Dive 2 Oceans in One Day

1 day
Full Day
About this activity
With forsook Caribbean islands to the north and the wild Pacific to the south, Panama might, from a diver's viewpoint, have everything. It's not beyond the worlds of possibility to dive with whale sharks in the morning and cruise Caribbean reefs in the afternoon. The numbers say a lot: there are more than 1120 kilometers/700 miles of Pacific coastline and more than 640 kilometers/400 miles front the Caribbean. There are more than 10,000 plant species and in excess of 900 sorts of fledglings found inside its 75,991 square kilometers/29,340 square miles. About 30 percent of this region - around two million hectares/five million (territories of area around 200 feet X 220 feet) - is forbided by parks, stores and safe spots. Some of these parks are immediately arrived at; there are five inside two hours of Panama City. Also some, for example, the rainforest of La Amistad International Park, where panthers, ocelots, margays, pumas, and jaguarondis wander, are very nearly (not able to be utilized or caught on). Panama’s biodiversity is staggering. It hosts one of the most complex ecosystems on earth: primal rainforests, untouched beaches and high cloud-shrouded mountains. That's all in addition to the Pacific and Caribbean marine environments, which are, naturally, the highlight for visiting divers. Panama’s waters support myriad tropical fish, humpback whales, whale sharks, black-tip and white-tip and tiger sharks. Five sea turtle species call Panama home. As one of the few places in the world, Panama allows you to experience both oceans in a single day. First you will be diving with schools of jacks, sting rays, moray eels and lobsters in the Pacific Ocean, then move to the Atlantic Ocean for clear water filled with coral reef, sandy bottom and small colorful fish.
Features
Tourism
85% Adrenaline
85% Aquatic
80% Sport
80%
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