Sea Saba Dive Center Reviews, Photos & Special Rates - Bluewater Dive Travel

Sea Saba Dive Center

4.4375
(4 REVIEWS)

 

Destination: Caribbean

Price Varies p.p.p.n

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Sea Saba Quick Pitch

Since 1985, Sea Saba has maintained its commitment to high standards in staff expertise, customer service, and environmental sustainability. The resort boasts knowledgeable and experienced dive guides and also allowed experienced divers the freedom to explore the diverse underwater world of the Saba Marine Park.

 

Sea Saba Features

  • Sea Saba is a PADI 5-Star Resort as well as a REEF Field Station
  • Sea Saba offers 40' boats for your comfort and convenience
  • Each vessel provides plenty of sun or shade, wind protection, ample seating, gear storage, hanging facilities, fresh water shower, drinking water and lemonade, cold storage for lunches and a complimentary "camera bag"
  • Sea Saba offers professional dive training programs for all ages and all levels
  • Nitrox available to certified Nitrox divers
  • Sea Saba offers extensive workshop of tools, equipment & spare parts

 

Pricing

Varies, depending on the type of package & accommodation. Contact us for more information.

 

Location

Saba is the smallest island in the Dutch Caribbean, 28 miles southwest of St. Maarten. Guests fly into St. Maarten before taking a short, 12-minute flight to Saba. Alternatively, a ferry runs between the two islands. Guests are greeted upon arrival and transferred to the resort.

 

Dive Overview

Sea Saba is referred to as "The Unspoiled Queen," boasting beauty and peace. The diving is bright and diverse, made easy by Sea Saba's sturdy boats and small dive groups. The boats have a capacity of 20 but they limit the number of divers to 10, ensuring relaxing, stress-free dive excursions.

[Read More: Saba Dive Travel Guide]

 

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Accommodations

Types of Rooms, Amenities and Photos

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Sea Saba Accommodation Overview

Sea Saba offers accommodations at a variety of hotels, lodges, cottages, houses, and luxury properties according to the preferences of the guests. Whatever your taste or budget, Saba offers a variety of properties to please every level traveler, from comfortable and affordable hotel rooms to luxury villas, private cottages and eco retreats.

Sea Saba Sea Saba

Sea Saba Sea Saba 

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Dive Information

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Saba's Marine Diversity

Saba offers year-round diving with seasonal differences in water temperature and surface conditions. Winter months bring cooler water temperatures ranging from 77° to 80° Fahrenheit, whereas summer months yield a toasty 80° to 85 Fahrenheit. Nature itself ensures a variety of different marine activities and aquatic visitors throughout the year. The Saba Marine Park now boasts more than 30 permanently moored dive sites. There are now multiple moorings at some of the sites giving us more flexibility for accommodating your requests. The Saba Marine Park is zoned for various recreational and commercial uses. The yachting community will be pleased to note there are more overnight (yellow) moorings in place in both the Wells Bay area as well as the Fort Bay area; however, newly introduced legislation now dictates that all visiting yachts must register and dive with one of Saba's local dive operations.

Saba’s volcanic origins have blessed her waters with spectacular formations and structural diversity. From shallow patch reefs to deep water seamounts, Saba offers interesting diving at each depth and for every diver's experience level. The Saba Marine Park ("SMP") was established in 1987. One of the few self-sustaining marine parks worldwide, it’s important to note that it was not established to help repair a damaged environment and ecosystem, but rather to safeguard and ensure the continued quality of an extraordinary resource.

Our small size, 5.1 square miles, and circular shape don't provide us with large leeward side, but nevertheless, allows us to dive almost any day of the year even with less than perfect weather. Our experienced crew will take you to the best dive site for the day’s conditions and match your diving ability to the selection. With the variety of diving that is offered, plan at least a few days of diving to enjoy a real sampling of the Saba Marine Park's diversity. To learn more about the origins of Saba's reefs and what to expect to see at different dive areas, join us for "Making the Most of Your Saba Experience". This casual and fun photographic presentation is given every Monday night in a 'happy hour' environment at The Brigadoon restaurant.

