Drift & Reef & Scenic Dive sites
We are lucky in Swanage to have some really nice drift dives, on spring
tides you can get water in the 12-16 meter range, ideal for a second dive, moving at up
to 3.5 kts. Its the nearest to flying underwater you can get, the closer you
get you're nose to the bottom the faster is seems you're moving. It's very
important that you use a red SMB and that it is used from the start of a drift
dive. It puts years on my life waiting to see if the diver will come up near
where I think he should be. Yellow SMBs are poor in the suns reflection! Round
red and white ones should be sent back to Italy with a hole in them!
The best site is under the Light house on the mussel beds an area of no
mussels! They used to extend out 300-400m from the cliffs but some years ago
now they decided to legged it, well, they would have if mussels had legs!. You
can drift on the ebb or flood as there is no obstructions going east to west.
The water will gradually get deeper at the end of any drift in this area. On
the ebb put your divers in here, X marks the spot any closer in and your divers
will come to a slow but certain stop close to the cliffs. Average depth is
approx 15-17m.
2 hours after high water Kyarra you can dive the Peveril Ledge just to
the east of Swanage, a nice area with gullies 2-15m deep. You should try and
keep inside the buoy as it can shelve away to 27m close to the east. There is a
deep pit 300m to the SE of the buoy (The welland its 38m deep not a place to visit
on a second dive. However some experienced divers have done the dive, which
they claimed was very enjoyable. This site is not divable when spring ebbs away
.
If the weather is from the SW it may not be possible to dive the above
sites, you can always try Old Harry 2 miles from Swanage. Old Harry was used as
target practice by Spitfire's in the World War II. 20mm shells are regularly
picked up. Average depth approx 15m, but can be deeper if requested.
Just to the SE of the Peveril Buoy is a very deep hole 38m avoid this on
ebb tides. We have only just started diving here, in a bid to find new sites we
tried to drift to the east of the hole. The drift is really good, depth ranging
from 20-30m with lots of rock formations, fish and changes of bottom. Only dive
here on flood tides and as a first dive remember the hole is 38m deep!
We have a small fishing boat called the ‘Fleur de Lys’ situated at the
north side of Swanage bay. To find it take a line from the corner of Ballard
point to Swanage pier. 300 metres from the cliff you will find the shot line
with two buoys, one black, one orange. It is only a small wreck 45-50’ long and
stands in 13 metres of water. It can be dived at any state of the tide and is
ideal for novice/open water divers. Look both in and under the wreck as it is
surprising how much life there is on it, you can then take a drift but you must
send up an SMB.H We have a small fishing boat called the ‘Fleur de Lys’
situated at the north side of Swanage bay. To find it take a line from the corner
of Ballard point to Swanage pier. 300 metres from the cliff you will find the
shot line with two buoys, one black, one orange. It is only a small wreck
45-50’ long and stands in 13 metres of water. It can be dived at any state of
the tide and is ideal for novice/open water divers. Look both in and under the
wreck as it is surprising how much life there is on it, you can then take a
drift but you must send up an SMB.
The Tanville ledge is a shallow 10m) reef suitable for novice divers as
there is very little tide and is sheltered from all winds except from the east.
The reef is approx 2m high, plenty of life including crabs, lobsters and fish.
The Peveril Ledge extends outwards from the end of Peveril point. It is
made up of large rocks and boulders and can be quite colourful. Depths vary
between 14 and 20 metres due to the rocky bottom that has eroded to create
gullies, look for the cuttlefish, wrasse, crabs, anenomes & plaice.
The Tanville Ledge is a rocky reef, again quite colourful. It is situated
within Swanage bay. The depth is approximately 10 metres.
Both dives are suitable for new and novice divers as well as the more
experienced diver.


