Welcome to Scuba-Diving-Anguilla.com!
Your guide to scuba travel, scuba diving and everything you need to plan your next dive trip to Anguilla.
When you think of a dreamy destination with turquoise water, premier scuba diving, pristine coral reefs and cays, you can easily be thinking of Anguilla. This is one of the Caribbean’s top rated destinations for snorkeling and scuba diving. With plentiful reefs and rock formations, brightly colored fish are abundant and the avid snorkelor can find a vivid display of fish close to shore. All of the island's beaches provide excellent access for snorkeling, including Crocus Bay, Shoal Bay East, Junk’s Hole and Sandy Island, all known for great snorkeling.
Anguilla offers plenty of excellent dive sites for scuba divers and the island has seven marine parks, Dog Island, Prickley Pear, Seal Island Reef System, Little Bay, Sandy Island, Shoal Bay Harbour Reef System and Stoney Bay Marine Park. In these parks you can find everything from living limestone walls, giant schools of fish, coral formations and even century-old shipwrecks.
For a list of dive sites geared for various levels of scuba divers, click here.
Going With The Flow - an article about drift diving.
History of Anguilla
Anguilla is a British overseas territory in the Caribbean, located north of the Leeward Islands in the Lesser Antilles. It consists of the main island of Anguilla and a number of smaller islands and cays. The main island of Anguilla is approximately 26 km (16 mi) long by 5 km (3.1 mi) wide. The Valley is the island's capital and Anguilla boasts a population in excess of 13,500, comprising of approximately 39 square miles in total.
Anguilla is a British overseas territory in the Caribbean, located north of the Leeward Islands in the Lesser Antilles. It consists of the main island of Anguilla and a number of smaller islands and cays. The main island of Anguilla is approximately 26 km (16 mi) long by 5 km (3.1 mi) wide. The Valley is the island's capital and Anguilla boasts a population in excess of 13,500, comprising of approximately 39 square miles in total.
More Anguilla History