  • Saba's Pinnacles
  • Not far offshore, Saba ’s famous pinnacles and seamounts, Third Encounter, Twilight Zone, Outer Limits, Mt. Michel and Shark Shoals rise dramatically from the depths to within 85 feet of the surface. These depths have protected them from any natural storm damage and, of course, anchors. The mere size and abundance of large sea fans and sponges put the pinnacles at world-class status even without the added bonus of reef creatures and fish. The structures themselves are not to be missed with the most unique being The Eye of the Needle, just off in the deep blue from Third Encounter. It’s common to encounter schools of tropical fish, jacks, groupers or even members of Saba's robust shark population. Caribbean Reef, Nurse and Black Tip sharks are the most common to see cruising our waters but there are a few sightings each year of Hammerheads, Bull and a rare Tiger shark. Lucky divers may get to swim with a humpback whale, manta ray or whale shark, things we don't advertise or guarantee but are seen. Although these dive sites are virtually bottomless, they can be safely enjoyed with 100 to 120-foot dive profiles (30-40m), well within the limits of recreational diving.
  • Man O’ War Shoals, Diamond Rock and Green Island are also classified as pinnacles but have sandy bottoms at between 70 and 80 feet. Although pelagics are not as common at these shallower pinnacles, more bottom time let’s you absorb and explore the many nooks and crannies that are home to every imaginable species. The currents, that sometimes prevent diving these sites, yield plankton-rich waters for the inhabitants that line the cylinder style walls of these two pinnacles. Schools of blue tangs, big eyes and juvenile barracuda frequent these areas. The dark volcanic sand around these sites is home to many interesting critters including flying gurnards, batfish, industrious sand tilefish and jawfish. If you were limited to only one dive on Saba, either of these sites will be the best representation of the healthy reefs and abundance of marine life that the waters of the Saba Marine Park offer. In addition, each of these sites offers the opportunity for increased bottom time when conducted as a multi-level profile with long slow spirals upward around these minor seamounts.Saba's ladder Bay Seahorse
  • Ladder Bay
  • Traveling in a westerly direction down our leeward coast brings you to that area referred to by Sabans as The Ladder. Perched precariously on a steep cliffside are the original steps used by islanders to access Saba. The original custom house remains. Prior to the building of the Fort Bay harbor, goods were brought to the island by landing long boats on the rocky shoreline with stout and hearty Sabans carrying the goods by foot up the nearly vertical stairway before reaching the road leading to the village of The Bottom. As such, dive sites off this shore are referred to as Ladder Bay: Custom House, Porites Point, Babylon, Ladder Labyrinth, Hot Springs, Ray 'n' Anchors.
  • Volcanic lava flow has created a natural labyrinth of spur and groove formations. If you still question Saba’s volcanic origins, you can place your hands into the sulfur stained sand and feel the warmth of this now dormant volcanic island. Nurse sharks, turtles, mated white-spotted filefish and even the occasional tarpon are some of the larger animals you may meet face-to-face on the leeward coast. The seagrass on the perimeter of the reef provides sustenance for Saba's healthy sea turtle population as well as garden eels, spotted eagle ray or seahorses. Ladder Bay is also one of our favorite areas for night dives.Saba's Tent Bay Turtle
  • Tent Bay
  • Less than five minutes from Fort Bay, our only harbor, Tent Bay offers spectacular diving at Tent Reef Deep, a small but interesting reef. Dives at the vertical Tent Reef Wall can be conducted as a shallow dive, a deeper multi-level dive or as an exhilarating drift dive. The sandy top of the wall is home to hundreds of garden eels, razorfish and southern stingrays. A three dimensional mural of colorful mollusks, large barrel and drooping sponges are guaranteed on this dive with the schools of sergeant majors, queen angelfish, french angelfish, frogfish and of course, Buddha, the resident barracuda who likes to hang out with divers and is naturally curious. The swim through at Tent Reef is a treat day or night with yellow cup corals, black coral, a family of black margates, and spiny lobsters. The resident dog snappers have learned to follow night divers and attempt to hunt prey with the assistance of your dive lights. Tent Reef is a favorite for night dives with frequent octopus sitings and a chance to see a blue manytooth conger.
  • Windwardside dive sites
  • More dependent on weather conditions are our Windwardside sites: Greer Gut, Giles Quarter, Big Rock Market, Hole in the Corner, David's Dropoff, Core Gut, Cove Bay. The majority of Saba’s diving offers volcanic coral encrusted boulders with only a few Windwardside sites being true coral reefs. The white sand bottoms in these areas give them a different look and feel from the leeward side sites, and serious fish watchers will note different species of reef fish and critters than seen in other areas of the Saba Marine Park. The exposure to the Atlantic side lends itself less to soft corals but yield grand hard coral structures of elkhorn forests, large plate and mushroom-shaped star corals, and brain corals. These formations set the background for nudibranch, frogfish and seasonal juvenile activity. It’s rare to have current on this side of the island and visibility tends to be exceptional.
  • Saba's Shallow Dives
  • Well’s Bay and Torrens Point are the most protected waters of Saba during normal weather conditions. Great for snorkeling or shallow dives, large boulders, caves and swim-throughs present interesting underwater structures. A series of patch reefs leading away from the shoreline host many juvenile species and a variety of eels. Saba's nursery, as it's known, also has a prolific population of Flamingo Tongue Cowry shells as well as other interesting invertebrates, fish and hard corals. Morays eels, sharptail eels, goldspotted eels and the less common spotted snake eel that conceals the majority of its long body in the sand are all to be found here. From squid to a humpback whale, this underestimated dive site is always worth a third tank.
  • Saba's Muck Diving
  • Ask about our special Sea Saba Muck Dive-just another Sea Saba Difference. With the emphasis on "the entire ocean, not just pretty reefs, is worth preserving and observing, let us take you somewhere different. If you are into seeing odd sand dwellers and enjoy taking the chance of seeing something unique, grab your camera and let's go...the sand flats in front of the Fort Bay harbor are where our overnight moorings are for our boats. Artificial reefs (even those created by big concrete blocks and chain) serve as foreseen protection and a gathering point for many unique species. We dive our mooring regularly to be certain the mooring is safe and secure for our vessel. Over the years, we have noticed fabulous, obscure marine life at these moorings from Oscillate Frogfish to Rosy-Lipped Batfish to huge starfish, seahorses, eels and more. Best done as a small group on a 3rd dive of the day, just let us know you're interested.

