Sentences with word «bumphead»

School of bumphead parrotfish sleeping on the wreck at night and the gloomy atmosphere are unforgettable memories!
Some divers have reported schools of Bumphead Parrotfish swimming across the shallow reef flats.
Reef sharks are found basking in the canyons, lobsters, cuttlefish, stingrays, tons of turtles in the shallows, and every full moon it is a favorite hangout for a school of huge bumphead parrot fish.
Then try the night dive on the wreck, it's one of the best on the island, see bumphead parrotfish sleeping peacefully inside and watch the lion fish and moray eels, out of hiding and in search of their nightly feed — bring that camera though as the photo opportunities are endless!
Visibility was around 15 m / 50 ft.. At the beginning we spotted huge bumphead parrotfish reaching 2 m / 6 ft.. We also saw a school of fusiliers and wobbegong shark.
It's here where you can spot Bumphead Parrot fishes and as its name says also Hawksbill - or Green Turtles.
For their last open water dives they managed to visit the USAT Liberty shipwreck, the most famous dive site in Bali, and it was amazing with Bumphead parrotfishes, Barracudas, and giant sweetlips.
Giant bumphead parrot fish, green and hawksbill turtles, cuttlefish, squirrel fish, triggers, sweetlips, groupers, rays, snappers, trumpet fish, Moorish idols, scorpion fish, lion fish, barracuda and trevallies are all frequently seen.
Around an extending ridge teeming with action, the divers got to see: Yellowtail and Chevron Barracuda, Malabar and Brown - Marbled Grouper, congregating Spanish Flag Snapper, Napoleon Wrasse and also a few Bumphead Parrotfishes.
What about the vast herds of marauding bumphead parrotfish that we gazed at as they munched their way across coral grazing fields?
The boulders drop down to 27m and their crevices are home to large giant moray eels and refuges for bumphead unicornfish.
Watch this Khao Lak diving video with underwater footage from the nearby Similan Islands and Koh Bon, including bumphead parrotfish, cave sweepers, sea snakes, zebra morays, nudibranchs and lionfish.
Index Bumphead parrotfish Lobster liberation Marine medical emergencies Nautica, Thailand liveaboard
Everybody could at last see the famous Bumphead parrotfishes.
Even snorkellers can expect to regularly see turtles, reef sharks and tonnes of fish, including massive bumphead parrotfish.
Creature Feature Index Barracuda Bumphead Parrotfish Clownfish Clown Triggerfish Cuttlefish Dolphins Dwarf Minke Whales Frogfish Giant Galapagos Tortoises Great White Sharks Harlequin Ghostpipefish Komodo Dragons Leopard Sharks Lionfish Mandarinfish Manta Rays Marine Iguanas Mimic Octopus Moray Eels Napoleon Wrasse Nudibranchs Orang Utans Scalloped Hammerhead Sharks Sea Horses Sea Lions Sunfish Tawny Nurse Sharks Titan Triggerfish Trevallies Turtles Whale Sharks Wobbegongs
Departing as early as 6 am, divers could be in for a treat watching the odd - looking bumphead parrotfish school moving from Barracuda Point to Mid Point in search of breakfast.
You can check out our new videos of diving in Malaysia, see our new products in the Red Sea, Indonesia, Fiji and Australia or enjoy some informative dive travel articles on marine dangers, the appealing Bumphead parrotfish and a liveaboard trip report from Thailand.
Divers can enjoy the spectacle of seeing spawning bumphead parrotfish and grey reef sharks as well.
We spotted some group of fusiliers, napoleon wrasse and small group of shy bumphead parrotfish.
On top of this great dive, a school of 70 + Bumphead Parrotfishes was seen congregating in a corner of the reef where they seem to sleep.
Get to dive and see the incredible Bumphead Parrot Fish.
Giant barracuda and even bumphead parrot fish school... if you can take you eyes off the pelagics passing.
Watch this video as an introduction to the Sipadan Water Village Resort and the island of Mabul, as well as underwater shots of diving with bumphead parrotfish, batfish, turtles and other local marine creatures.
Divers exit onto a spectacular reef wall where schools of giant Bumphead Parrotfish swim and sharks and turtles are often sighted.
A few Bumphead Parrotfish, Blacktip Reef Sharks, Big - Eye Jacks, Giant Trevally and schooling fusiliers, trigger and surgeonfish were also seen.
We also saw bumphead parrot fish, sweetlips fish, many spade fish, angle fish, nudibranch and wobbegong shark.
However at night a different world comes to live, a world where you will see Spanish dancers, the school of huge Bumphead parrotfish in their sleeping cocoons, Flashlight fish, Bobtail squid, sea moths, ghost pipefish, cuttlefish, starry night octopus, mimic octopus and different kinds of nudibranchs!
Keep an eye out for bumphead parrotfish, bluefin trevally, lionfish, snappers and white or black tip reef sharks that occasionally patrol these waters.
The dive site was Baby Rock, where the dive guides, already spotted Bumphead Parrotfishes and a some macro life, like the Raja Ampat Denise Pygmy Seahorse, Orangutan Crab and a few lobsters.
Head to Shark and Manta Point to spot reef sharks and groups of Bumphead Parrotfishes on Coral Fan Garden.
This is probably the most popular site as reef sharks are found basking in the canyons, cuttlefish, stingrays, plenty of turtles in the shallows, and every full moon most likely schooling bumphead parrot fish.
Scorpionfish, Ribbon Eels, colonies of anemones with their resident clown fish along with giant Bumphead Parrotfish and passing Blacktip Reef Sharks are a few of the things that you can see here.
Visibility here can exceed 20 meters so you can immediately see what the dive site has in store, with schooling Bumphead Parrot Fish, Squid and Leaf Scorpion Fish.
The bumphead parrotfishes are the biggest of their species.
The bumphead parrotfishes are back.
We saw lots of red bass, white - tip and grey reef sharks, and «towers» of bumphead parrotfish.
The dive sites are home to a huge variety of tropical fish, from charismatic little critters like seahorses and ghost pipefish, through shoaling fish like fusiliers and sweetlips up to larger creatures including turtles and reef sharks, bumphead parrotfish and barracuda.
The USAT Liberty Wreck is spectacular at night with Lion Fish and Moray Eels out of hiding and in search of their nightly feed — but remember to be quiet or you'll wake up the Bumphead Parrotfish sleeping inside!»
Swim amongst schools of giant trevally, dog - tooth tuna, blue spot trevally, barracuda or bumphead parrotfish.
Bumphead parrotfish are vital to the reef building process — as they crush rubble and dead coral into sand.
The Liberty is home to hundreds of different species including giant barracuda, turtles, bumphead parrot fish, oriental sweetlips, pygmy seahorses and the enormous potato cod.
If you have the time then we would certainly recommend staying several days but if you just have a day to spare then you will love diving around the wreck that is home to sweetlips, turtles, bumphead parrot fish, huge potato cod, reef sharks and the amazing schooling jackfish.
Along with the countless turtles we see regularly, we also ran into a school of bumphead parrot fish, eagle rays, moray eels, giant black frogfish, and a few white tip sharks swimming through our dive sites.
Bumphead Parrots were shoaling... an incredible, awesome sight!
We would like to highlight some of our best trips in Amed: Night diving on the USAT Liberty shipwreck and see the Bumphead parrotfish.
A large group of Bumphead Parrotfish were in the shallows, hanging out on our safety stop.
Common sightings include turtles, reef sharks, whitetips and a big school of Bumphead parrotfishes.
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