This listing of dive sites of False Bay offshore and approaches is part of the regional guide for Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay which is intended to provide the already qualified scuba diver with information which will help to plan dives in the waters of the Cape Peninsula and False Bay, whether as a local resident or a visitor. Information is provided without prejudice, and is not guaranteed accurate or complete. Use it at your own risk. Expand or correct it when you can.
The region described is within a day trip by road from any part of greater Cape Town, in the Western Cape province of South Africa and includes over 300 named dive sites for which positions are recorded, which is a lot for any single destination.
Detailed information on individual dive sites is provided in the sub-articles linked from this list. The information in the site descriptions ranges from superficial to highly detailed, depending on what is known about the site. There may be a map. The bathymetric charts by SURGMAP are updated as and when new survey data is collected, and are mapped by swimming the contours towing a GPS buoy. They are reasonably accurate – within a couple of metres usually – and reliable for what is shown, but seldom complete. It is quite possible that some tall pinnacles have been missed. There is no guarantee that you will not discover one by hitting it with your boat. If you do, please let us know. We are working on it. Bathymetric maps and images provided by Wreckless Marine are produced by state of the art multibeam sonar and are generally accurate to within 1 m in position and depth where position and depth are given, and are otherwise metre-scale accurate representations of the underwater topography. Their colour coding for depth may not be consistent.
In some instances a dive site sub-article will include several sites which are in close proximity, as much of the information will be common to them all. In other cases, usually involving wreck sites, two adjacent sites will each have its own sub-article, but if two or more wrecks lie in the same position, or with substantial overlap, they will be described in the same sub-article.
Other dive sites in the Cape Peninsula and False Bay region can be found at:
The dive sites described in these articles include some which are well known favourites and have been dived frequently and by many divers for decades, and also newly described sites, which may only have been dived a few times, and by a few divers. There are also sites which have been known for years, but seldom dived due to their relative inaccessibility, and a few which are basically not particularly interesting, but have been included in the interests of completeness, as the information is available, and occasionally people want to know what they are like or need to dive there. With a few exceptions, the information provided is based on personal observation at the sites by Wikivoyagers. All photos of marine life and features of interest were taken at the listed site, but seasons and conditions change, and your experience may differ.
Geographical information is provided in as much detail as is available. Sites are geolinked, which allows them to be identified on various internet map systems. Positional accuracy is usually good. The maps provided should be usable, to scale, and accurate, but are not guaranteed either to be correct in all details, or complete. Clicking on the image will open a link to a higher resolution image.
Introduction and some tips on diving the Central False Bay sites.
All the sites in this area are fairly far offshore, and can only be done as boat dives. They are also relatively deep and because of the long boat trip and exposed positions, generally only dived when conditions are expected to be good.
This area is exposed to the same south-westerly swells as the Atlantic coast, but they must travel over a much wider continental shelf, much of which is less than 100 m deep, so there is a significant dissipation of wave energy before it reaches the shoreline.
During summer the strong south-easterly winds have sufficient fetch to produce sea states which are unpleasant and though the wave action may not produce a great deal of surge at the bottom, the surface conditions may be unsuitable for diving, and in winter the north-wester can have a similar effect.
As the area is affected by the winds and wave systems of both winter and summer, there is less seasonal correlation to suitable conditions, and it is simply dived when conditions are good, which is not very often, but may be more often than previously thought, and at some reefs the visibility may be better than inshore.
It is quite common for the surface visibility offshore to be poor, with better visibility at depth, but the reverse effect can also occur. These effects are often associated with a thermocline, which is associated with midsummer to autumn.
Water temperature can differ with depth in summer from 20°C on the surface to 9°C at the bottom at 28 m, sometimes with a distinct thermocline, though usually there is less of a change, and in winter the temperature may be nearly constant at all depths. A dry suit is recommended for any of these dives, but they are also often done in wetsuits.
There is often a surface current associated with wind at the offshore sites, which generally sets to the left of the wind direction.
These sites are not dived as frequently as the inshore reefs, as they are further from the launch sites and therefore take considerably longer to get to. They are also more exposed to the weather from all directions, so the trip is often bumpy. However, as they are relatively deep, and far offshore, the visibility can be very good, and may well be better than inshore areas at any given time, particularly with an onshore wind and swell. Unfortunately this is not reliably predictable.
Local geography: The topography of the reefs differs according to the geology of the area. As a result the character varies considerably.
Seal Island, Whittle Rock and the associated reefs, Anvil Rock and Bellows Rock are granite outcrops, probably all part of the Cape Peninsula pluton, and the exposed granite is heavily weathered in corestone landforms. Steenbras Reef is sedimentary rock, thought to be Tygerberg formation of the Malmesbury series, but looks more like sandstone than shale, East Shoal and York Shoal are also hard sedimentary rock, and Rocky Bank is sandstone, probably of the Table Mountain group. The character of the sedimentary rock reefs is largely determined by dip, the angle of tilt of the strata, and to a lesser degree by strike, the orientation of the strata relative to the cardinal directions.
