West New Britain has fantastic diving. You should include this destination
in your PNG trip, especially if you are into underwater photography.
A chain of dormant volcanoes forms the scenic boundaries of Kimbe
Bay, encompassing hundreds of submerged reefs and more than a dozen
islands. Scientists studying the region have already identified
more than 900 species of fish and 400 species of corals.
Willaumez Peninsula on one side and the main land of West New Britain
on the other side are sheltering Kimbe Bay which is of impressive
size and beauty.
You can dive in this area all year round. However, the best season
is mid- August to late December and again between February and May/June.
In August it can be quite windy.
Visibility ranges from 55-50 metres (80- 50 ft.), water temperatures
range between 27-30 degrees Celsius (85- 90 F). Weather is tropical,
with only little seasonal variation. Diving is ideal for intermediate
to advanced divers. As the reef tops are shallow, snorkellers will
enjoy the reefs.
How To Get There
New Britain is PNG's largest island. West New Britain Province is
the western part of the Island with its capital Kimbe, which is
a very small town. It is the production centre for palm oil and
timber plantations.
Dive excursions start in Walindi, which is approximately a 45 minutes
drive from the airport in Hoskins. Walindi Plantation Resort is
also located here.
Hoskins is the airport for the region (HKN). It has daily flights
coming in from Port Moresby and Rabaul. The flights are on Air Niugini's
F28 jets.
Diving
You can be land-based in Walindi Plantation Resort, or to go on
a live aboard vessel, the FeBrina or Star Dancer - or do a combination
of both! If you stay at the resort, you will dive Kimbe Bay area,
which has a huge variety of dive sites to offer.
With live aboard diving, the entire coast of New Britain and nearby
islands are possible: Kimbe Bay, Witu Islands and Fathers Reef are
the most popular destinations.The area offers a lot of variety in
diving.
Characteristics of the West New Britain area include the huge range
of giant soft coral species, the abundance of barrel and elephant
sponges and the prolific marine life. Coral can grow to enormous
sizes in Kimbe Bay, as it is so well sheltered there. Sometimes
plate corals just collapse under their own heavy weight, because
they grow bigger here than normally. Additionally Whale, Orca and
Dolphin encounters are not unusual here.
Kimbe Bay: Very sheltered and the diving is usually very
calm and relaxing. There a lot of outstanding dive sites (more than
190 reefs). The reefs are rising from approx. 600 metres (1800 feet).
Drift dives are possible and offered sometimes. When Dolphins are
in the area, they offer snorkelling with them by towing people behind
the boat. All dives in this part of the world are exceptional.
Everything that is part of the tropical ecosystem exists in this
bay. Dolphins, sometimes even Orcas and dugongs but also tiny decorator
crabs and most rare nudibranchs are to be seen there. These waters
are home to prolific and diverse marine creatures and corals. Within
Kimbe Bay one can find everything, starting with massive coral reefs,
atolls and older reefs, close to the coast, were the coral growth
is very well supported. The fish life is very colourful and rich.
Recent marine surveys in Kimbe Bay have recorded over 350 species
of reef building corals, and over 900 species of fish.
The reefs are a photographer's paradise. Pristine and colourful
corals are home to a variety of fish, crustacean and invertebrate
life. Many of the reefs have resident schools of barracuda, tuna
and jacks. Almost all diving is done at the far western end of Kimbe
Bay. Willaumez Peninsula on one side and the main land of West New
Britain on the other side are sheltering Kimbe Bay which is of impressive
size and beauty.
Walindi Plantation Resort is the basis for a dive holiday in Kimbe
Bay. Great diving and luxury accommodation are the reason that Walindi
is one of the most wanted destinations in Papua New Guinea. This
is true not only for divers, but also for non-divers.
Witu Islands: a very pretty island group which offers a
lot of variety in diving. The islands are of volcanic origin. Garove
Island (about 60 km northwest of Kimbe Bay) was a large volcano
in the past. The crater is now flooded with water (approx. 300 meters
deep) and makes for some great diving around the island that was
created within the volcano's caldera. The landscape is awesome!
There are nutrient rich currents in the area, so marine life is
very diverse. At dive sites like "Lama Shoals" you are
in for big fish like barracudas, trevally, large dogtooth tuna,
spanish mackerel, and sharks. The reefs here are grown over by gorgonian
fans, black corals, different species of soft corals and hydroids.
You also get "muck diving" around the Witu islands. The
so-called "muck diving" is done in areas with sand and
rubble bottom, where you find all sorts of weird but wonderful creatures.
In PNG, Milne Bay is already well known for "muck diving",
but "Dicky's Place" offers something similar! Here, watch
out for tailed seaslugs, nudibranchs, razor fish and much more.
Fathers Reef: a chain of reefs out in the open ocean, northeast
of Kimbe Bay, about 26 km away from an island called Lolobau. Pelagics
such as silvertip, grey reef sharks and barracudas are some of the
attractions here. The reef formation and invertebrate life here
are also worth a visit.
"Fathers Arch" for example has the arch top (at 25 meters),
which is full of soft corals and gorgonians. "Jayne's Gully"
is a dive site which is located in a channel between two reefs.
Here, the sides of the reef are covered with beautiful soft corals
and if the current is right, you will get the sharks and other big
fish in as well on this dive. Febrina quite often has dolphin encounters
in this area, which is an awesome treat, especially when the dolphins
are playful.
A range of shark species is regularly sighted, including hammerheads
and silvertips, particularly at the outer reefs of Fathers and Witu.
Other Activities
Walindi is not only for divers. If you just want to snorkel, have
a family holiday, or explore WWII remains you are in the right spot.
You can go fishing, or play tennis at the resorts court. Ask the
staff for guided trekking tours or go bird watching in the rainforests
nearby. Attractions not to miss are the various hot springs in the
volcanic mountains. Your walks through the forests will also pass
by some of the wrecked planes and tanks - all left overs from WWII.
After these activities the resort pool invites you for a cooling
swim.
Live Aboard Dive Operators