Sentences with phrase «sweetlips fish»

We saw big number of surgeon, rabbit and sweetlips fish.
We saw: 3 different types of fusiliers, many spade fish, sweetlips fish, angel fish, rabbit fish, surgeon fish and many other amazing creatures.
We saw: huge number of yellow sweetlips fish, spade fish, 2 wobbegong sharks, couple of nudibranch, snappers, surgeon, rabbit fish and fusiliers playing in the blue.
Visibility was amazing reaching 30 m / 90 ft.. We saw: 5 different types of fusiliers, 5 black tip sharks, 2 grey reef sharks, 2 schools of big eye trevally, 5 giant sweat lips fish, bumphead parrotfish, school of yellow fin barracudas, couple of dog tooth tunas, spanish mackerel, school of spade fish, school of sweetlips fish, 3 different schools of snapper and many more.
We saw many schools of fish and also wobbegong shark, grey reef shark, schools of sweetlips fish, barracudas, tunas, big school of jackfish and a lot of glass fish.
We saw big schools of 3 different type of fusiliers, 2 big napoleon wrasse, 2 wobbegong sharks, nudibranch, bump head parrotfish, white tip shark, school of sweetlips fish, school of snapper and many other amazing fish.
We also saw bumphead parrot fish, sweetlips fish, many spade fish, angle fish, nudibranch and wobbegong shark.
We saw schools of: yellow fin barracudas, jack fish, giant trevallies, spade fish, sweetlips fish, giant sweetlips, black and grey reef sharks.
We found school of bat fish, sweetlips fish, wobbegong shark and many other interesting fish.

Not exact matches

When it comes to choosing a place to hang out, big reef fish like coral trout, snappers and sweetlips have strong architectural preferences.
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.
On the reef side of the wreck also had lot of cool little encounters like juvenile sweetlip, mantis shrimp, ornate ghost pipefish and scorpion fish.
To the west, you'll find a popular dive site that boasts many anemones, box fish, sea bass, large snappers, and sweetlips.
We also saw plenty of Bat fish, Peacock Mantis Shrimps, Fusiliers, Trevally, Crabs, Cuttlefish, Lionfish and Scorpionfish, sweetlips and groupers.
Our tropical reef fish up here are morish idols, parrot fish, damsel fishes, rabbit fish, sweetlips, groupers and so much more.
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.
Apart from the mantas we saw a few giant frogfish, cuttlefish, giant trevally, juvenile silver sweetlip, turtles, bamboo sharks and many other big and small reef fish in every color of the rainbow.
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.
This multicoloured wall of soft coral is home to Damselfish, Chromis, Sweetlips and Clown Fish.
The dramatic drop - offs have a huge variety of soft and hard corals that offer a home to an abundance of reef fish such as fusiliers, butterflyfish, sweetlips, cardinal fish and damsel fish.
The Necklace reef has become a haven for fish, like Giant Moray eels, sweetlips, triggerfish, and others now rarely seen on the dead reef.
During the years it has completely overgrown with corals and is now hosts a large variety of fish, including frog fish, scorpion fish and Sweetlips
Large schools of fish such as trevally and sweetlips can be found along with macro critters, beautiful hard and soft corals and healthy sea fans.
It is now home to a huge variety of fish and marine life, especially schooling juvenile barracuda, sweetlips and trevallies.
Amongst the rocks there were large schools of yellow snapper and numerous other tropical fish such as butterflyfish, surgeonfish, sweetlips and groupers.
Fish: Cuttlefish, Moray Eels, Clownfish, Glassfish, Six - banded Angelfish, Lionfish, variety of Triggerfish, Sweetlips, Damselfish
Look out for leaf fish, rainbow runners and sweetlips as well as special coral species such as brain corals and staghorn coral.
Almost too much to take in on 10 dives let alone 1 See sea snakes sunbathing on the surface, variety of angel fish, bannerfish, cleaner shrimp, sweetlips, boxfish, fusiliers, and so much more.
The wreck is covered with different hard & soft corals and surrounded by groups of different fish like Oriental & Harlequin Sweetlips, Black Snappers & Batfish.
More than 10 species of Nudibranchs can be seen here along with the Frog fish, Harlequin Sweetlips and Crocodile Ffish, Harlequin Sweetlips and Crocodile FishFish.
As is common in an area where currents meet, you can expect lots of schooling fish: Drummers, sweetlips, trevallies and snappers.
As well as, schools of big - eye trevelly, barracudas, banded sweetlips, snappers, clown fish, tomato anemone fish, Harlequins, surgeonfish, mantas, ancient giant clams, butterflyfish, archerfish and many others.
And don't forget the fishing in Bowen... its great... catch flathead, sweetlip and other reef fish straight off the beach in front of the units whilst dolphin and stingray spotting..
These coral sites have plenty of the usual tropical fish suspects, from sweetlips to angelfish to the omipresent clownfish.
Some of the fish life you can expect to see here are lionfish, the colourful Oriental sweetlips and the gorgeous but less commonly seen clown triggerfish.
If you venture deeper you'll find schools of sweetlips beside bommies which are literally shrouded in glass fish.
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