Red Sea diving holidays are simply unforgettable!
Our Well-established diving centres in various locations in Taba, Nuweiba, Dahab, Sharm el Sheikh, El Gouna, Hurghada, El Quseir, Marsa Alam, Hamata and Port Sudan will gladly provide you with scuba diving information and arrange courses, daily excursions, and live-aboard trips to almost anywhere.
From the gigantic coral outcrops of Taba to the vertical walls of Ras Mohammed, from the wrecks of Sha'ab Abu Nuhas to the lonely offshore islands of The Brothers and Zabargad.
The Red Sea is dubbed âGarden of Allahâ, due to the wealth of underwater pristine life.The Red Sea offers the world's best scuba diving: at only a few hours by plane from Europe, you find superb visibility (up to 50 metres), abundant and diverse fish life (over 1,000 species), countless varieties of hard and soft coral (over 400 species), year-round diving in comfortable water temperatures (18° to 26° Celsius), incredibly diverse underwater topography, spectacular wall and shipwreck destinations, sunny weather and pleasant air temperatures (18° to 40° Celsius), and easy access to diving locations.
Browse through our Red Sea dive sites maps and you will be impressed by the range of diving possibilities. It is no surprise therefore that Red Sea diving is one of the most sought-after holidays. Whether a hopeful wannabe or expert diver, eight year-old kid or sporting grandmother, diving can be experienced and enjoyed by nearly everyone.
The Red Sea is an enormous basin, 2350km (â1400 miles) long by about 350km (â220 miles) broad at its widest point, enclosed to the north by the Gulfs of Suez and Aqaba, and at its southernmost point the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which is hundreds of metres deep. The sea is has a truly unique ecosystem, surrounded as it is, by red-hued bauxite mountains that some believe to be the origin of the name Mare Rostrum â the Red Sea. It was formed 25 million years ago by the separation of the African Continent from the Arabian Peninsula. It is distinguished by the volcanic activity in its shallows, its regular currents, the small tidal range, a salt content of 4.1% (the worldâs seas average 3.2%), and a water temperature that drops only slightly in its depths.The Red Sea has been a commercial highway between the East and the West since classical antiquity. Boats departed loaded with copper, pottery, and cloths to return laden with silks, spices, wood, and even elephants. The cutting of the Suez Canal in 1869 boosted and encouraged a tradition of many centuries of sailing, interspersed with shipwrecks and piratry.
Today the Red Sea is an essential destination for divers the world over, and OCEANROAMERS located in Cairo is the right choice for your holiday choice.
With more than 25 years in the Diving Industry of which 15 Years spent allover The Red Sea...our professional advice will mean the difference between a mediocre holiday and an unfoirgetable underwater, and above experience!
Click here to Check on our Diving Holiday Packages and Trips for 2009-2010



