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Friday, 26 February 2016

Leave rush behind

Gran Canaria doesn’t just start at the edge of the beach. Not at all. It appears long before that, although submerged under the sea. The powerful orography is reproduced on the seabed running all the way round the island earning it the nickname of Miniature Continent.
 
 
In many ways, the sea around the island represents all seven seas on the planet. Somebody should make the effort to collect a full set of specimens from around the same island because scuba divers can find tremendous walls in Gran Canaria ending in abysmal floors, monumental drops which cause an explosion of marine life, volcanic caves and dune “deserts” with a thousand fish… basically a captivating sequence of the best of each ocean. But something makes this island completely exceptional for scuba diving: the temperature, which is a big deal in Gran Canaria.

 
The Atlantic surrounding Gran Canaria fits scuba divers’ needs like a glove, in an extraordinary way for this latitude. In winter, it swaddles it in a higher temperature than in the months of March and April which is the lowest period. The warm flow which reaches the Gulf Stream sets the thermometer around 20 degrees, 25 - 30 metres down and in the middle of winter. Later it ‘drops’ to 18 degrees in the spring, and rises back up to 26 degrees in the summer.
 
 
Not even a gigantic heater could be so efficient. All this causes the amazing situation experienced by everyone lucky enough to dive here, finding that just a light wetsuit provides sufficient protection for many hours of diving. Obviously this ‘underwater climate’ is not just a treat for visitors, but amazing for fauna, providing a home for an astonishing representation of species. Endless numbers of moray, amberjacks, barracudas, turtles, alfonsinos, bream, spiny angler fish or gulls weighing up to 30kg are some of the living treasures hidden by the sea around the island.
 
 
 
Combining its large amount of flotsam, almost all with accessible depths which do not require decompression, with sea beds offering boulders which shelter millions of young, creates a highly desirable landscape under the island for a whole host of European divers, who grab the chance to fill their oxygen bottles in the middle of winter.
 
I recomen you to watch this video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpmCjFBFHz8


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