Spanning 1.8 kilometres across Geographe Bay, the heritage listed 152 year old Busselton Jetty is the longest timber-piled jetty in the Southern Hemisphere. It is a West Australian icon and is recognised for its spectacular Underwater Observatory, Jetty Train and myriad of recreational uses.
Walk amongst thousands of marine and freshwater animals including, Asian small-clawed otters, our family of seals, sawfish and tropical reef fish without getting your feet wet.
Make contact with marine life wonders and experience a whole world of amazing rides, shows and attractions at a Gold Coast theme park favourite! Snorkel or SCUBA Dive at Shark Bay!
Free Seal and Dolphin Kisses, we offer in the water dolphin and seal interation and a Marine Magic Presentation at 10am 1pm and on selected periods in the summer school holidays a 4pm presentation.
Adventure Kayaking SA is ensuring adventure is alive in Adelaide. Exploring the sea caves and viewing the friendly seals at Rapid Bay is a day of high adventure.
The Aquarium of Western Australia is Perth's premier underwater aquarium located on the shores of the Indian Ocean just 20 minutes north of Perth city.
Named by Captain Cook in 1776, Julian Rocks in Byron Bay consists of ancient sedimentary rock, remains of a volcanic eruption more than 20 million years ago. It is an extension of Cape Byron separated by water and forms a most unique marine reserve, providing shelter and food for more than 500 tropical and temperate fish species alone!
For those that live and dive in the temperate water of Victoria we are blessed with an abundance of readily accessible sea food - just waiting to be picked up - abalone, crayfish, scallops.
Ask any scuba diver what is the one thing they fear most when diving and they will tell you it is the bends. However, if you get a group of divers together they will no doubt joke that '... we will probably all end up bent sooner or later!'. I myself often joked to friends and family that 'I'll probably just end up bent ...' and like most divers I used to think that it would never happen to me ... but it did. I got bent.
Named by Captain Cook in 1776, Julian Rocks in Byron Bay consists of ancient sedimentary rock, remains of a volcanic eruption more than 20 million years ago. It is an extension of Cape Byron separated by water and forms a most unique marine reserve, providing shelter and food for more than 500 tropical and temperate fish species alone!
For those that live and dive in the temperate water of Victoria we are blessed with an abundance of readily accessible sea food - just waiting to be picked up - abalone, crayfish, scallops.
Ask any scuba diver what is the one thing they fear most when diving and they will tell you it is the bends. However, if you get a group of divers together they will no doubt joke that '... we will probably all end up bent sooner or later!'. I myself often joked to friends and family that 'I'll probably just end up bent ...' and like most divers I used to think that it would never happen to me ... but it did. I got bent.