Beyond
the occasional hammerhead shark or elusive octopus, the Great Blue Hole is largely uninhabited.
Black tip reef sharks, dogtooth tunas, Napoleon fish, giant trevally, eagle rays and
the occasional hammerhead shark all glide through the currents, seemingly without effort.
However, when it can be dived and currents are swift, divers get to experience a drift that attracts the big schools of fish, which in turn attract Caribbean reef sharks;
the occasional hammerhead, mantas, schooling eagle rays in groups of up to 40 or 50, and lots of other pelagic life not normally seen in calmer areas.
Kona has some great sharky dive sites with tiger sharks, white tip reef sharks and even
the occasional hammerhead shark.
The crystal - clear water provides excellent visibility and there are plentiful fish to be seen, including Caribbean reef sharks and
occasional hammerheads.
Sipadan Island in Malaysia - large numbers of whitetip reef sharks, grey reef sharks,
occasional hammerheads, whale sharks and even thresher sharks.
Not exact matches
Hammerhead sharks, killer whales, eagle rays, sea lions, whale sharks, reef fish, turtles, morays, iguanas and the
occasional blue - footed booby diving for a morning snack can all be encountered on a Galapagos dive.
Sharks are often seen including
hammerheads and the
occasional Mola Mola.
All this plus
occasional larger pelagics such as
hammerhead sharks, mantas and sunfish.
However they are the best place in the area to see large pelagics — big barracuda schools, reef sharks and tuna are common, with
occasional dolphins, mola - mola and even
hammerhead sharks if you are lucky, along with luscious hard and soft coral gardens.
These, in turn, attract the pelagics, and lemon, Caribbean reef, blacktip and the
occasional solitary
hammerhead shark can be seen here.
The coral reef plateaus are loaded with fish life and the deep wall drop offs offer the opportunity of encounters with
hammerhead sharks, pelagic fish and
occasional tiger sharks.