Top 10 Scuba Diving Sites in France
Last week I sent a friend a text for some tips on fine French diving. He misread it and gave me the address of a Bistro on the Rue de Rivali. Let’s be honest, our Gallic cousins are best known for their gastronomy, but the country boasts almost as many great places to dive as to dine.

Scuba diving in France Image: © ATOUT FRANCE/Palomba Robert
So if you like your moules to be found clinging to the side of wrecks and prefer your fish swimming off the Cote D’Azur rather than swimming in garlic, check out our “menu touristique” of the top 10 scuba diving sites in France.
Scuba Diving Holidays : Don’t Drink and Dive!
If your going to have a drink then don’t get behind the wheel. Equally important should be the message to everyone with a PADI qualification off on scuba diving holidays to lay of the juice before they head below the waves: An obvious message but one that sometimes is not taken seriously.
For many, the whole concept of a holiday is to go somewhere hot on the coast and pass the time either in the water or at the bar – looking out the window onto a drizzly, cold, grey European winter, who came blame them.
However, if part of your holiday by the sea involves scuba diving then you have to take responsibility over your condition before you go swimming with the fishes, or you may find yourself down there for good…
Geographically embarrassed : Is it Red Sea or Dead Sea?
There are a number of travel trivia questions that always turn up in quizzes and conversations. And every time they have you scratching your head in a, ‘I really should know this’ kind of way. Well, we’re looking at the places and countries causing this confusion, starting with the Red Sea / Dead Sea mystery.
As it’s likely to be a geography question that reveals your confusion, let’s start with location then explain more about these two very different places – pay attention, we will be asking questions…
A scuba virgin diving in Australia
I think I’ve been forgotten. I’m sitting at the back of the boat, wetsuit-clad legs dangling into the Pacific, and attempting to look back with a heavy oxygen tank on my back to see if I’m going to get a partner for the dive or not; my first scuba dive, and I’m diving in Australia. You see, one must go down in a pair, but due to travelling alone the odd numbers in the group means I’m waiting for someone to accompany me. The rest have already gone ahead.
My nervousness is palpable, but I’m also possessed with a sense of excitement and anxious anticipation. Scuba has its dangers, as does the Pacific… The laid-back tour guide eventually, and somewhat reluctantly, offers to join me and we’re soon off into the deep blue below.
This is the Great Barrier Reef, one of the wonders of the world, it’s a few kilometers off the coast of tropical North Queensland in Australia, and I’ve come on a day trip from Cairns to the Outer Barrier Reef – ideal for the traveller short on time and perfect for anyone new to scuba diving. Many day trips will focus on the Inter Reef Gardens, and reefs close to places such as Michaelmas Cay, Fitzroy Island and Green Island. In short, diving paradise.
Scuba diving or skydiving: can you take the pressure?
Other than both featuring the word diving, these two sports seem largely unrelated. After all, throwing yourself out of an aircraft and swimming underwater couldn’t be more different. However, scuba diving and skydiving share one significant challenge: pressure.

Yes, height above or below sea level affects the body – something any mountaineer or climber will tell you. When climbing to elevation the air thins, making it harder to breathe.
Trekking in Nepal, or sat in a plane climbing into the clouds, you may begin to notice altitude sickness when you pass 8,000 ft – as your elevation increases, the air pressure decreases, reducing the amount of available oxygen. Deep sea diving or scuba diving also stresses the human body: the deeper you go, the greater the pressure on your lungs.
Oxygen breathed from a scuba tank is at a higher pressure, and when you return from a very deep dive you need to spend a little time at set depths adjusting to the changes. That’s why returning from the deep, divers need to ‘decompress’ as their bodies move up into the ‘lighter’ water above them.
Briefly, the human body can be pushed to extremes, but when it comes to elevation above ground and depth below sea level, it really has its limits.
If you know about how the human body reacts to these challenges, drop us a comment – we’re always keen to hear from experts who can add their knowledge.
We’ve also got a new skydiving blog starting: 1,000… 2,000…3,000 Check Canopy!
Waterproof camcorders: tough enough or digital bluff?
Guest blogger Natalie jumped at the chance to test the latest generation of waterproof camcorders designed to take the rough and tumble of adventure sports…
Adventure sports and technology don’t always go hand in hand. Being able to climb to 3000 ft is no mean feat, but it’s not always the best environment to start fumbling around with gizmos and gadgets. Being able to record stunning vids of the Great Barrier Reef while snorkelling, or pictures of your friends’ faces while you’re white-water rafting is usually a good enough reason to get clicking – but what do the clips look like? And how do these ‘ruggedized’ movie makers perform under pressure?
The problem with mixing expensive equipment with adventure sports is that there’s always a chance that your precious piece of kit could end up in gadget heaven. Drum roll the clever people at Panasonic who’s latest range of hard-wearing, waterproof, touch screen cameras and upright HD camcorders are designed to be used ‘in-action’.
As a technophobe with a slightly pathological fear of heights, I was delighted to be invited along to Go-Ape Adventure Park to try out their new range of cameras 15 metres (45 ft) in the air. Throw in the fact that we were blessed with typical British summer weather – monsoon storms and a little bit of thunder – and it was my idea of a perfect day.
Beach Holiday: Why black sand is sometimes the best sand
Most people’s idea of a beach holiday includes time spent wasting time on a white sandy beach. Well, there are plenty of spots around the world that serve up exactly the same beach experience, just without the white sand – and why waste time when there’s wind and waves in which to play?
Here are three destinations with black sand beaches to go on your next travel itinerary.
As well as the miles of pristine light sand, these islands have a dark side. On the north shore of Tenerife, there’s La Grañosa and Los Roques (the later very popular for scuba diving) as well as several bays and ways to the sea that are dusted in black sand.
Gran Canaria also offers beach life in black and white, as does the east coast of Fureteventura, an island that’s one of the windsurfing capitals of the world.

Black sand beauty Image: Flickr/Ryan Devenish
One of the most beautiful, and sought after island holiday resorts sports a black sand beach. Visitors swim up to 800 miles to rest on Punalu’u beach – that’s the sea turtles that come to lay their eggs here. The black sand is so prized it’s illegal to remove it, so stick to wandering and marvelling at the scenery.
If surfing is your sport, you may have heard of Playa La Boca in Puerto Rico. Just east off this black sand beauty is a great point-break best suited to experienced surfers. The beach here runs west from the mouth of the river, and runs for miles till it whitens past the distant headland.
Black sand beaches are formed as boiling larva meets the ocean. So, if you’ve black sand under foot, you know that where you’re holidaying was once a bubbling, flowing mass of volcanic sludge (the heat you feel searing through your toes just comes from the sand’s absorption of sun rays – in case you were getting worried for a minute!)
Categories
- Adventure Sports & Travel Thoughts
- New Adventure Travel Ideas
- New Site Features on ASH
- Our Experts
- Top 10 Adventure Sports Travel Lists
- Tribe Adventure Travel Blogs
Recent Posts
- Overseas Adventure Travel: Top 10 undiscovered destinations
- Travel Gear: Camera bags built to travel the world
- Baby on a ski holiday: Review of the Pepi Penguin Club
- Travelling with a baby on a winter sports holiday
- Winter Festivals 2012: Snowboard Events and Ski Parties
- Top 10 active breaks for solo travellers
- Walking gear : how getting your kit off keeps you warm





