Shark Point
DEPTH: 25-8O FEET (8-24 M)
LEVEL: ADVANCED
The rocky southern tip of Peter
Island continues underwater as a ridge rising above
a fairly nondescript bottom. The area is an undersea
crossroads with schools of pelagics sweeping through,
mingling with the schools of residents, and then zooming
off again. Visibility can be exception at over 100
feet due to the site's location in the open ocean.
The mooring places the boat over
a shallow, fire coral-blanketed saddle on the ridge.
There is a small cave just to your left as you come
over the saddle. As you turn right and follow the ridge
away from shore, a condo-sized rock abuts a matching-sized
dog leg dent in the ridge. Here you can find shelter
from the current and if it is particularly strong,
this is a great vantage point to watch the schools
of black durgon, horse-eye jacks and the occasional
marauding barracuda cavorting above the current-swept
craggy edge of the ridge. Continuing out along the
base of the ridge there is a small tunnel that cuts
through it and into a canyon formed by a second parallel
ridge. Queen angelfish, whitespotted filefish, groupers
and all the different species of butterflyfishes frequent
this area.
Deeper, there is a series of mini-ridges.
We once spotted a large jewfish and a sizable nurse
shark resting on top of one another in a low archway
here. This is an exciting place to scan the blue water
horizon as you never know what may pass by; turtles,
large jacks and even the odd shark have been sighted
here. Head back to the boat, hugging the lee side of
the ridge to avoid any current.
Virtually a second separate dive
site is the maze-like system of alleyways and caves
that pockmark the shoreline in less than 20 feet (6
m) of water. There is one cave with five separate entrances.
But diving here requires flat calm conditions and advanced
buoyancy skills.
Caution. This is an advanced
dive because it is exposed to the prevailing swells
and sometimes has strong current. Snorkeling should
only be attempted in the shallows on calm days
by experienced snorkelers.
Text extracted from Diving
British Virgin Islands
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