Seddülbahir

Depth: 18-23 m

Class: Majestic-class pre-dreadnought battleship

Built: 1893-1895

Sunk: May 27, 1915

Dimensions: 118 x 23 m

Tonnage: 14,900 grt

Commanded by: Captain Henry FitzRoy George Talbot

MASSÉNA AND SAGHALIEN

Built between 1894 and 1898, the Masséna battleship was named in honor of French Marshal André Masséna, an important figure in the French Revolution. The vessel significantly exceeded her design weight and suffered from stability problems, resulting in the inaccurate firing of her guns. On November 9, 1915, she was scuttled at Çanakkale to form a breakwater – her last duty in protecting the evacuation effort of the Allied forces. Submerged at a depth of 5-7 meters, the Masséna still preserves her form although she lacks her upper structure.

MASSÉNA

Location: Ertuğrul Bay

Depth: 5-7 m

Type: Pre-dreadnought battleship

Built: 1894-1898

Sunk: November 9, 1915

Dimensions: 113 x 20 x 9 m

Displacement: 11,735 tonnes (11,550 long tons)

Commanded by: Unknown

SAGHALIEN

Built in 1879, the Saghalien was a Sénégal-class passenger ship. She passed the Çanakkale Strait in August 1914 to evacuate French citizens from Istanbul before the Çanakkale Campaign. On December 10, 1915, she was scuttled at Çanakkale together with Masséna to form a breakwater – her last duty in protecting the evacuation effort of the British and French forces. Submerged at a depth of around 5-7 meters, the Masséna preserves her form, although the wreck lacks its upper structure.

Location: Ertuğrul Bay

Depth: 5-7 m

Type: Sénégal-class passenger ship

Built: 1880

Sunk: December 10, 1915

Dimensions: 130.8 x 12.1 m

Tonnage: 4,050 grt

HELLES BARGES

 The Helles barges were two vessels used in the Çanakkale landing to transport soldiers, supplies, and equipment for building docking access, and animals such as horses and mules to be used at the landing area. These flat-bottomed vessels required less water to draw and had wide underwater hulls; they were sometimes equipped with ammunition. It is believed that the barges sunk during the landing on the morning of April 25, 1915. They are offshore at Tekke Bay, sitting at 24 and 25 meters in the water. The smaller barge is 18.2 meters long and her anchor and the anchor rode are visible at the bow. The other barge is 23.5 meters long and her boiler sits just next at sand level.

 Location: Seddülbahir

Depth: 24-25 m

Type: Barge

Built: Unknown

Sunk: April 25, 1915

Dimensions: 18 x 5.8 – 23.5 x 6.6 m

TEKKE BAY (W BEACH) WRECKS

 The identification of the shipwrecks is still in progress.

Location: Tekke Bay

Depth: 7 m

These vessels are believed to have been scuttled to create a breakwater similar to the one at Ertuğrul Bay.

The identification of the shipwrecks is still in progress.

ARIBURNU BARGE

 Depth: 28.5 m

Type: Barge

Dimensions: 17.5 x 6.5 m

 The date and cause of the sinking of the 17.5-meter-long and 6.5-meter-wide vessel are unknown. While the ship’s wooden components have decayed, her metal components remain intact. The higher rails on the vessel suggest that the barge was used to transport animals. Near the shipwreck is another barge with the same features, submerged at a depth of 54 meters.

KÜÇÜKKEMİKLİ BARGE

Location: Küçükkemikli

Depth: 30 m

Type: Barge

Dimensions: 17.5 x 6 m

The date and cause of the sinking of the 17.5-meter-long, 6-meter-wide vessel are unknown. The vessel is submerged at a depth of 30 meters. Her wooden components have decayed but her metal components remain intact. Called barges, these steel vessels with wooden decks could navigate shallower waters and were used to ferry soldiers from the transport vessels to the shore during the landing. Following the landing, they were then used to transport soldiers, animals, food, and ammunition.

ARIBURNU LASH

Location: Arıburnu

Depth: 18 m

Type: Lighter aboard ship (LASH)

Sunk: December 1915

Dimensions: 11.50 x 3.5 m

LASH ships, also known as mule barges, were used to transport equipment and animals between ship and shore. The shipwreck’s dimensions are 11.5 meters by 3.5 meters, and it had a ramp to ease access to the shore. During the evacuation in December 1915, the Allies destroyed or scuttled the tools, ammunition, supplies, etc. which they could not take with them. It is believed that the LASH in Arıburnu was scuttled during the evacuation.

