Emperor Asmaa Itinerary

Safaga, Brothers and Elphinstone (RMF - HRG)

8 days / 7 nights

About Emperor Asmaa

  • Dedicated diving liveaboard with no more than 20 guests onboard
  • Get the most out of your trip with the 21+ DIVES or MAX dive itineraries
  • Enjoy free wifi, free red wine with dinner, and free nitrox mixes up to 40%
  • Family-like atmosphere with sociable guides and crew

Designed with discerning divers in mind, the Emperor Asmaa is dedicated to delivering guests directly to the action. And, with no more than 20 guests on board and a warm family-like atmosphere, each and every trip feels like an intrepid adventure with friends. Explore some of the Red Sea’s best diving, enjoy free nitrox and complimentary wine, and relax on one of two stylish sun decks - divers can be sure of an exceptional holiday experience onboard the Emperor Asmaa.


Itinerary details

8 days / 7 nights
21+
Advanced Open Water - Minimum 30 dives
Required

Highlights

  • One-way itinerary diving both well-known wrecks and pristine reefs
  • Explore the chilling wreck of the Salem Express
  • Experience the current swept pinnacles of Brothers Islands National Park
  • Search for the oceanic whitetips and hammerheads of Elphinstone
  • Dive the remote, virgin reef of Hal Hal (Middle Reef)
  • Rare chance to spot highly elusive thresher sharks

Day 1: Once onboard there will be a safety briefing, crew introduction, complete and check dive paperwork, cabin allocation and boat orientation. Our boats moor in the port on arrival day, departing early the next morning. The first dive is a check dive near the port.

Days 2-6: The area around Safaga has some great diving, the best being the offshore reefs of Panorama Reef, Middle Reef and Abu Kafan. Some divers say this area equals the great sites of Ras Mohamed. The diving offers a combination of shallow reef dives and drop-offs, as well as the famous wreck of the Salem Express.

The Salem Express is a dramatic wreck dive. It is now home to a thriving underwater life, including a famous resident frogfish, blue-spotted stingrays, angel and butterfly fish. The ship itself is covered in a large quantity of hard and soft corals. It is one of the largest wrecks in the Egyptian Red Sea, roughly the same size as the Thistlegorm.

There is superb wall diving at Panorama: on the south-east side of the plateau is a gorgonian and glassfish corner with the whole plateau covered in soft corals and on the south side is an anemone city.

Hal Hal (Middle Reef) is a rarely chosen dive site due to its distance from the coast, which makes it a virgin spot. The north side is a drop off going down to 80 metres and is a perfect location to spot tunas, barracudas, turtles and sharks. The southern side has colourful coral gardens along with some caves and canyons.

Abu Kafan is a 300-metre long, narrow reef offering a plateau at both north and south tips. We normally jump in the water on the north plateau and glide with the frequent strong current southwards along the impressive walls covered with soft and black coral, giant fans and gorgonians.

The Brother Islands are the pinnacles of two undersea mountains rising from the depths of the abyss and are located about 60 miles offshore. Part of the Marine Park Islands National Park, these islands offer stunning wall diving, with the walls covered in soft corals and forests of gorgonians, creating a kaleidoscope of ever-changing colours. They attract a diverse array of marine species and large pelagics. Large tuna, jacks and snappers cruise in the blue, accompanied by occasional hammerheads, silvertips, silky and oceanic white tip sharks and mantas. Even the rare thresher shark can be found here. Sightings of the grey reef shark are almost guaranteed on the North and South Plateaux of Small Brother.

Abu Dabab is six reefs commonly known as “Fathers Steps” or “Fathers Stepping Stones” and as the name suggests a set of fairly shallow reefs ranging from depths of 25 metres to the seafloor. In between Abu Dabab II and III at approximately 15 metres is the wreckage of a small ship sunk after a fire in 2004.

Elphinstone is approximately 30km from Port Ghalib; Elphinstone reef is 300 metres long with sheer walls richly covered in colourful pink and red soft corals and elegant red gorgonians descending to around 40 metres. Other areas of the reef have near vertical cliffs, overhangs, small caves and drop offs of up to 100 metres. Elphinstone is known to experience some strong currents attracting many diverse species such as barracuda, angel fish, groupers, Napoleons, morays, reef sharks and great shoals of dogtooth tuna and jacks. Occasional sightings include dolphins, turtles, oceanic whitetip and hammerhead sharks.

Day 7: On the last diving day, 2 dives are available in the morning whilst observing the rule of no diving within 24 hours of reaching altitude. We return to port at approximately 13.00 and moor here overnight. In the evening, we will pack up diving equipment, visit the marina and settle any outstanding bills. 

Day 8: Depart for the airport or hotel.

Sample itineraries are for guidance only. Actual itineraries may differ slightly due to factors such as weather, wildlife, logistics and local regulations.

Transfer details

Departure

06:00pm

Port Ghalib

Marsa Alam Airport: RMF

Return

09:00am

Hurghada

Hurghada Airport: HRG


Choose your trip