Padang Bai is Bali's first purpose built Scuba Training Dive Resort. Set on the beach of a picturesque village with direct access to more than 40 of the best dive sites, the resort offers quality accommodation in 22 rooms,with the Buddha café, Restaurant & swim up bar, dive training pool,air-conditioned classroom,dive retail shop, and a highly-trained staff. This allows us to offer you the best possible relaxation, diver training or scuba refresher course during your Dive vacation.
Absolute Scuba Bali
Monday, May 16, 2011
Tulamben
Today we're off to Tulamben for 2x dives.
The history of this site is quite interesting;
The U.S.A.T. LIBERTY, a 120 metre long shipwreck, is the remains of a US World War II freighter, torpedoed on January 11, 1942 at 4:15 a.m. by a Japanese submarine, while crossing the Lombok Strait carrying material (rubber and railway parts) from Australia to the Philippines. Two US destroyers hitched up to the ship and tried to tow it to the port of Singaraja. The damage was immense, she was taking too much water and her crew ran the vessel up onto the beach of Tulamben 70km away from the nearest safe harbor.
For 21 years she stayed there, the people of Tulamben secured all items of any value, even parts of the deck. In 1963 the Liberty was pushed to her present location by the fatal eruption of the volcano Gunung Agung. During this process the hull broke into two pieces. Now she is laying only 30 metres from the Tulamben beach on a sandy slope 90° on her side, parallel to the shore. The deck side faces the ocean.
The Liberty ship wreck is the most visited diving site of Bali at a perfect depth for scuba diving ranging from 2.5 metres down to 29 metres. There are a couple of impressive swim throughs, but one must be cautious because the structure of the wreck is unstable, every year parts collapse. An amazing growth of encrusting animals cover the wreck, marine biologists estimate that about 400 different species of reef fish live on the Liberty. It is not usual for this site to be visited by big pelagic species. It also has its own resident Barracuda, we call him Brian!
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