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A part of India, the Andaman Islands are one of the world's
newest diving destinations and have yet to be properly explored
for diving. After a 50 year period of virtual isolation from
the outside world the Indian government has made a decision
to allow limited, environmentally conscious tourism
development in the islands.
The Andaman's modern history began as a British penal colony
for Indian radical elements. During WWII it was occupied by
a small Japanese force. Once India gained its independence
from Britain, India initiated a limited colonization program
and at the same time, committed itself to protecting the island's
aboriginal population and its natural environment.
On the surrounding islands live some of the last stone-age
peoples on the earth. One tribe, the Sentinelese, are isolated
on their own tiny tropical island, North Sentinel, and no
visitors are allowed; no camera crews, no journalists, no
scientists, and no researchers. Contact has been attempted
only a few times by the Indian government and the locals have
made it rather clear-by throwing primitive spears and shooting
arrows at the party-that they do not want to be disturbed.
The islands have no modern fishing fleet and commercial fishing
licenses are granted to foreign operators only on an extremely
limited basis. Thus, the waters surrounding the islands are
simply full of fish that have never been disturbed by modern
man. And, since the islands only opened recently, most of
the off-shore diving areas have been dived by less than 50
people.
Although in many of the near shore areas the visibility is
limited, the off-shore islands such as Passage Island, Barren
Island, and Narcondam are rich in marine life-huge fish, sharks,
manta rays, unbelievable coral growth-and are blessed with
crystal-clear water.
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About 70 kilometers to the south of Port Blair, the capital
and main port of the Andamans, Passage Island features an
offshore pinnacle -- appropriately named Fish Rock -- where
two-meter long dog-toothed tuna compete with sharks for food.
Groupers larger than most men cruise the reef unafraid of
divers. Large eagle rays patrol the plankton rich waters completely
at ease in the strong currents.
The active volcano Barren Island, almost 20 hours cruising
northeast of Port Blair, last erupted in January of 1994.
The eruption covered almost everything underwater and above
with a thick layer of black sand, creating an unusual landscape
to explore. Although most of the coral was killed by this
layer of sand, tunas and sharks swim along its black walls,
which plunge to over 500 metres. Hammerhead sharks have been
seen here. Visibility can exceed 50 metres, and even though
there is not much coral left, the contrasting vivid colors
of bright fish against the jet-black walls is almost psychedelic.
The most fantastic spot in the Andaman Sea is an extinct volcano
located another 160 kilometers north of Barren Island. Walls
drop to over 500 metres here as well-just off the shoreline-but
the difference is that here everything is alive and healthy.
This is truly a diver's paradise.
Imagine four-metre tall barrel sponges. Fans twice as large
as they are in the Similan Islands. Monstrous dog-toothed
tuna -- one animal we saw was almost three metres long. The
best part of our first trip to the area was the herds of manta
rays that visited us on every dive -- both in shallow and
deep water. In four days we saw at least 50 mantas -- no kidding,
and we snorkeled with three groups of 12 feeding animals for
over two hours our first day there.
The Andamans are certainly not for everyone. It requires spending
long periods of time on the boat and traveling almost every
night in order to get to the best spots. However, for those
interested in the best of frontier diving, this is it.
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At a Glance: The
Andaman Islands
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Reef type:
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Fringing reef, deep walls, coral gardens -- you name
it
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Access:
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Lengthy liveaboard trips from Phuket; one, possibly
two dive centers in Port Blair offering local trips
and instruction
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Visibility:
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Variable from 3-50 metres
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Current:
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Variable, often strong
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Coral:
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Average to unbelievable
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Fish:
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Unusual and prolific, very big
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Highlights:
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Deep vertical walls, big sharks, lots of manta rays,
active volcano, very clear water, lots and lots of big
fish
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Source: ©Siam Dive n' Sail
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