Red Rocks
Typical of the diving in this area, Red Rocks is a sloping reef leading to a sloping sandy bottom with endless nooks and crannies to explore. This coral reef is incredible! The gulleys between the rock and coral slopes are worth investigating, as the many overhangs harbour various interesting creatures. It's a densely packed sloping soft coral reef with massive barrel sponges, tube sponges, sea fans, sea whips, sea rods, sea fingers, sea plumes, and a variety of hard corals in between. Giant Caribbean spiny lobsters and nurse sharks are commonly found while exploring the deep overhangs in sandy gullies along the route.
You can frequently see moray eels, octopus, barracudas, triggerfish, burrfish, porcupinefish, and hawksbill turtles at Red Rocks, which has a fantastic diversity of marine life. In 70 feet of water, a gradually sloping reef leads down to a sandy seabed where southern stingrays hide and brown garden eels bob.
- Depth: 35 – 70ft (11 – 21m)
- Location: Red Rocks, Antigua And Barbuda