Swimming to left of the thin rock, you find a channel 5m deep that allows you outside of the bay and onto a gently sloping reef wall. You swim straight out and follow this wall downwards. At around 10m, you see some huge boulders around which grouper and bream are often seen and continuing further, the wall begins to get steeper. At 18m, Open Water divers will turn right and follow the reef. Advanced divers continue deeper, up to 30m, where they seen brilliant white patches of sulphurous compounds leeching out from the rocks. Very large groupers of up to 2 metres have been seen on this part of the reef.
Following the wall to the right, sand and sea grass are encountered and ascending back up to 16m brings you to a second reef wall. Again, look out for grouper, octopus and morays hiding in and near holes in the wall. Following this second wall, the base of which is 18m and extends way up to the surface, the seafloor below you is sand at 18m until it suddenly drops away to over 50m. This dropoff is great for peeking over to see large predators like tuna, amberjack and dentex. A little further along the wall at 18m is a small cave, only about 3m deep, but spiny and flatheaded lobster can often been found by looking inside the holes in the walls.
When the first diver in your group reaches 100bar, it's time to turn around. You go up to 10m and follow the wall back to the shallow reef where the boat is anchored.