Dive Report: Tioman, April 2006, 3 dives

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malaysia-islands

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Dive #1: Salang Wreck

LOCATION:
Located somewhere in the middle of the bay in Salang. It is hard to tell the exact location (most people will go with a dive master anyway), but it is somewhere between Salang Reef North and Salang Reef South. The entry point is usually right behind Dive Asia's landing dock, from which you need to swim for about 100 metres to a buoy before descending.

DESCRIPTION:
I had initial reservation before diving at this site. First, because I haven't done any wreck-diving before, and second, I wasn't sure if the RM70 dive fee would worth my time considering the poor visibility often associated with wreck diving.

My worry wasn't entirely unfounded because during the early descent, the visibility was extremely poor that I could barely see the divers in front of me. We descended to a sandy bottom at about 20 metres, and slowly crawled our way forward, haphazardly I must say, until the dive master signaled us to slow down.

When I looked up, the wreck was standing before me. It was a rather huge ship, or rather, a fishing trawler intentionally sunk to create the diving spot. I started to circle the bottom with delicate movement to avoid stirring the sands. The dive master instructed us to circle from the ship bottom in an ascending movement to fully enjoy what the wreck has to offer.

The bottom portion was nothing that interesting. There were a number of isolated white sea fans, brown and red sea whips, white dendronephthya, leaf oyster (Lopha cristagalli, very sharp edges, so please exercise caution), and a bottom-dwelling lionfish.

I ascended to the main deck of the wreck. The dive just got more interesting. I saw hundreds, if not thousands, of yellowtails. Their numbers created a magical underwater scene of some sort, especially when you swim through them. There were also Behn's damselfish (silvery-yellow body, neoglyphidodon nigroris), an elusive but large blue-ringed angelfish (pornacanthus annularis) and common Indo-Pacific sergeant. I also saw a unique type of white algae that I could not name.

The scenery at the ship's tower mast also was spectacular, especially with the much-improved visibility of about 10 metres. The dominant species here was brown hydroid, not the stinging one I suppose, and other unique-shaped corals that compete for sunlight to grow.

Overall, Salang Wreck was also a memorable dive for me in Tioman, apart from Chebeh Island of course.

Full dive report:http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/salang-wreck.shtml
Photo gallery: http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/salang-wreck/01.shtml
 
Dive #2: Pulau Chebeh

LOCATION:
Chebeh Island is located to the northwest of Tioman. The island is basically the northernmost island that makes up the Tioman archipelago. Dive boats will take about 30 minutes to get here from Salang, or slightly more if you are departing from Tekek or Air Batang. This particular dive site is on the eastern portion of the small island of Chebeh.

DESCRIPTION:

This was truly an amazing and unforgettable dive for me. For the first time since being certified as a PADI scuba diver, Chebeh offers the best visibility that I have encountered thus far in Malaysian waters.

There was barely any noticeable current despite the choppy water surface. I descended to about 20 meters and the whole dive was at about 15-25 meters. The visibility was amazing, I estimated to be about 20-30 meters, which was comparable, if not better, with my recent dive at Nusa Menjangan in Bali.

The main highlight here definitely goes to the infinite garden of gorgonian sea fans, of varying colours of course. Most of the sea fans are of white in colour, but I did see some variations such as light pink, blue, milky green and rusty red. I barely could concentrate on one photography spot because the next cluster of gorgonian sea fans seemed to be better than the other. Indeed, I had a field day with my camera.

There were other types of soft coral too, though somewhat less spectacular, but still worth mentioning. I saw various colours of dendronephthya soft corals, yellow pore coral (Porites lutea), green staghorn (Acropora sp), whip corals (that looks like dead branches, but don't get fooled, they are still corals), sea anemone, etc.

Among the fish that I encountered were various damselfish, a "friendly" teira batfish (Platax teira), a rare and elusive six-banded angelfish (Pomacanthus sexstriatus), and a one-metre long great barracuda at some height above me, as if it was patrolling the area.

Before I forget to mention, the dive master brought us through a number of swim-through among the many large boulder rocks, just for fun I guess. Overall, this dive at Chebeh was simply memorable and highly recommended to avid scuba divers who come to Tioman.

Full dive report: http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/chebeh.shtml
Photo gallery: http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/chebeh/01.shtml
 
Dive #3: Malang Rock

LOCATION:
Malang Rock (or locally known as Batu Malang) is located to the south of Tulai Island. In fact, from the Pasir Panjang Beach on Tulai, you can spot to your left the huge collection of boulder rocks that constitutes this diving and snorkeling area. Access is by boats from Tulai (5 minutes) or Salang village (30 minutes).

DESCRIPTION:
The afternoon dive was regarded as rather shallow, only to maximum depth of about 15 metres. The visibility was quite good at about 10 metres.

I descended down to an area filled with plate/column corals (Pavona clavus). It was quite a sight because its colony covers a vast expanse of the area. Drifting right above it was rather fun, while looking at other coral varieties that grow in-between its gaps, such as cabbage-like coral (Montipora hispida), sea anemones, various acropora sp corals, etc.

There were plenty of fish specie here, mostly consisted of various damselfish types, titan triggerfish (my dive master was ready with his knife, just in case), clownfish, etc.

Just like in Chebeh, my dive master brought us on another few swim-throughs. The scariest one was under a big boulder rock that had only about one metre opening. Most of us found ourselves bumping onto the boulder wall. Lurking in the distance was actually a lone sweetlip, if I was not mistaken. The fish was huge though, and I could actually see its sharp teeth. Anyway, nothing happened and we gladly continued our dive.

Full dive report: http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/malang-rock.shtml
Photo gallery: http://www.malaysia-islands.com/html/tioman/dive/malang-rock/01.shtml
 
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