The boat moors in a small bay and dive begins by entering about 8m of water over a reef of limestone sea grass. Following a rocky wall on one side of the bay, you swim out over a shallow reef and arrive at a wall, the top of which is at around 10m and the bottom begins at 12m and slopes away to around 16m. The wall is made of limestone and large grouper are often seen hiding near the numerous holes and crevasses. Following this wall brings you to the main reef itself, which is a huge protrusion of rock roughly circular in shape.
Following the wall of the main reef in a clockwise direction, you can see octopus and moray eels hiding in holes on the reef and grouper and other reef fish swimming about its walls. Beneath you is a sand or seagrass bottom, where goatfish, bream and mediterranean oysters can be seen. Occasionally giant loggerhead turtles are seen here.
The deepest part of the reef is 18m, so suitable for Open Water divers. For Advanced divers, following the sandy slope at the deepest part of this reef brings you to a second wall which begins at 26m and slopes down to over 50m in places. This is where large predatory fish such as bluefin tuna, amberjack and large grouper are seen.
The shallow parts of the main reef are covered with smaller fish such as wrasse and parrotfish. The dive route continues around the main reef, following up to a depth of around 8m and back to the boat.