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Text
and Photography by Rick Frehsee
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Bahamas walls offer breathtaking vistas, populated by colorful marine life. Whether inland or submerged in the sea, the incredible blue holes are the result of centuries of freshwater dissolving and redepositing limestone.
Wall
Diving in The Bahamas The
Great Lucaya or Grand Bahama Wall
Southwest
Wall The
Andros Wall
The "greatest of all Bahama walls" is found at Andros, the largest island in the chain. The Andros Wall offers uncountable sites that display mountains and canyons of every shape and size. The Bimini Wall From the Biminis southward is a nearly continuous wall facing the Gulf Stream. The North Bimini Wall is just south of the entrance channel to North Bimini and begins in 120 feet of water. This is generally a drift dive for very experienced divers. To the south are numerous walls, such as those at South Cat Cay Wall, Victory Cays Drop-off and Riding Rock Wall-all of these are fish filled spectacles that begin in 30 to 90 feet. The Exuma Wall Directly off Highbourne Cay is a drop-off that faces the Exuma Sound. This is a vertical wall, 75 feet deep.
A continuous drop-off runs from the southwest tip of Chub Cay to Whale Cay, in the Berry Islands. These sites offer a variety of wall formations. Riding
Rock Wall
Dozens of popular wall sites are located along the western coast to the southern tip of San Salvador Island in the south-central Bahamas.
Conception
Island Wall
Here is one of the most dramatic and colorful walls in all of the archipelago. The wall begins in 45 to 60 feet of water, its entire length decorated with spectacular sponge and coral formations. Diving the Blue Holes Blue holes that are accessible to divers are sprinkled throughout The Bahamas. Some are cavern diving experiences and others are mile-long labyrinths, off limits to sport divers. Access to blue hole diving varies; some are controlled and monitored by the Bahamas National Trust. Entry to others is policed by local organizations. Although some unique organisms are found in blue holes, the attraction here is chiefly geological's experiencing a spectacular visual realm seldom seen by other human beings. The greatest concentration of blue holes is found both inland and in the shallows of Andros Island, where more than 50 blue holes have been recorded. Other concentrations of blue holes occur on and off Grand Bahama Island (Ben's Cavern, for example), the Exumas and Eleuthera. One of the world's deepest blue holes is located off Long Island and is surrounded on three sides by land. A few well-known blue holes are located off Nassau, the Biminis and scattered throughout the Out Islands. |
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