LUNDY

Location: Suvla

Depth: 28 m

Type: Minesweeper

Built: 1908

Sunk: August 16, 1915

Dimensions: 33.6 x 6.5 x 3.6 m

Weight: 188 tons

Commanded by: Henry Charles Taylor

Built in 1908 at Beverley, United Kingdom, Lundy was originally a trawler owned by Hull Steam Fishing & Ice. The 33.6-meter-long, 6.5-meter-wide patrol vessel’s engine was a Smith. She served as a civil vessel prior to the Çanakkale Campaign, but was appropriated after the war began and used as a minesweeper. On August 16, 1915, during an ammunition load, she hit Kalyan, a vessel attempting to escape Turkish cannon fire. Lundy sustained damage to her stern and sunk. Submerged at a depth of 27 meters, Lundy remains intact with the exception of her stern.

HMS LOUIS

 Location: Suvla

Depth: 13 m

Type: Laforey-class destroyer

Built: 1913

Sunk: October 30, 1915

Dimensions: 81.9 x 8.4 x 3.2 m

Displacement: 965 – 1,010 long tons

Commanded by: Harold Dallas Adair-Hall

This shipwreck is in the north of Suvla Bay and is submerged at a depth of 13 meters. On October 30, 1915, during the Çanakkale Campaign, she collided with a trailer and sustained heavy damage, splitting apart during the rescue effort. The rescue operations took place at night and, to conceal the damage and prevent the Turks from targeting the vessel, HMS Louis was painted to blend in with the rocks around her. Approximately 45 metres of the 82-meter-long vessel is on sand; the rest of the ship is submerged. The four Yarrow boilers, sitting on sand, are good spots for divers to take photos, due to the diverse sea life around them.

SS Milo

Location: Anzac Cove (Anzak Koyu)

Depth: 5-7 m

Type: Steam passenger ship

Built: 1865

Sunk: October 26, 1915

Dimensions: 74 x 9 m

Tonnage: 1057 grt

The 74-meter-long, 9-meter-wide SS Milo was built as a steam passenger ship in 1865. As World War I began, she served under the British Navy and was used to transport equipment to troops in the Anzac Cove at Arıburnu. On October 26, 1915, she was grounded and filled with cement, for use as a jetty to protect the harbor and the other ships. She was also used as a generator for electric light to illuminate the shore. She continued to serve until the end of the battle and was scuttled during the evacuation. Submerged at a depth of 15-17 meters, SS Milo is severely damaged but retains her form.

TUZLA

Location: Akbaş Bay

Depth: 10 m

Type: Paddlewheel

This paddle wheel steamship was used by the Turkish company Şirket-i Hayriye to transport ammunition and wounded personnel. The vessel is submerged at a depth of 10 meters in Akbaş Bay. The Tenedos and Chios shipwrecks are also near the Tuzla shipwreck.

SUBMARINE NET

Location: Akbaş Bay (Akbaş Koyu)

Depth: 10 m

Dimensions: 2 x 12 m

This net is among those used during the battles of Çanakkale to prevent submarine passage between Akbaş and Nağra. The submarine net, which has survived to this day, is in Akbaş Bay, submerged at a depth of 10 meters.

BEBEK ROCKS

The first recorded location of a Halley’s Comet sighting was at Bebek Rocks. According to Pliny the Elder, between 468 and 466 BCE, a large brown meteorite landed near the ancient settlement of Aegospotami, overlooking the Bebek Cliffs. It is believed that this may have fallen during a meteor shower from a Halley’s Comet. The Battle of Aegospotami, in which the Spartan army vanquished the Athenians, also allegedly took place in this region. According to another legend, townspeople fleeing pirate raids would leave their infants on the cliffs, so that their crying could not be heard – thus, the cliffs were named the Bebek (baby in Turkish) Rocks.

Bebek Rocks offers numerous diving spots and a diverse range of sea life. The first 20 meters feature a dense coral population. While corals usually feed on zooplankton at night, here they feed during the day, due to the strong current. Other creatures that can be seen are red and yellow-colored blackhead fish, which are visible in the rock crevices, and various marine insects with long, protective antennae. In addition, divers are highly likely to encounter dolphins, anglerfish, or catsharks in this area.

