Map available from issues@themaps.co.za. Click to enlarge |
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Sardine Run 2010
What is the Sardine Run? Click to find out.
For 2010, our Sardine Run programme is specifically planned to allow Soccer fans who are also divers to be at all the important soccer games but still enable them to dive the Sardine Run or dive with Tiger sharks at Aliwal.
Click here to see the various diving options during the World Cup period.
Arrive Durban airport, South Africa before12h00. Our shuttle will then bring you the 380 kms through southern KwaZuluNatal and the Transkei to Port St Johns (see map alongside). On the day of your departure, the schuttle will take you from Port St Johns to arrive at Durban airport at around 12h00. The shuttle will run Port st Johns- Durban airport - Port St Johns every Thursday and Monday starting Thursday 10 June and the last transfer Monday 12 July. By choosing your arrival and departure dates, you can have 2, 3 or 6 days at sea with the sardines. Remember, this is the 'Wild Coast' not only in name. Allow for the fact that we can have days when sea conditions prevent us from launching in safety.
Once we are all assembled at Durban airport, we depart overland for the Transkei Wild Coast. The Wild Coast with it's lagoons, cliffs, palm trees, sandy bays with rivers reaching to the sea via convoluted valleys has such limited access that there has been no industrial development. The coast remains pristine.
Our base of operations is Port St Johns which stands at the mouth of the Mzimvubu river between Mt Thesiger and Mt Sullivan. A magnificent setting with huge cliffs covered in subtropical forest. Our hotel sits right on the river itself allowing us easy access to the boat for our early morning launch.
Early breakfast at around 07h00 and then on to the waiting semi rigid boat. We shall be launching via the Mzimvubu mouth. We then cruise slowly along the coast looking for the telltale concentrations of Gannets. A number of the Gannets fly extremely high acting as look-outs for the main flock. On spotting sardines, they signal their find and the sky suddenly turns white with thousands of birds heading for the action....and we are right there with them!
The dolphins and sharks now try to herd the sardines into a compact mass, called locally a baitball, by circling the sardines and the dolphins swimming under the mass of sardines breathing out bubbles to frighten the sardines towards the surface. Once they are between the surface and 10 metres depth, the feasting begins. The Ganets plunge in such numbers that they sound like machine gun fire. The dolphins and sharks swim, mouth fully open, into the baitball and then, often, a whale (this one a Bryde's whale) swim up from the depths scouping an incredibe volume of sardines in one huge mouthful and often as in the picture below, surface centimetres from our divers. If that does not get your adrenalin pumping at full throttle.................(click to enlarge)
As the action is on the surface and down to a maximum of 6-10 metres, virtually everything can be seen from the boat meaning that this is an experience equally suited to non divers though, obviously, the extreme thrill for scuba divers is to be below the surface with a baitball.
We normally stay at sea until around 14h00 depending on the activity and sea conditions.
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