Shorebased Diving
There are several spots that a diver can walk into from
land in the Panama City area, primarily area Springs. Florida's geology
as gifted several parts of the state with numerous freshwater springs
where gin clear water comes from limestone caverns and joins local
streams and rivers. While some of the springs are in private hands and
not readily accessible to divers several are. The two most popular are Vortex springs (private) and Morrison Springs (park).
These springs are perfect places for divers to take open water classes
in pool like conditions and bone up on dive skills if they have been
out of the water awhile. Depths are very shallow around the spring but
slowly run deeper as you approach the mouth of the caverns. There are
also wooden platforms at the springs which make them great for class
practice sessions. Obviously only trained cavern and cave divers should
attempt to dive inside the caverns and deeper into the caves. There are
quite a few other Springs in the area for the more intrepid diver where
arrowheads and spearpoints and pottery are commonly found. Econfina,
Cypress, Pitt and Gainer springs just to name a few.
There is also one shore dive available to check out the marine life in the Gulf of Mexico. The Saint Andrews State Park
in the East end of Panama City's Beaches has a long set of rock
jetties. The jetties are best dove on a peak high tide as the incoming
Gulf water is clearer than the Bay Water and the time between rising
and falling tides is key due to possible strong currents from the
incoming/outgoing water. Many species of snapper, grouper (including
goliath), spade fish, angel fish, flounder, red fish and baitfish are
commonly seen. Depths are less than 10' on the kiddie pool side and
slope as deep as 60' once you cross over the rocks. Dive flags are the
law and for your own safety as many boaters travel through the pass.
There is also a convenience store in the park. It used to offer basic
dive services but no longer does so come prepared!
Boat Based Dive Sites
Most operators classify sites as inshore or offshore.
Fishing boats and individuals will have different concepts of what this
mean, and there is alot of confusion when divers start talking about
this too. In the Dive charter mindset of PCB this is really just a
measure of how far the site is from the pass not from the shoreline.
Since big dive boats typically get about 1mpg operators needed a way
to classify sites to charge more for trips that burned more fuel and
time. Consequently you could be charged for an offshore trip to dive a
reef ledge and span 5 and only be 4 miles from shore but 11 miles from
the pass.
Additionally, even though some sites are in the same bracket they
aren't particularly close to one another. Given fuel prices today most
charters Captains are under orders to keep all the running around to a
minimum. Below is a general association of the different popular sites
based on proximity to the pass and each other.
Inshore (typically 8 miles and less from the pass)
West
PCMI Barge
Stage 2
Long Beach Barge
South West The Black Bart (below)
Hovercraft
Bridge Span 14
Davis Reef
Warsaw Hole (limestone reef)
Central
Chickasaw
Smith Barge
Holland Barge
Dan Safety Barge
B&B Barge
Navy Trash Pile
East
LOS Pontoon
Bridge Span 12 USS Strength (below)
Bridge Span 1