Diving, Hurghada, December 2009
Moderators: 4u Network, DJKeefy
Diving, Hurghada, December 2009
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value=" name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
- Susue
- Senior Member
- Posts: 456
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2009 3:34 am
- Location: lalaland
- Been thanked: 3 times
Aaaahhh... sorry.... didn't realise it was your video!
Did you go over the wall at Turtle bay.... or did you just stay in the first lagoon?
If you go over the wall, turn right, go for about 50m then back over the wall..... follow it to the end.... you come to a wonderful part with HUGE giant clams .... go even further, and you can often see a couple of eagle rays!
It takes about 40 min each way, so you have to be good with air.... but it's well worth it!
Did you go over the wall at Turtle bay.... or did you just stay in the first lagoon?
If you go over the wall, turn right, go for about 50m then back over the wall..... follow it to the end.... you come to a wonderful part with HUGE giant clams .... go even further, and you can often see a couple of eagle rays!
It takes about 40 min each way, so you have to be good with air.... but it's well worth it!
- CocoaButter
- V.I.P
- Posts: 1044
- Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2008 2:49 pm
- Location: United Kingdom
- Been thanked: 1 time
Love the video net and i was so looking forward for me and my girl to be doing this but under circumstances this will not be possible due to health issues ,anyway music is awsum and so vibrant fish and i bet the video does not do it justice.
i recently read somewhere the envirorment is getting anxious now for the amount of diving in the red sea causing for concern ie pollution upsettingthe fish the mating season and damage to the corals .they was going to downgrade the amount of people entering it and putting santions on this .
As I agree with this to a degree to preserve these beautifil sites and views ,i do feel as well we need to learn but to a proper order ,
how do u feel of this would u like more control on this ,because we wud not one for it to die off .
Example the dead sea is dying .
sorry for my way of writing and i cannot see good i am full of flu and streaming eyes
i recently read somewhere the envirorment is getting anxious now for the amount of diving in the red sea causing for concern ie pollution upsettingthe fish the mating season and damage to the corals .they was going to downgrade the amount of people entering it and putting santions on this .
As I agree with this to a degree to preserve these beautifil sites and views ,i do feel as well we need to learn but to a proper order ,
how do u feel of this would u like more control on this ,because we wud not one for it to die off .
Example the dead sea is dying .
sorry for my way of writing and i cannot see good i am full of flu and streaming eyes
Hi CB,
I'd say that noone is more concerned about the environmental impact to the ocean life than responsible divers, of which the vast majority are.
A lot of damage is done on the diving safaris, where it can be a bit like tourists in the Valley Of The Kings I except, dragging them around to the main attractions.
Some of the sites (eg. Giftun Island) now exact a daily tax for snorkelling or diving and this would appear to be the way forward, as long as that tax is put into enviromental husbandry to regenerate and preserve the coral reefs and fish life.
I don't believe the fish suffer due to diving, as you can see from the video, the turtle was completely unphased by our presence, however I have not seen any studies into what happens during the matig season. I can see how this could be a problem and would like to read more about it.
I'm not sure about the Dead Sea dying as there's no life in it apart from microbes.
The Red Sea certainly has taken a battering over the past few decades and this really does need to be addressed. When I stayed in Marsa Alam, the Three Corners Fayrouz hotel did not have a pier built and so access to the sea and reef was by clambering over the coral - obviously a very bad situation.
I'm very interested myself in the conservational aspects of diving and I am hoping, perhaps, to move into marine biology in the future, an childhood ambition that I thought was lost but may be available to me again.
I'd say that noone is more concerned about the environmental impact to the ocean life than responsible divers, of which the vast majority are.
A lot of damage is done on the diving safaris, where it can be a bit like tourists in the Valley Of The Kings I except, dragging them around to the main attractions.
Some of the sites (eg. Giftun Island) now exact a daily tax for snorkelling or diving and this would appear to be the way forward, as long as that tax is put into enviromental husbandry to regenerate and preserve the coral reefs and fish life.
I don't believe the fish suffer due to diving, as you can see from the video, the turtle was completely unphased by our presence, however I have not seen any studies into what happens during the matig season. I can see how this could be a problem and would like to read more about it.
I'm not sure about the Dead Sea dying as there's no life in it apart from microbes.
The Red Sea certainly has taken a battering over the past few decades and this really does need to be addressed. When I stayed in Marsa Alam, the Three Corners Fayrouz hotel did not have a pier built and so access to the sea and reef was by clambering over the coral - obviously a very bad situation.
I'm very interested myself in the conservational aspects of diving and I am hoping, perhaps, to move into marine biology in the future, an childhood ambition that I thought was lost but may be available to me again.
- CocoaButter
- V.I.P
- Posts: 1044
- Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2008 2:49 pm
- Location: United Kingdom
- Been thanked: 1 time
thankyou for your reply i am happy to hear how you feel on this .Netyoda wrote:Hi CB,
I'd say that noone is more concerned about the environmental impact to the ocean life than responsible divers, of which the vast majority are.
A lot of damage is done on the diving safaris, where it can be a bit like tourists in the Valley Of The Kings I except, dragging them around to the main attractions.
Some of the sites (eg. Giftun Island) now exact a daily tax for snorkelling or diving and this would appear to be the way forward, as long as that tax is put into enviromental husbandry to regenerate and preserve the coral reefs and fish life.
I don't believe the fish suffer due to diving, as you can see from the video, the turtle was completely unphased by our presence, however I have not seen any studies into what happens during the matig season. I can see how this could be a problem and would like to read more about it.
I'm not sure about the Dead Sea dying as there's no life in it apart from microbes.
The Red Sea certainly has taken a battering over the past few decades and this really does need to be addressed. When I stayed in Marsa Alam, the Three Corners Fayrouz hotel did not have a pier built and so access to the sea and reef was by clambering over the coral - obviously a very bad situation.
I'm very interested myself in the conservational aspects of diving and I am hoping, perhaps, to move into marine biology in the future, an childhood ambition that I thought was lost but may be available to me again.
as a mother i want my children to enloy ever aspect of the world i grew up in ,at the same time to respect mother earth and her seeds ..
What i mean in the Dead Sea, Jordan. The water levels in the Dead Sea - the deepest point on Earth - are dropping at an alarming rate with serious environmental consequences.
this causes a lot of concern
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 091514.htm
http://www1.aucegypt.edu/students/award ... amira.html
this lady i have had the pleasure of speaking too a wonderful and knowledgeble lady ..
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post