Trip Report Maco Coron Diving Center - Coron, 3-10 June, 2025

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

sostil

Registered
Messages
14
Reaction score
37
Location
USA
# of dives
100 - 199
Background: My boyfriend (BF) and I are budget-backpacking-scuba diving SEA for the next ~8 months. Our goal is to see as much healthy hard coral in the Coral Triangle as possible. We brought all our own gear (excluding weights & tanks of course), including full 3mm wetsuits, which we carry in 75L backpacks. The prices listed are for two people, unless otherwise noted. Apologies if the report is too long!

Day 0: There were several mishaps with transit to Coron from Sablayan. The first plan was to take a ferry from San Jose (Bunso), which was unsuccessful because it was suspended in March for government inspection. The second plan was to take a ferry from Batangas (Atienza), which was unsuccessful and an awful experience. I will link a separate comment here where it’s explained. [Link Here]

Day 1: (Note that Day 1 became a travel day due to losing a day from the Atienza ferry experience). What ended up happening: We took a bus to Manila (580P) and arrived late, around 22:00. On the bus I booked a night in a hotel by the airport and last-minute, extremely pricy tickets on an early morning flight to Coron the next day via Cebu Pacific (~23,000P). RIP my valiant attempts to save money via ferry transfers.

Day 2: Woke up around 4:30, took a Grab to the airport, made our 7:00 flight to Coron. I was worried about our dive gear in our checked bags since it was a small propellor plane, but the flight was uneventful (1 hr?) and our gear arrived safely. We paid the Coron eco fees (400P) and took a shared van to Coron town (500P).

Our accommodation was Coron Backpackers Guest House and I do not recommend this accommodation unless you are not traveling with your dive gear. There was very little room to spread gear out on the floor to dry and no where to hang in the room. In addition, the showers/bathrooms are communal, so it was a real treat to rinse off our gear in them and then lug it back to the room through the shared common spaces.

We checked in with the dive shop (Maco Coron Diving Center) to sign paperwork.

At this point it was maybe 10:00 so we headed to the port to figure out if we could make a private snorkel trip happen on one of our days. We found a guy and set up a trip and then proceeded to take a trike to Siete Pecados (300P) for a half snorkel day. We paid the eco fees (200P) and hired a small bangka (500P) to take us around each Pecado.

We heard online that it still had beautiful corals left but were quite disappointed. The snorkeling here has degraded a lot since pictures/reports from 2017. While fish life was excellent (schools of barracuda, jacks, several juvenile napoleon wrasses, and 4+ turtles), the coral cover was mostly rubble. There were exceptions with 10m staghorn fields and some nice colonies of various hard corals, but they were concentrated in the northeast corner of the islands. The south side that used to be all staghorn corals is now 80% rubble.

Triked back to Coron (300P).

Day 3: Finally, our first dive day! This day we had 3 other dives with us, a couple that was OW and one AOW. They split us into 2 groups based on skill levels.

The dive operation: Both BF and I remarked that Maco felt the most “by the book” we had experienced so far in the Philippines. We had our first boat briefing, and the briefings of each dive site were good as well (included max depth, time, what they considered low air, even history of the wrecks, etc.).

The DMs felt competent and ours was very flexible and understanding when BF and I stressed that we wanted to do NO penetrations of the wreck. Mel (our DM) thoroughly explained that what we were going to do were only swim-throughs and the locations of where light would enter and alternate exit points we had. He stated that we would only do swim-throughs after he assessed our skills underwater and there was a possibility that we wouldn’t do any depending on what he saw (which I felt was very responsible, considering I heard that in Coron, they take brand new divers through the wrecks all the time). We had Mel as a DM the entire trip and were very pleased with the experience!

We had a set schedule of meeting at the shop at 8:00 and then taking a trike/jeepney down to the port (less than 5 mins). The boat usually left at ~8:30 and the rental gear was set up for everyone and tanks were available for us to set up our own gear. The wrecks are quite far away, 1-2 hr boat ride (big bangka) and they always provided us with donuts and coffee/tea/water. Within 10 mins of reaching the dive site the DMs would come over with a picture of the wreck for the briefing and to let everyone gear up. We always did a 1 hr surface interval, with a longer one after the second dive for lunch time (~1.5-2hrs SI). Because of the long distance away, the day ended at the port between 16:00-17:00 and we would then get shuttled back to the shop via trike/jeepney.

