French Polynesia Scuba Diving
Including Tahiti, Bora Bora, Moorea and Rangiroa
An Undercurrent Insider Report on French Polynesia Diving
The Consumer Newsletter for Serious Divers Since 1975
Overview of French Polynesia
Tahiti and Moorea are everyone's dream of the South Pacific, and despite their pricey resorts and food, these French-speaking islands are now attracting North American divers to join in the plentiful reef shark action. There are a range of accommodations and restaurants, some reef diving, and plenty of great scenery. The once- snotty French attitude toward others has lessened considerably.
French Polynesia Seasonal Dive Planner
Rangiroa is diveable year-round, with water temperatures of 79°­83°
F. There are really only three seasons of interest to the traveling diver: the
manta ray season, from early September through mid-October; the hammerhead shark
season, January and February; and the rest of the year, during which an assortment
of fish may be seen, with the exception of the two just mentioned (although during
May, I did see one manta ray, and a hungry hammerhead stalking it). If you are
particular about land weather conditions, you should know that the rainy season
is November through December, and the windy season is July and August.
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French Polynesia Feature Articles and Reader Reports
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Editor's Book Picks for French Polynesia
Including Tahiti, Bora Bora, Moorea and Rangiroa
The books below are my favorites about diving in this part of the
world All books are available at a significant discount from Amazon.com;
just follow the links. -- BD
Reef
Fish Identification: Tropical Pacific: by Gerald Allen, Rodger Steene, Paul Humann, & Ned DeLoach. At last, here's a comprehensive fish ID guide covering the reefs of the Pacific and Indian Oceans. The generous 500-page text, displaying 2,500 underwater photographs of 2,000 species, identifies the myriad fishes that inhabit the warm tropical seas between Thailand and Tahiti. The concise text accompanying each species portrait includes the fish's common, scientific and family names, size, description, visually distinctive features, preferred habitat, typical behavior, depth range, and geographical distribution. This is an essential book for every diver traveling westward. 6x9 inches. Order
through us, get Amazon.com's best price and a good hunk of the profit will be donated to the Coral Reef Alliance.
If you're headed south out of San Diego, Fishes of the Tropical Eastern Pacific
by Gerald R. Allen, D. Ross Robertson, is the fish guide you need.
With 324 photo-packed pages covering 680 species of sharks and sailfish,
wrasses and razorfish, pipefish and pearlfish, this is the ultimate ID book for
the Baja, Costa Rica, the Galapagos, and the Sea of Cortez. Sponsored by the Smithsonian
Institute Drs. Gerald Allen and Ross Robertson took years to produce this definitive
volume that describes and comments on the remarkable behavior of these critters.
Hardbound, $85.
Coral Reef Animals of the Indo-Pacific
by Terrence M. Gosliner, David W. Behrens, Gary C. Williams.
At last -- a just-published, complete guide to help you identify
the uncountable variety of weird critters you'll see on any Indo-Pacific dive,
complete with full-color photo of 1,100 species. About Coral Reef Animals of the
Indo-Pacific, Chris Newbert says, "This invaluable new book makes identification
easy and enjoyable." There are scores of flatworms, nudibranchs galore, bumblebee
shrimp, painted crayfish, pompom crabs, side-gilled sea slugs, and endless corals.
Marine biologists Terry Gosliner, David Behrens, and Gary Williams cover the reefs
from the Solomons to Sipadan, from the Maldives to Maui, from Palau to Papua New
Guinea. They provide good notes to help you find and identify each critter. Indispensable
for any Indo-Pacific trip. Paperback,
8x110, 314 pages, $45.00.
Indo-Pacific Coral Reef Field Guide
by Gerald R. Allen, Roger Steene.
I was trying to pack
light for a change. Surely the Solomon Sea would have good identification books
aboard. Not so; the only book on the boat belonged to a fellow passenger. It was
one that I had not seen before, the Indo-Pacific Coral Reef Field Guide,
by two of the best fish guys around, Gerry Allen and Roger Steene. The problem
was this fellow passenger kept it in a plastic baggie most of the trip and I had
to beg to see it. Great book, good traveling size, and it covers everything from
fish, shells, marine plants, mammals, corals, and invertebrates to sea birds and
more. Now I've got my own, and it won't do you any good to beg me to borrow it.
This is one of two books that I will not travel to the Pacific without. Good for
travel to the Red Sea, East Africa, Seychelles, Mauritius, Maldives, Andaman Sea,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Australia, Micronesia, Polynesia, and Hawaii,
it has 1,800 color illustrations in a 6x8 1/2 paperback format with 378 pages.
$39.95.
Sea of Cortez Marine Animals
by
Daniell W. Gotshall, Daniel Gotshal.
It's just the book
you'll need to identify critters anywhere along Mexico's Pacific Coast, all the
way to Panama. Any other ID book just doesn't cover the creatures here. Dan Gotshall,
a marine biologist with 34 years research experience, has more the 250 photos
of fish, corals, nudibranchs, lobsters, sea stars and other critters endemic to
these waters. For each animal there are tips how to identify and where to spot
it. Paper, 110 pages, $20.95.
You might find some other books of interest in our Editor's
Book Picks section.
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