Islamorada
Dive & Snorkel Sites
The waters off Islamorada, between Conch
Reef and Alligator Light offer a variety of diving and snorkeling sites;
Shallow mound coral reefs, patches, intermediate ledges, deeper drop offs,
and the Eagle Wreck. Each site has something special to offer with its large
variety of fish, hard and soft corals, sea fans and range of depths for
every preference.
Shallow Reefs
Hens & Chickens and Cheeca Rocks are good examples of Mountainous star coral
which rises from 15-20 feet depths, to just a few feet from the surface, as
well as Brain coral, making these reefs great for snorkeling as well as
scuba diving.
Patches
Further out are numerous low profile 20-30' deep "patch reefs" such as The
Aquarium, Fishbowl, Arno's, Rocky Top, Smiley, Pick & Choose, Telephone,The
Maze, and The Grotto, where relatively unexplored nooks and crannies the
Sheet coral, Star coral and small brain corals offer hiding places to the
shy octopus, nurse shark and moray eels. Again, great for the slightly more
advanced snorkelers and scuba divers of all skill levels. The wreckage of
Spanish Galleons is scattered along the inner patches.
Ledges
Islamorada also has numerous intermediate-depth ledges bounded by sand on
one side and a coral outcropping on the other. The Beanpatch, El Paso,
Fishnet, Davis Ledge, Pleasure,
Margaret's Reef and Alligator Gully are just a
few of the incredible sites we can take you to on your next scuba or
snorkeling vacation in the beautiful Upper Florida Keys.
Dropoffs
On the edge of Islamorada reef areas are the dropoffs. With a spur and
groove system of hard coral ridges and sand gullies leading from shallow
(35-45 feet) to deep (65-95 feet). All of the main reefs; Conch, Davis,
Crocker, Victory and Alligator and the areas in between, have dropoffs. Some
are gradual and some are steep forming mini-walls. Here scuba divers will
encounter large sea turtles, rays and many deep water species as well as
huge barrel sponges and sea fans.
Wreck Diving
Wreck divers will enjoy visiting the Eagle, a 268.5 foot long freighter sunk
as an artificial reef in 1985. Broken into two sections by Hurricane Georges
in 1998, the Eagle lies on her starboard side in 105-115 feet of water and
rises to about 70 feet below the surface. Large Jewfish, Permit, and many
types of reef fish live on the Eagle .