|
 A
largely unexplored area, the Burma Banks are a series of large underwater
flat-topped sea-mounts that lie approximately 180 kilometres (100 nautical
miles) northwest of the Similan Islands. The Banks' surrounding waters
are over 350 metres deep and large areas rise to within the depth limits
of recreational scuba diving. The name derives from the fact that this
1,500 square kilometre area lies within the exclusive economic zone of
Burma. The Banks offer some exciting, stimulating diving, but since this
is true open-ocean diving, they certainly are not for everyone.
These mountains rise very gradually from the depths and are covered with
hard coral growth and large patches of sand. Although the huge plate corals
(some of these 'plates' could seat all the knights of the round table
easily) are in many areas fantastic, that is not the reason for travelling
so far out to sea. After all, the Similans and the islands north of them
boast of some of the loveliest coral in the world. No, the reason for
diving all the way out here is for what the Similans don't have; BIG ANIMALS-and
that means big sharks as well.
Close shark encounters are virtually guarantied here. The most common
type of shark is the nurse shark that grows to over 3 metres in length.
Where else can you go to see tens of large nurse sharks freely swimming
nose-to-tail over the top of the reef on every dive, which have so little
fear of divers that they sometimes accidentally swim harmlessly (for both
parties) into us? They are truly the clowns of the banks as it is difficult
not to laugh at their frenzied movements. Not enough? How about large
silver tip sharks that when attracted by bait swim within range of your
Nikon's 15 mm lens?
 If
the nurse sharks are the clowns, then the silver tips are the stars. Reaching
an impressive length of two to three metres, these sharks -- often compared
to the Galapagos shark and easily identified by the white trailing edge
on their pelvic, dorsal, and caudal fins -- are full-bodied, serious predators.
Although cautious by nature, and certainly not aggressive towards divers,
these sharks are spotted on virtually every dive. And these days, all
three of the diving companies that visit the banks feature a controlled
shark attraction by placing fish in the water down current from all divers,
baiting the sharks in for an up-close, personal look.
back
to top
These attractions offer the opportunity to photograph these silver tips
and nurse sharks, with the occasional tiger or hammer head making an appearance.
In addition, you'll see larger reef fish than in other areas of Thailand,
such as huge sweet lips and the occasional grouper. The most common diving
technique at the banks are large drift dives over the mountain flats.
Currents can be quite tricky here-sometimes changing in direction 90º
to 180º very quickly - and very fast. It is common to drift over one kilometre
on certain dives - assuming the current is taking you in the direction
you originally planned! All dive operators that dive at the banks are
strict with safety rules. Although these vary slightly from operator to
operator, it is roughly agreed that all divers must dive with a 'safety
sausage', a whistle or other signalling device, and that either the dingy
or the larger vessel should follow the diver's bubbles on the surface.
Finally, it is a must that buddy pairs stay together at all times, and
in fact some operators insist that divers dive in a group of at least
four. To become separated from your dive boat this far from land would
surely be a disaster.
|
At a Glance: The Burma Banks
|
|
Reef type:
|
Underwater banks, fairly flat profile
|
|
Access:
|
Liveaboard boat from Phuket or Ranong
|
|
Visibility:
|
Variable from 10-50 metres
|
|
Current:
|
Variable, often strong
|
|
Coral:
|
Some good spots, but that's not why we're here
|
|
Fish:
|
Fantastic, very exciting; everything
|
|
Highlights:
|
Silvertip sharks, nurse sharks, exciting currents, really wild
diving. Shark feeding
|
Source: ©Siam Dive n' Sail
121/9 Patak Road, Mu 4, Karon, 83100 Phuket, Thailand
Tel: 66-76/330-967 Fax: 66-76/330-990
E-mail:
info@siamdivers.com
back
to top
|