Scuba dive South Africa with us today! Meridian Dive Centre - The adventure starts here

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

Click here to return to the homepage of our web site.
Facilities - Information for your diving trip to South Africa
Dive Courses - Recreational and technical diving courses on offer
Scuba diving in South Africa - Dive Safaris and packages to some of our best destinations!
Getting in touch with us is easy - click here to do so now.
   

DIVE SITES OF SOUTHERN AFRICA

SARDINE RUN

Between May and July each year huge shoals of sardines move into the coastal waters of southern KwaZulu- Natal (KZN) in what is known to locals as THE SARDINE RUN - the marine equivalent of the annual migration of the Wildebeest in the Masai Mara. In recent years this natural phenomenon has been documented and filmed and is known to the rest of the world as the........."The Greatest Shoal on Earth".

Join us on a Sardine Run Adventure where you can experience the awesome sight of dolphins, whales, seals, sharks, game fish and a myriad of sea feeding on these fish.

The annual migration of sardines starts at the Agulhas Banks off the southern most tip of Africa when colder water conditions moving up the normally warm (+20°C) east coast allow the sardines to extend their range. These shoals can contain over 1000 tons of fish and be 5 km long and many predators that prey on the sardines heavily accompany them. This moving fish restaurant and ensuing feeding frenzy is a sight to behold and certainly one of the wildest spectacles to occur anywhere on the planet. The predators feeding on this feast include over 20 000 common dolphins and approximately 2500 bottlenose dolphins, copper dusky, blacktip and spinner sharks, various species of game fish such as shad and garrick, and even the occasional South African fur seal.


There are also multitudes of sea birds: several species of albatross: yellownose, blackbrowed and shy storm petrels, white-chinned petrels, Cape gannets, several tern species and even African penguins. Sightings of various whales are also common. We have 14 different species of Whales off the Natal coastline.

Many locals suffer from "sardine fever" at this time when the predators drive the shoals onto the shore and people wade into the sea with every conceivable container to try and grab some of the slippery fish regardless of the consequences. Visitors and locals can enjoy the spectacle of shimmering shoals of sardines within and beyond the surf zone, accompanied by flocks of plunging gannets, schools of dolphins and packs of sharks. Teams of fishermen can be watched as they encircle pockets of sardines with seine nets and then haul the catch back to the beach through the surf. Lively bargaining then takes place on the beach as the fish are sold by the basket.

As exciting as the action is on the beaches, the frenzy of the sardine run is best experienced by boat as beaching of the shoals is unpredictable and shore based viewing is often limited to seeing the action through binoculars. Assisted by up to date reports of sightings from micro lights, helicopters and the Natal Sharks Board monitoring the movements of the shoals, boat operators are able to put their boats right in the middle of the action offshore. The braver souls on board can venture into the shoals with scuba diving equipment, but often those on the surface and snorklers have the best sightings.

SCUBA DIVE SOUTH AFRICA!

Contact Details

Barry & Celia Coleman
Meridian Dive (PADI & IANTD)