As a note, the lunch (and donut breakfast) was always good and enjoyed by everyone. A few days we had vegetarians as well and everyone was appropriately accommodated for.

Tank fills were variable with lowest being 2800 PSI and highest 3600 (!!!) PSI.

One thing to note is that there are no rinse tanks/hoses at the shop. The DMs and shop workers said that they rinse the gear down at the port (there was an old, abandoned building that everyone used apparently…?) and offered to do our gear for us. We declined, since we like making sure it’s done properly. They also offered to drop us off at the building while shuttling everyone back to the shop, but we declined again since we’d have to pay for an additional trike to go back to our accommodation from the port.

It was quite pleasant diving with Maco and we felt very taken care of the whole time. They had some areas to improve (e.g. rinse tanks for people with own gear) and not strict regulation of people who went into deco (sigh). They let us pick the sites out every day which was nice and were understanding that we had to dive one less day than planned due to our disaster ferry.

Dive 1: Okikawa Maru
Max depth 76ft, 57 mins, min water temp 85F.
Only note here is that the space inside requires good buoyancy and the AOW with us silted the entire place up (he informed us he had 12 dives…). This site was also the farthest away for us (2 hr boat ride).

Dive 2: Lusong Gunboat
Max depth 65ft, 63 mins, min water temp 85F.
Very nice corals on the backside of the boat but we spent most of the time in the muck unfortunately. After this dive there was a sudden thunderstorm, and I became very cold (foreshadowing…).

Dive 3: Malpadon Reef
Max depth 69ft, 52 mins, min water temp 85F.
Very boring reef. Sparse corals, but we saw a sleeping cat shark which was nice!

-- Broken up due to character space limit
 
Day 4: BF and I were the only divers on this day. I woke up feeling extremely congested but could still equalize my ears.

Dive 1: Barracuda Lake
Max depth 85ft, 52 mins, max water temp 99F.
On my first attempt to descend I suddenly experienced a squeeze in my forehead sinus, which felt as if my brain wanted to exit my skull. On my second attempt to descend the pain lessened if I equalized every foot or so, which was irritating. The dive site was very interesting though, with the crayfish/shrimp (?) coming onto our hands to clean them.

Dive 2: Morazan Maru
Max depth 73ft, 58 mins, min water temp 84F.
I was able to dive again by slowly descending and equalizing frequently throughout the entire dive. I thought this was a better wreck than the Okikawa, as you could truly start to experience the massive size of the ship.

Dive 3: Teru Kaze Maru
Unfortunately, I had to sit this dive out. I attempted the same strategy as before, but my sinus refused to stop hurting so I snorkeled from the top. BF said he saw lots of mandarins.

Day 5: We previously planned this day as a snorkel day to take a break from diving, which worked out well as I was having sinus problems. Day 2 we set up a private snorkel day (6000P). The guy stopped responding to me via WhatsApp the night before and I had accepted that it wouldn’t happen, but he found us at the port as we tried to find someone else to take us. Apparently, his texts didn’t go through.

Spot 1: Lusong Coral Garden
Consistent coral coverage-wise, this is the best place for healthy reefs in Coron. The first area directly west of the mooring line was about 60% coverage with lots of wrecked branching Porites/Isopora, but this transitioned into 80-100% coverage 50-100m west. Huge fields of branching Acropora and plating Montiporas were the highlight here broken up by both fingering and bouldering Porites, Gorgonians, Isopora, and Pavona colonies. The healthy corals on this stretch start at just 1m deep and continue to 5-10m. This healthy portion of reef continues until about 20-50m before the headland rock, where the coral dies down again to 50-60% coverage. East of the original mooring also featured 80-100% coverage with the same diversity as the far west, but was a bit less consistent in it’s health and only extended down to 5m deep.

