The dive site Zigzag Reef is an offshore rocky reef in the Castle Rocks restricted zone within the Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area on the False Bay coast of the Cape Peninsula, near Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa.
See also: Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay#Understand
This is one of the deeper reef sites within a short distance from the popular False Bay launching areas. It is compact with some high relief, but there are no shallow areas.
Zigzag Reef π: S34Β°14.362' E018Β°29.275'. (20Β m pinnacle) This site is almost entirely inside the Castle Rocks Restricted Zone of the Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area (2004). A permit is required.
The name "Zigzag" was given by Pisces Divers. The site was first surveyed in detail in August 2020, but was already shown as a patch of reef on the Council for Geoscience side-scan sonar survey made some years previously (dotted red outlines on the maps).
Maximum depth is about 32Β m, and the top of the pinnacle is about 20Β m. (Average depth of a dive is likely to be about 25Β m.)
Visibility is likely to be similar to the other reefs in the Miller's Point area, but may be better due to less surge at depth, but darker, due to greater average depth.
The reef is quite compact, being roughly 70Β m from east to west, and 50Β m from north to south, with an irregular perimeter and surrounded by fairly flat sand and shelly detritus. The group of tall pinnacles is to the south-west of the reef, and is made up of a tight group of massive tall outcrops surrounded to the north and east by lower boulders and outcrops.
Geology: Pre-Cambrian Granite of the Peninsula pluton, surrounded by mostly fine quartzitic sand and mounds of shell fragments.
The site is exposed to swell from the south and south-east, and to wind chop from the north-west, so should be dived in westerly swells, and preferably in moderate winds.
The site will generally be at its best in winter but there are also occasional opportunities at other times of the year.
See also: Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay#Boat dives
Access is by boat. The site is about 1.9Β km from Miller's Point slipway, or 9.2Β km from Simon's Town jetty.
See also: Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay#The marine ecology
There will be more diversity in areas of high profile or overhangs. The site has a limited depth range, so there are no shallow depth zones.
<gallery mode=packed> File:Basket star at Zigzag Reef P8220300.jpg|Basket star File:Shell detritus at the edge of Zigzag Reef P8220328.jpg|Shell detritus at the edge of Zigzag Reef File:Encrusting sponge and Mauve sea cucumbers at Zigzag Reef P8220315.jpg|Encrusting sponge and Mauve sea cucumbers File:Whelk with egg mass at Zigzag Reef P8220322.jpg|Whelk with egg mass File:Orange false coral at Zigzag Reef P8220369.jpg|Orange false coral File:Sinuous sea fan and elegant feather stars at Zigzag Reef P8220421.jpg|Sinuous sea fan and elegant feather stars File:Basket star on palmate sea fan at Zigzag reef P8220423.jpg|Basket star on palmate sea fan </gallery>It is a small site and can be explored fairly comprehensively on one dive. Start deep and spiral upwards on the pinnacle towards the end of the dive.
See also: Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay#Stay safe
The site is in a fairly high traffic zone for fishing boats at times.
The site is too deep for entry level divers. The ability to deploy a DSMB is recommended in case you cannot get back to the shotline to surface, as there van be fairly heavy boat traffic when the fishing is good.
See also: Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay#Equipment
It will usually be quite dark so a light is recommended. The depth range makes nitrox worth considering to extend no-stop time or reduce decompression time.
Back to the Alphabetical list of sites, or list of dive sites in the Castle Rocks area
Other regional dive sites: