Bunga Beach | | | |

Location: Miri
About 1 hour drive from Miri and situated near Kampung
Bungai in Bekenu is Bungai Beach. Bungai Beach is popular with
beachgoers who appreciate its pristine beach, clear waters, and the
beauty of the untouched surroundings. Its relatively secluded and a
great spot to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city.
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Diving in Miri-Sibuti Coral Reef National Park | |
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Location: Miri
Miri is a popular dive destination due to an abundance of
pristine patch reefs. The Miri-Sibuti Coral Reef National Park, lying at
depths ranging from 7 to 30 metres has an average visibility of 10 to
30 metres. There are also some interesting wreck dives. The nearest dive
site is a mere ten minutes from the marina bay jetty. One can land in
Miri and be in water two hours later. Local dive operators offer certification programme as well.
Water temperature at the start of the season is normally 26 to
27ºC but can be as low as 23ºC at depth, as the NE monsoon still brings
in cold water from the northern Pacific. By May the water temperature
reaches the more normal 29 to 30ºC. The best time to dive is from late March through November each year.
The diversity and accessibility of corals and other marine life on the reefs is amongst the best in the region.
Here are some of them:
Eve's Garden (15 minutes from jetty)This
shallow reef just 7 to 2 meters deep is carpetted with soft corals such
as leather corals, elepant’s ear sponges and sees whips. Giant
anemones and clown fishes are all over the reef. This reef is also
characterised by the schooling yellow tail fusiliers and angelfishes.
Anemone Garden (30 minutes from jetty)In
terms of flora and fauna composition, this is one of the most
interesting reefs with depth ranging from 0 to 10 meters. Both hard and
soft corals thrive in splendid diversity. Anemones and their symbiotic
clown fishes are found in abundance. Bubble corals, staghorn corals
and the colorful Dendronepthya soft corals. Other surprises are feather
stars, giant clams and nudibranchs, with schooling yellow tails also
found in exaggerated numbers.
Belais Reef (30 minutes from jetty)This
site is like an open zoo in the sea; the pelagic - sea fans - large
gorgonian fans of over 4 metre span, red, orange, white whip corals,
yellow coral trees are found in their own concentration, spread over a
19,000 square meter complex. Along the 'walkways' are angelfishes,
butterfly fishes, sea perch, lizardfish, and nudibranchs. Jacks and
yellow snappers are found in abundance. Batfishes are also common among
the long swaying sea whips or hovering blithesomely over outcrops
whilst being serviced by entourage of cleaner wrasse and shrimps. Reef
top is at about 15 metres and the site is absolutely a photographer's
heaven.
Tukau Drop-Off (50 minutes from jetty)This
site challenges the senses; the reef starts at about 20 metres and
drops quickly to 40 metres; often there is a vertical wall. Schooling
jacks, barracudas, Napoleon wrasse, yellowtail fusiliers, and large
groupers are predictably found.
Santak Point (45 minutes from jetty)Blue
water, glass fishes and sea fans are the signature of this site; with
an average visibility of 30 meters or more, the sea fans, large colonies
of gorgonian fans of 2-3 metres in size are found all over the top of
the reef at 21 metres. The reef edge drops to 35 meters.
Siwa Reef (35 minutes from jetty)The
most interesting section of this reef is along the lower reef slope
where leopard sharks and huge marble rays hang out during the day. This
site is full of surprises in small packages; orange clownfish in purple
anemones to several species of nudibranch.
Barracuda Point (45 minutes from jetty)A
reef within a reef; this is a site on Salam reef where a school of 300
large barracudas are predictably swirling in a never ending circle. At a
depth of 25 metres, flatworms, sea horses, symbiotic shrimps and seldom
seen nudibranchs are also commonly found.
Sri Gadong Wreck (1 hr 10 minutes from jetty)This
is one of the favourite sites among local divers; resting upright on a
18- metres mud bottom, this small 30-metre cargo ship is renowned for
its large resident groupers. The whole wreck is teeming with fish life
in entirety. Jacks, yellow grunts, batfish and batfish and barracudas
encircling around the wreck while the giant groupers swim in and out of
the cargo holds.
Kenyalang Artificial Reef A
decommissioned oil rig, this is the first artificial reef in Malaysia
and the second in the region.It teems with small fish. 13-22m depth. A
relaxing dive to be had.
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