Spot 2: Smith Coral Garden
East of the central anchorage is the best- there are no moorings so expect significant damage around the center of the reef. The entire west dropoff has good fish biomass and tons of staghorn patches, which wax and wane between high, diverse coverage and terrible coverage. This continues until the southeast where for about 30-50m there is extremely diverse 80-100% coral coverage from top to bottom. This portion is definitely worth a snorkel. The west side, around 7-10m deep, feature hills of fingering Porites but the shallower portion is completely wrecked- likely damaged by anchors.

Spot 3: Twin Lagoon
This is not a snorkel spot, but BF wanted to visit some of the “tourist” spots of Coron to take pictures.

Spot 4: Kayangan Lake
Same as Spot 3.

Spot 5: Twin Peaks Coral Garden
Incredibly high and consistent hard coral coverage on the south side of the reef. Lots of fingering Porites fields on all sides, punctured by occasional patches of Acropora, Montipora, and surprisingly Euphyllia. The reef, which extended much further away from the small islands (the twin peaks) than expected, was pleasant from 1-2m down to 10m deep making it very enjoyable to snorkel and shallow dive.

Day 6: We had a very large group of 10 people on this day. A group of 4 French, 2 Spanish, 1 German, 1 other French diver not in the group, and of course, the two of us. There were plenty of DMs this day (4) to split us up into groups which was nice, as I was not expecting that. BF and I got assigned our DM (Mel).

Other than the 2 Spanish divers, everyone else was a disaster. In the French group, a diver went into deco and another one ran out of air. The OOA diver told a very “exciting” story of dropping his GoPro and going down to get it and then becoming lost… The German diver went into deco as well and the other French diver dove without a computer and started experiencing severe headaches on the surface after the dive. Of course, BF and I strongly recommended to those who went into deco/had DCS symptoms to not keep diving, but, of course, no one followed our advice. One of the divers even looked up a manual on how to factory-reset his dive computer, since it had locked him out for the next 24 hours.

Dive 1: Kogyo Maru
Max depth 96ft, 43 mins, min water temp 81F.
A deep dive for us and we dive with medium conservancy, so after ~20-25 mins we started hitting 5 mins NDLs and had to ascend, where the dive became less interesting because the Kogyo lies on its side. We did see the bulldozer/tractor though!

Dive 2: Olympia Maru
Max depth 88ft, 43 mins, min water temp 82F.
BF’s and my favorite wreck. Very well preserved and you could truly feel the history. There was also a lot of fish life, with a huge school of jacks circling the masts.

Dive 3: Malpadon Reef
Max depth 69ft, 51 mins, min water temp 82F.
Abysmal corals and a boring dive, even more so with no repeat appearance of a cat shark.

Day 7: Two of the French divers rejoined us. This was a very exciting dive day for us though, because we were able to request non-traditional sites (our favorite locations from snorkeling). It was a real treat to dive the same spots we snorkeled previously.

Dive 1: Twin Peaks
Max depth 30ft, 66 mins, min water temp 81F.
We purposely dived shallow here to enjoy the healthy reef. Nothing to see deep. The hard corals were incredible!

Dive 2: Morazan Maru
Max depth 76ft, 53 mins, min water temp 82F.

Dive 3: Lusong Coral Garden
Max depth 25ft, 55 mins, min water temp 82F.
Only got to dive east of the mooring so we didn’t get to dive the best spot we found snorkeling (which also had a deeper reef). As a result we spent most of the dive at 5m, and while those corals were great Lusong is better as a snorkel spot than a dive spot.

Final thoughts: Maco was a solid dive operation for us, although I wish they handled inexperienced divers better. Overall the shallow corals in Coron met our high expectations, even if not in the famous areas (Siete Pecados…).
 
Did not dive those two deep wrecks eg Akitsushima and Irako?
There is even a better one Kyokuzan in north of Coron.
All these wrecks are depper than 30m and Irako is the deepest.

Catch the ferry to El Nido. Diving is not bad there.
Don't forget to stopover at Sabang for the Underground River(UNESCO World Heritage site) before hitting Puerto Princesa.
 

Back
Top Bottom