Are you ready for your next — or first — big-animal encounter? Do you dream of scuba diving with sharks, manta rays, sea lions and dolphins?
Cayman Islands Articles
How do you get an 1,100-pound bronze statue underwater? Very carefully. Check out the video of how Divetech owners Jay and Nancy Easterbrook moved the Guardian of the Reef statue to its final spot — on the sand bottom in 65 feet of water off Lighthouse Point.
We've put together a photo gallery of 15 wrecks — some open to scuba divers and some not; some of their stories known to us and some not — that move us.
Scuba diving in Grand Cayman is for everyone — from Stingray City to the Kittiwake shipwreck to wall diving and macro life — you'll love this island.
Beautiful, accessible and packed with marine life — these are among the favorite things divers love about the sun-kissed islands in the Caribbean and Atlantic.
Check out some of our favorite purpose-sunk wrecks — they're just as good, and maybe even better, than the real thing.
Join the man who discovered the _Titanic_ as he probes the ocean to depths of 6,000 feet.
Grand Cayman has 365 moored dive sites so that you can dive every day of the year without repeating a dive. The newest is the Divetech's Guardian of the Reef statue.