moorish8idol
Contributor
Hi folks! I see that only a few people have posted their reviews of diving in WA and having recently returned from a 3 week diving trip there, I thought I might chime in for the benefit of future travelers. It really is a phenomenally beautiful place to visit and dive! [note that I was diving between 1-17 October]
I arrived internationally via Perth but flew straight to Exmouth the following day – there are one or two flights each day with Qantaslink and the trip is 2 hours. There is a shuttle that meets each flight and it was 35AUD to get a drop-in in town. I stayed at the dormitory cabins at the RAC – while it was packed with caravan travelers due to Aussie school holidays, the dorms were pretty quiet so I was able to have my own cabin for all four nights. It was a quick walk to Ningaloo Dive, the shop I dived with, but unnecessary since ND does pick-up and drop-off for all of their customers staying in Exmouth. Nice facilities, nice staff, very unreliable WIFI and a bit of a walk into town for post-dive beers/dinner (15-20 mins). Nice pool as well.
I did 3 days of diving with ND. They are the only shop that has the tender to go to the Exmouth Navy Pier. Everyone says this is a spectacular dive and I had my doubts that I would be wowed but yes, people are not lying – this is a must-do dive. You can only dive it in slack-tide so whether you can do a single or double dive will depend on the moon cycle. I really recommend doing the double dive if the dates match up. Max 17 divers go a day (obviously all together with the shop) and it isn’t cheap when you factor in the additional 50 AUD you have to fork over to the navy. But it’s still worth it. ND provides all gear and equipment with their dives (except for hoods, which I found bizarre, so bring your own if this is a requirement for your dive) though I found many of the divers (myself included) were quite cold in the water despite having full length 5 mm wetsuits provided (the water was around 23 degrees in early October). At the pier you do a loooong stride into the water (it was about 4 metres for us that day though the surface conditions were perfectly calm) but it is otherwise a very easy dive with max 12 m depth. Visibility isn’t good (3-5 m) but who cares when everything you could ever want to see is literally in front of you, surrounding you, on top of you. Saw around 10 white-tip sharks, a 3 metre grey nurse, wobbegongs, giant groupers (we saw the BFG AND all of his friends – in fact at one point I felt annoyed about having a diver swimming over top of me but when I turned to look up, I realized it was the big friendly grouper coming in for a better look), cuttlefish, octopus, frog fish, lion fish, schools of trevally, even lots of beautiful nudis for the macro-lovers. On double dives, your surface time is very short (again, they have to keep to a very tight schedule to ensure you are in the water for slack tide) and we lost 5 minutes off of our second dive because people couldn’t get organized quick enough so the dives were 50 and 45 minutes each for us but wonderful nonetheless! I also dived the Muiron Islands and the regular Ningaloo Reef (Lighthouse bay) but windy conditions and less than desirable surface conditions (I didn’t find them so terrible but the boat did have open-water students on board so I think ND wanted to ensure everyone was as safe and comfortable as possible) kept us from diving some of the better locations (like the Labyrinth at Lighthouse and the beautiful coral gardens and swim-throughs of Muiron) so I personally felt a bit underwhelmed by the dives there but it is a matter of your diving preferences. People who love bommies, coral and macro life will probably love it. Profiles were very shallow (max 10 metres usually) and dives usually consisted of exploring the bommies (lots of beautiful fish, schools, rays hidden under the bommies). ND will also let you do a snorkel/swim with mantas between dives if they see them (I saw 2! Other groups saw them on their dives as well) which is a huge bonus considering people pay $300 AUD just to go out for the day to search out and snorkel with the mantas. Overall good shop, really nice enthusiastic staff, safety was prioritized and equipment was good.
Also as a side note, I had a bit of lingering sinusitis when I started diving and my ears started to get quite clogged so I visited the Exmouth health centre to get my ears looked at. Not cheap for non-Aussies (and people coming from countries that do not have a reciprocal agreement with Australia) but I have to say I was very well cared for and perhaps lucked out but didn’t have to wait at all (I headed over around 6 pm.) and the ER doctor was well versed in diving and ear problems and hooked me up with a good short round of antibiotics that completely sorted me out (there are no health clinics in Exmouth, just the hospital). Continued below....
