- Advanced Open Water Required Requirement Advanced Open Water Required
The Little Gardens and Indigo Ledges are photogenic and frequently visited by large pelagic animals, making them two of our favorite deep water sites.
The Little Gardens and Indigo Ledges are photogenic and frequently visited by large pelagic animals, making them two of our favorite deep water sites.
The Y-73 is one of our most photogenic wrecks, and is well worth the trip. There is a large assortment of tugboats to explore, too!
The Gardens Reef is our deepest, longest and most colorful limestone ledge systems, perfect for drift diving when conditions allow.
The Steel Deckhouse is a fantastic wreck offering penetration opportunities for properly equipped and certified wreck divers.
Both the Researcher and the Steel Deckhouse offer swim-through or penetration opportunities for those with proper certification.
An extremely photogenic diving trip, both sites provide ample opportunities to capture incredible photos.
The Subway Cars is one of the most haunting wreckscapes in the Atlantic, and the Comanche inspires a feeling of awe you won’t soon forget.
The Comanche Wreck Scuttled in 1992, the Comanche had an exciting career on the Great Lakes as a former icebreaker.
This somewhat patchy limestone ledge system was carved during the last Ice Age by the old Cooper River system, when sea levels were much lower.
The natural Anchor Wreck, an incredible 300-foot freighter of unknown origin, lies in 105 feet of water.
Charleston’s rivers are world-famous for the archaeological treasures hidden in their murky depths.