The sites include:
This is an extensive region of granite reef east of Miller's Point. It can be considered as being four areas, with the main reef at Whittle Rock as the focus, and Off-Whittle Western Reefs, Eastern Reefs and Southern Reefs as a simple way of distinguishing the general area of the sites. Whittle Rock is the shallowest, most varied, and best known sector There are reefs to the east of similar depth, some of which have been dived and recorded, reefs to the west which are deeper on average due to their lower profile, which are unknown, as no-one has reported diving on them, and deeper reefs to the south, of rather varied profile, some of which have been dived and recorded.
:Reef dive. Boat access only. Depth 4 m to more than 36 m.
:This is a large area of granite corestone reefs surrounded by sand. The topography varies considerably as it is such a large area. The top of the shallowest pinnacle is at about 4 m depth, and the surrounding sand is around 30 to 40 m.
:Shards Cluster 📍: S34°14.704' E18°33.763'
:East Ridge North Pinnacle 📍S34°14.742' E18°33.843'
:North-west corner pinnacles 📍: S34°14.750' E18°33.482'
:Whittle Rock North-west Pinnacle 📍: S34°14.765’ E018°33.622’
:Euphrates anchors 📍: S34°14.776' E18°33.801' and S34°14.783' E18°33.795'
:Peter's Ridge 📍: S34°14.800' E18°33.160'
:Bruce's Reef 📍: S34°14.824' E18°33.310'
:Criss-cross Cracks 📍: S34°14.830' E18°33.879' (East Ridge)
:Whittle Rock West Pinnacle 📍: S34°14.844’ E018°33.682’
:Whittle Rock 📍: S34°14.846’ E018°33.714’ — (Shallowest pinnacle)
:Whaleback Pinnacles 📍: S34°14.850' E18°33.508'
:Whittle Rock Western Reef Pinnacle 📍: S34°14.856' E18°33.269' (inside the MPA)
:Whittle Rock South-east Pinnacle 📍: S34°14.887’ E018°33.775’
:Whaleback Rock 📍: S34°14.900' E18°33.635'
:Far Southwest Pinnacle 📍: S34°14.881' E18°33.241'
:South-east pinnacle chain (Neptune's bath plug) 📍: S34°14.917’ E018°33.753’
:Flash pinnacle 📍: S34°14.931' E18°33.718'
:M&M Tower (the Spark plug) 📍: S34°14.043’ E018°33.549’
:Whittle Cave Complex 📍: S34°14.943’ E018°33.616’
:Bus Stop (the Gnarly wall) 📍: S34°14.945' E18°33.573'
:Wreckless Rock and the Little Labyrinth 📍: S34°14.949' E18°33.707'
:Table Top pinnacle 📍: S34°14.968' E18°33.668'
:Mossie's Cave and pinnacle 📍: S34°14.972' E18°33.420' (South-western pinnacles)
:Grant's Spike 📍: S34°14.991' E18°33.450' (South-western pinnacles)
:Grant's Wall 📍: S34°15.003' E18°33.445' (South-western pinnacles)
:Labyrinth South Pinnacle 📍: S34°15.048' E18°33.606'
:Deep South Pinnacle 📍: S34°15.103' E18°33.603'
:Reef dive. Boat access only. Depth 3 m to more than 20 m.
:The reef is Peninsula granite corestone.
:Anvil Rock 3 m pinnacle 📍: S34°22.218' E18°31.090'
:Anvil Rock caves 📍: S36°22.244' E18°31.068' — Approx 20 m deep, area of nice caves/swim-throughs:
:Reef dive. Boat access only. Bellows Rock breaks the surface. Depth in the immediate vicinity can exceed 40 m. The south wall may be the highest continuous face wall dive in the Cape Peninsula, and is largely unexplored. The east side of Bellows Rock is the site of the wreck of the SS Lusitania.
:The reef is Peninsula granite corestone.
:Lusi Pinnacle 📍: S34°23.419’ E018°29.485’
:Wreckless Reef 📍: S34°23.33’ E018°29.39’
:Reef dive. Boat access only. Depth 22 m to more than 50 m on the south side.
:The reef is said to be Table Mountain sandstone. It is a beautiful site with bright colourful reef invertebrates, but is seldom dived due to the distance from the nearest launch site. Visibility is often better than inside the bay.
:36 m Pablo's steps drop 📍: S34°25.160’ E018°35.571’
:Reef dive. Boat access only. Depth varies considerably from fairly shallow inshore to more than 100 m
:The reef is said to be Table Mountain sandstone. Deeper areas may be Tygerberg series. Little information is available. The ridge is shown on the bathymetric charts as extending south-west from Cape Hangklip for several kilometers, and is known to affect the water circulation in False Bay.
There are a number of wrecks in central False Bay. Only the ones that are identified and dived are listed here. Exploration of previously undived wrecks occurs sporadically and the list is sure to increase over time. Most of these wrecks are relatively deep, and are all too far offshore to dive from the shore. Some of them are considered among the best dive sites of the Cape Town area, at least partly because of the difficult access and rarity value.
Local geography: The "Lusitania" is on a site where the granite reef is ruggedly spectacular and the boat trip provides a magnificent view of Cape Point. The General Botha, Bloemfontein and Fleur are on the flat sand bottom of the bay and in these cases, only the wreck is of much interest. The Godetia is relatively shallow and on a mixed sand and sedimentary rock reef bottom.
The sites include:
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