I arrived internationally via Perth but flew straight to Exmouth the following day – there are one or two flights each day with Qantaslink and the trip is 2 hours. There is a shuttle that meets each flight and it was 35AUD to get a drop-in in town. I stayed at the dormitory cabins at the RAC – while it was packed with caravan travelers due to Aussie school holidays, the dorms were pretty quiet so I was able to have my own cabin for all four nights. It was a quick walk to Ningaloo Dive, the shop I dived with, but unnecessary since ND does pick-up and drop-off for all of their customers staying in Exmouth. Nice facilities, nice staff, very unreliable WIFI and a bit of a walk into town for post-dive beers/dinner (15-20 mins). Nice pool as well.
I did 3 days of diving with ND. They are the only shop that has the tender to go to the Exmouth Navy Pier. Everyone says this is a spectacular dive and I had my doubts that I would be wowed but yes, people are not lying – this is a must-do dive. You can only dive it in slack-tide so whether you can do a single or double dive will depend on the moon cycle. I really recommend doing the double dive if the dates match up. Max 17 divers go a day (obviously all together with the shop) and it isn’t cheap when you factor in the additional 50 AUD you have to fork over to the navy. But it’s still worth it. ND provides all gear and equipment with their dives (except for hoods, which I found bizarre, so bring your own if this is a requirement for your dive) though I found many of the divers (myself included) were quite cold in the water despite having full length 5 mm wetsuits provided (the water was around 23 degrees in early October). At the pier you do a loooong stride into the water (it was about 4 metres for us that day though the surface conditions were perfectly calm) but it is otherwise a very easy dive with max 12 m depth. Visibility isn’t good (3-5 m) but who cares when everything you could ever want to see is literally in front of you, surrounding you, on top of you. Saw around 10 white-tip sharks, a 3 metre grey nurse, wobbegongs, giant groupers (we saw the BFG AND all of his friends – in fact at one point I felt annoyed about having a diver swimming over top of me but when I turned to look up, I realized it was the big friendly grouper coming in for a better look), cuttlefish, octopus, frog fish, lion fish, schools of trevally, even lots of beautiful nudis for the macro-lovers. On double dives, your surface time is very short (again, they have to keep to a very tight schedule to ensure you are in the water for slack tide) and we lost 5 minutes off of our second dive because people couldn’t get organized quick enough so the dives were 50 and 45 minutes each for us but wonderful nonetheless! I also dived the Muiron Islands and the regular Ningaloo Reef (Lighthouse bay) but windy conditions and less than desirable surface conditions (I didn’t find them so terrible but the boat did have open-water students on board so I think ND wanted to ensure everyone was as safe and comfortable as possible) kept us from diving some of the better locations (like the Labyrinth at Lighthouse and the beautiful coral gardens and swim-throughs of Muiron) so I personally felt a bit underwhelmed by the dives there but it is a matter of your diving preferences. People who love bommies, coral and macro life will probably love it. Profiles were very shallow (max 10 metres usually) and dives usually consisted of exploring the bommies (lots of beautiful fish, schools, rays hidden under the bommies). ND will also let you do a snorkel/swim with mantas between dives if they see them (I saw 2! Other groups saw them on their dives as well) which is a huge bonus considering people pay $300 AUD just to go out for the day to search out and snorkel with the mantas. Overall good shop, really nice enthusiastic staff, safety was prioritized and equipment was good.
Also as a side note, I had a bit of lingering sinusitis when I started diving and my ears started to get quite clogged so I visited the Exmouth health centre to get my ears looked at. Not cheap for non-Aussies (and people coming from countries that do not have a reciprocal agreement with Australia) but I have to say I was very well cared for and perhaps lucked out but didn’t have to wait at all (I headed over around 6 pm.) and the ER doctor was well versed in diving and ear problems and hooked me up with a good short round of antibiotics that completely sorted me out (there are no health clinics in Exmouth, just the hospital). Continued below....