HMS Triumph

Location: Kabatepe

Depth: 10 m

Type: Swiftsure-class pre-dreadnought battleship

Built: January 15, 1903

Sunk: May 25, 1915

Dimensions: 144.9 x 21.6 x 7.72 m

Displacement: 12,175 long tons

Commanded by: Maurice Swynfen Fitzmaurice             

HMS Triumph was a Swiftsure-class battleship belonging to the Royal Navy. She was launched on January 15, 1903 after being laid down by Vickers, Sons & Maxim  Barrow-in-Furness. Until March 1909, she was assigned to the Channel Fleet protecting the southern shores of Britain. She also participated in the campaign against the German colony at Tsingtao alongside Japanese battleships. In January 1915, she was transferred to the Mediterranean to participate in the Çanakkale Campaign. On May 25, 1915, while bombarding positions off Gaba Tepe, she was torpedoed by the German submarine U-21. She capsized and sank in about 90 minutes. Three officers and 75 enlisted men were killed.

The Gulf of Saros (Çanakkale)

Submerged treasures and aquatic life make the Gulf of Saros the leading diving spot on Türkiye’s northwestern Aegean coast.

The strong underwater currents in the Gulf of Saros protect it from the impact of urbanization and industrialization. The bay cleans itself three times a year, thanks to these currents, flushing out waste with a mixture of warm and cold waters. As a result, it is among the Aegean Sea’s cleanest and most pristine areas.

There are more than 200 different marine creatures in the bay, including lobsters, starfish, sea snails, and aquatic insects. There are also numerous diving spots: Ibrice Port, Cennet, Cehennem, Toplar Cape, Asker Taşı, Üç Adalar (Three Islands), Kömür Limanı (Coal Port), Bebek, and the Minnoş Cliffs. Minnoş Cliffs, about 50 feet below the water level and featuring colorful outcrops, is the most well known. After the first few meters, dolphins and sea turtles are visible, along with orange corals. At the end of the cliff, divers might come face-to-face with anglerfish and large stingrays.

The Gulf of Saros is also home to shipwrecks. One is the Lundy, a 188-ton vessel. The ship was built in 1908 and sank in 1915. Its wreckage is in Suvla Bay, south of the Gulf of Saros. After the 13th meter, the silhouette of the ship appears; from there, divers can navigate the captain’s boat and watch sea bream float along the deck. Numerous lobsters and whitefish can be seen around the sandy bottom where the ship is submerged.

The most recent wreck in the Gulf of Saros is an Airbus A330. The aircraft was sunk in March 2019 and is ready for exploration!

Gallipoli Peninsula

The Gelibolu (Gallipoli) Peninsula, where the Aegean and Marmara Seas meet, hosts plenty of marine life and fascinating shipwrecks.

The Gelibolu Peninsula was the site of one of the most epic operations of World War I,  the Çanakkale Campaign, with fighting between British forces and their allies, and the Turks. The wreckage of the cargo ship Lundy, which was torpedoed on April 15, 1915, and HMS Majestic, submerged at a depth of 18-28 meters, are some of this area’s most fascinating features.

There are 216 shipwrecks around Gelibolu Peninsula and Çanakkale. The vast majority of these, aside from galleons, are marine vessels. Diving depths range from 7 to 30 meters, with both normal dives and static line dives available. The SS Milo was partially scuttled by the Allies in October 1915 in an attempt to create a wave breaker to protect the Australian and New Zealand Military Corps (ANZAC) on the Northern Beach. On November 18, 1915, the vessel split apart during a storm and is now only 15 centimeters from its original location.

Q&A

When is the Best Time for Underwater Diving

In most locations, underwater diving is a year-round activity that can be enjoyed in all four seasons but rain and excessive wind makes the sport much more challenging so summer season can be considered the best time for underwater diving.  

What is Underwater Diving

Underwater diving is a popular sport and recreational activity that involves descending below the water’s surface with specially designed equipment. Underwater diving as a recreational activity is all about exploring the life and formations below the water. As a professional sport, most competitions are held in free-diving or underwater swimming. Underwater diving is a highly popular sport with millions of enthusiasts around the world.

Before You Go- Stuff You Need to Know

  • It would be good for you to familiarize yourself with the hand signals such as going up, going down, out of air, shark and, etc.
  • You should bring an underwater camera with you to capture the wonders of the underwater world and to treasure your trip.

What are the Basics and Where to Learn them

Underwater diving does not require a prior experience but you need to have a certain skill set in order to safely enjoy underwater diving. Controlled ascending and descending, hand signals, buoyancy, and emergency ascents are the four skills that you need to master. There are many certified diving schools which can make you a licensed diver; entry-level open water certification takes 2 to 4 days to complete. 

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Contact Information

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