Diving the Solomons
Contributed by Zoe
An excited crew of Toowoomba SCUBA Divers departed from a hot and steamy Honiara
across Guadalcanals' Iron Bottom Sound and headed over to a group of Islands
called the Florida Islands where we had arranged to spend five days diving with
Neil Yates who operates Solomon Islands Diving in Tulagi.
This was Scuba Zones, Toowoomba's leading
dive shop, third trip to the beautiful Solomon Islands. As well as teaching
scuba diving we also specialize in club trips to all parts of the Queensland
and NSW coasts as well as exciting overseas destinations to our South Pacific
neighbours and into parts of Asia.
Our first dive in the Solomons was to the Twin Tunnels, which is on top of
a large pinnacle of magnificent reef in deep water. The Twin Tunnels are two
ancient vertical shafts quite close together on the top of a submerged mountain.
We
descended the mooring line which is attached to the reef at about 12 metres
near the entrance of the Twin Tunnels. We dropped down through the further most
tunnel and made our way into the second tunnel which ended in a cave full of
fish and other marine creatures at 34 meters. From the cave we made our way
out onto a sheer wall, where, in a slight current we found a good vantage point
to hold on to the reef and were enthralled by the fish life. Thousands of fish
swarmed around as we peered over the abyss. We stayed there for about 20 to
30 minutes watching the live stage of large tuna, white tipped reef sharks and
many scatterings of small fish.
If you are anything like me and really into wreck diving then Tulagi in the
Florida Islands is the place to go. In our five days at Tulagi we went on two
truly awesome wreck dives. These wrecks are fairly deep and usually involve
decompression diving. After a warm up decompression dive on the American fleet
oiler, the USS Kanawha which sits upright at about 50 meters we decided to take
on the American destroyer USS Aaron Ward which was sunk in 1943 by a group of
Japanese bombers and sits upright on the sandy bottom in a depth of 70 metres.
Because of the depth, we assembled our gear to include a second tank and redundant
regulator set which was attached to our BCDs to provide us with a bigger safety
margin for the planned 20 minute dive and the multi-staged decompression during
our ascent.
We
descended rapidly down the mooring line for 50 metres before we reached the
highest point over the bridge of the ship. We drifted over the bridge to the
top of the two forward 5 inch guns on the severely damaged bow. Gradually we
made our way toward the port midship area where our guide pointed out the torpedo
tubes, rear funnel, searchlight and then it was back to the bridge and the long
ascent.
After Tulagi, we went on to Gizo for another week of sensational diving. Gizo
is the capital of the Western Province of the Solomon Islands. What was once
an area that was notorious for headhunting is now a major centre for tourism
which mostly caters for divers.
Near
Gizo, there are several world class dive sites on richly coloured reefs and
walls. One of our dives was on a wall close to Kennedy Island. This was where
the young Lieutenant John F. Kennedy and the surviving crewmembers swam ashore
after their boat PT109 was run down at night by the Japanese destroyer Amagiri.
Our local dive guide from Solomon Watersports took us to yet another stunning
dive which was seven kilometers north of Gizo to the wreck of the Japanese transport
Toa Maru. Early in 1943, the Toa Maru was sunk by American dive bombers and
their fighter escort while on route to Kolombangara Island near Gizo. The ship
was carrying cargo which included fuel, timber, trucks, bags of cement, bottles
of Saki (a common cargo), steel girders, ammunition and a two man tank.
This is beautiful dive which can start at the stern at 30 metres working your
way towards the bow which lies on the sand. The ship is about 140 metres long
and lies on the starboard side in a sheltered bay.
After
recent unrest the arrival of the Regional Aid Mission to the Solomon Islands
(RAMSI) which includes Australian Federal Police and a military presence from
several countries, a feeling of calm has returned to one of the most beautiful
archipelagoes our world has to offer. Recreational and technical divers are
returning in significant numbers to an area that has been rated by many as the
top diving destination in the world. It is impossible to rank any of the dive
sites in the Solomon Islands as better than the other as they are all world
class. Each of the dive destinations we visited has its own pristine coral reefs,
incredible deep walls, prolific marine life, staggering visibility and WW2 ships
and aircraft wrecks.
Its beauty, remoteness, friendly people and jungle clad islands will certainly
have us going back for more adventures. It is one of those dive destinations
that once visited will never be forgotten.
Zoƫ Crowther
Tour Guide - Ken Jones Scuba Zone