 

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Packages & Rates

Sea Saba Packages and Rates

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Rates & Availability

Sea Saba and Juliana's Hotel are known as 'The Best Above and Below': 7 nights, 5 days inclusive dive packages start at $1,283 per person.

For more information on rates, availability and to book, drop us an email at info@bluewaterdivetravel.com or call us today at 310-915-6677. We will gladly help you plan your dream vacation!

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Other Information

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Practical Information

  • Local Currency: USD (US Dollar)
  • International Airport: Princess Juliana International Airport
  • Language: English
  • Time Zone: UTC-4
  • Electricity: 110V

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GOT QUESTIONS? READY TO BOOK?

Call us today at 310-915-6677 or email us info@bluewaterdivetravel.com

And let us book your dream vacation!

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Underwater Gallery

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Coming soon!

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Reviews (4)

5
5
5
5

We had a great time with Sea Saba and their staff. I have booked three trips with them staying in houses 2x, and at the Cottage Club with 12 divers. All the staff are very helpful and knowledgeable. We had the treat of diving near the airport on one trip. Great dive! We have traveled to Saba in Dec, and March. All our trips were great.

Visited on 03/2014 - Submitted on 03/12/2021
5
5
5
5

Sea Saba advertises concierge dive service & they mean it! Right from the morning pick up until the afternoon drop off -you are treated to a Cadillac service.. Last stop before the 10 minute drive to the marina is at the Sea Saba office where lunch delivery orders may be placed or a dinner reservation made for any of the island's restaurants.
Arriving at the dive boat, your gear will already be set uo & they'll also change out the tanks for you between dives. Everyone is supplied a dive bag & hangars to keep gear stored on the boat.
Dive briefings are very thorough and the dive guides easily accommodate those diving on Nitrox or air. Water clarity is excellent & the dive masters do their best to get the most from each site.
Saba, (Dutch Antilles), offers two strikingly different types of dive site topography. The dive sites to the west of the island are more volcanic and dramatic, great pinnacle diving in particular. Those sites to the south, southeast are more typically Caribbean reef-like. We saw some Nurse & Reef sharks, stingrays, giant green Moreys, Barracuda, turtles, the odd Nudibranch, huge Tarpin, and many other creatures. Great diving, made even better by Sea Saba.

Visited on 01/2015 - Submitted on 02/02/2015
  • Reviewer
Washington, DC
United States
4
4
4
3

Amazing service that starts with your first step on the island. Sea Saba really knows how to offer five-star service on an island that is very casual about everything. Two 40" dive boats are rated for up to 20, however Sea Saba generally only will only take out 10 at any one time. It was almost live-aboard luxury as our gear stayed on the boat and was maintained by the dive crew in between dives and overnight. At least two friendly and knowledgeable dive masters accompanied each boat every day taking us to some great locations that offered some real "finds" (Sail-fin blennies, yellow banded shrimp, hawkesbill turtles and some of the largest queen angels I have ever seen). Due to the Caribbean Sea getting very deep very close to shore, most of the sites we dove were sea mounts and pinnacles which are fabulous for macro and absolutely jam packed with fish, invertebrates, corals, and sponges. The entire island being designated as a marine preserve park means that you will see some of the healthiest corals anywhere. A few reef sharks and barracuda were noticed off the shoals on one dive and large game fish are often seen in

Visited on 12/2013 - Submitted on 02/04/2014
4
4
4
4

Tiny Island of Saba is great for diving. Easy to get to Saba from St Martin. Have done day trips (via plane) while staying in St Martin. Dived with both Sea Saba Dive Center and Saba Deep - both are well organized and a pleasure to dive with. Diving is mostly known for pelagics. A waters around Saba are a Marine Park. Lots of pinnacles. I have always missed the dives to the muck site. The island has volcanic origins - some 'hot spots' in the sands are always neat. Only time we stayed overnight in Saba we stayed at Queens Garden. Super place. Views are delightful between the mountain peaks and out to the sea - especially when sitting in the hot tub at night with a full moon. There are no beaches on the Island. Hiking to the top of the highest peak (2900 feet) is quite a work out. Island is small - 5 sq mi.

Visited on 04/2012 - Submitted on 01/26/2014

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