Angelfish Blue Hole is located in an enclosed bay off Stocking Island, it reaches a maximum diving depth of 92 feet and there is a chamber that you can swim through when at the bottom.
The bay that
Angelfish blue hole is located in, is home to a school of eagle rays and turtles.
Not exact matches
If you book a diving experience, not only can you expect to see turtles,
blue - lined octopi, schools of white spotted eagle rays, an array of tropical fish including emperor
angelfish and clown triggerfish, but grey nurse sharks and leopard sharks often pay the rocks a visit.
The
Blue Hole is famous for its sponges, barracuda, corals,
angelfish, and a school of sharks often seen patrolling the hole's edge.
Fishes found in this area include:
blue striped grunts, French grunts, white grunts, grey snappers, French
angelfish.
Some of the brilliantly - colored tropical fish that you may see include
angelfish, grunts,
blue tangs, butterfly fish, damselfish, drums, filefish, parrotfish, scorpion fish, trunk fish, honeycomb cowfish, grouper, snapper, squirrel fish, wrasses, goatfish, trigger fish,
blue - spotted cornets, trumpet fish, lizard fish, tile fish, harlequin fish, jacks, and more.
Shallower sites in this region feature groves of staghorn, elkhorn and brain corals, covered in schools of
blue tangs, wrasse, grunts, and snappers, and harboring queen
angelfish, parrotfish and spotted trunkfish.
Reef fish include
blue - ringed
angelfish, moray - eels, snappers, frogfish, and the ever elusive ghost pipefish.
Here you might spot
blue tangs, foureye butterflyfish or the rather splendid queen
angelfish amongst the soft corals and small gorgonian fans.
The marine life is more diverse there with Napoleon wrasse, turtles, large cube boxfish, clown triggerfish, schools of batfish, yellow goatfish, palette surgeonfish,
blue - faced
angelfish and bannerfish.
Today the
Blue Hole is famed for its sponges, barracuda, corals,
angelfish, and a school of sharks often seen patrolling the hole's edge.
On this unique paddle, you'll have a chance to snorkel with brilliant king
angelfish and lobster, watch plunge - diving
blue - footed booties, and search for 60 - foot whale sharks — the world's largest fish.
Listen to your guide's commentary to learn about the marine life you see; the warm, tropical waters of the Bahamas are home to beautiful coral reefs and a fascinating array of fish including
blue tang, surgeonfish and queen
angelfish.
Blue angelfish, queen
angelfish, rock beauties, French
angelfish and gray
angelfish also inhabit the reefs of the western Caribbean.
Ocean
blue holes are considered some of the most unusual dive sites here, and you can find large schools of reef fish, like sergeant majors, chromis, and
angelfish.