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Solitude Acacia Resort

Solitude Acacia Resort

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In the middle of the Mabini-Tingloy Peninsula, guests find the stunning Solitude Acacia Resort. The area is more commonly referred to as Anilao and can be reached by airport transfers offered by the resort.

Solitude Acacia Resort
Solitude Acacia Resort
Solitude Acacia Resort
Solitude Acacia Resort WEATHER
In the middle of the resort, there is a century old Acacia tree around which all of the rooms and facilities have been built. There are six standard rooms, four Deluxe Rooms, and six Deluxe Suites. All rooms include a queen bed and spacious. The rooms offer cable TV and access to WiFi. Meals include a selection of both local and international cuisine.
The resort has been praised for its incredible dive crew where you can find some of the best dive guides and spotters to aid underwater photographers. The boat and land crew have had special training to handle all diving equipment such as cameras, tech gear, and rebreathers. The dive center can provide full gear rentals including wetsuits, dive masks, fins, BCD’s, tanks and air fills, and regulator sets.
While Anilao is perfect for macro photography, divers find so much more while exploring the deep blue waters. Divers explore unique reef and wall dives as well as sea mounts and coral gardens. Divers encounter the occasional shark, manta ray, or eagle rays. Twin Rocks is one of the most famous dive sites in the area and is known for schools of jackfish in the vast coral garden. This site is an easier dive and goes to twenty meters depth. Cathedral is another popular site that is known for the iconic concrete cross that lies between two boulders. The cross was submerged to fifteen meters in the 1980s after it was blessed by Pope John Paul II. Secret Bay has a wide range of reefs to explore, from five meters to thirty meters, divers experience a plethora of critters on this great muck dive. Basura is a great site for underwater photographers. The word basura means trash in Filipino as the site was originally littered with waste, but it has since been cleaned thanks to the local community. While there is no longer any trash covering the site, there is a variety of marine critters. Beatriz Rock is a sea mount next to Sombrero Island and the reef starts at six meters and features a sandy bottom at twenty meters. This site has a slight current and strong sun rays.



Dive Conditions

There are three seasons that affect the diving conditions in the Philippines. The northeast monsoon brings strong winds from December to March. The southwest monsoon affects the months of July through November which are wet but the ocean waters are warm. April through June are the dry months with very little winds.
November to May is the dry season in the Philippines, offering little to no rain and a nice hot and humid weather. This period of time is often considered as the best time to dive in the Philippines and is the most popular time to visit the country. Regardless, the diving season in the Philippines runs year-round, keeping in mind that some of the areas and certain marine life sightings are either seasonal or weather dependent, this includes Tubbataha which can only be dived around the months of March to June. During the wet season, typically runs from May to October, most of the dive sites remain great, the waters are warmer, and divers have the advantage of having uncrowded sites. Typhoons may occur during the wet season, particularly around July to September.
Tubbataha Reefs National Park – amazing biodiversity. Tubbataha is home to no less than 600 species of fish, 360 species of corals (about 50% of the coral species in the world), 11 species of sharks (including tiger sharks, whale sharks, and whitetips), 13 species of dolphins and whales, nesting hawksbill and green sea turtles. You can also see manta rays, schools of barracuda and tuna, and smaller marine life like nudibranchs, ornate ghost pipefish, seahorses, and frogfish.
Anilao, Batangas – best muck diving. The long list of small-scale sea life and critters that you can find in Anilao includes nudibranchs, frogfish, seahorses, cuttlefish, and pipefish. But don't leave your wide-angle lens at home. Beautiful coral reefs, turtles, huge schools of jacks, jellyfish, and the occasional reef sharks await in Anilao.
Dauin, Dumaguete – the luxury destination. The variety of marine life that you can find along the Dauin Coast include various types of frogfish, dragonets, pipefish, nudibranchs, blue-ring octopuses, bobtail squids, mandarin fish, seahorses, cardinalfish (with eggs), various shrimps and crabs. The main diving season in Dumaguete is October to early June, but the prolific marine life of Dauin can be found all year round, so there’s no worry of missing out.
Moaboal, Cebu – amazing sardine baitballs. Scuba diving in Moalboal is diverse and very vibrant. Think big schools of fish, beautiful walls, canyons and caves, and fascinating macro life. Pescador Island offers some of the best dives in the Philippines, featuring a dramatic wall with colorful soft corals teeming with anthias. Then there is a large cathedral on the west side of Pescador which makes a nice background for dramatic underwater shots. You can also see schools of barracuda, beautiful caves, reef sharks, and also smaller marine life like nudibranchs and frogfish
Puerto Galera, Mindoro – stunning white sand beaches and diverse dive sites. Canyons provide plenty of action with strong currents. For divers interested in wrecks, the three sunken boats of the Sabang Wrecks offer a fascinating dive trip. Don't forget to include a day trip to dive at Verde Island during your stay in Puerto Galera. Its passage is known to offer some of the highest biodiversity in the Philippines. Nudibranchs, reef octopuses, frogfish, and seahorses can be seen in abundance in Puerto Galera. There are also many stunning soft and hard corals to be found while exploring the reefs of this dream destination. Like most of the Philippines, Puerto Galera can be dived all-year-round.
Anda, Bohol – the hidden gem. There are 17 kilometers of coastline to explore in Anda, with a good mix of walls, slopes and sandy muck dive sites as well as coral gardens. The diverse underwater topography and critter population in Anda are really worth exploring. Divers can see pygmy seahorses, skeleton shrimps, anemone shrimps, dragon sea moths, mantis shrimps, Napoleon snake eels, nudibranchs, and mating mandarin fish. Turtles and beautiful reef fish can also be seen in the area. Anda can also be dived all-year-round.
Malapascua, Cebu – thresher sharks abound. Malapascua is known to be the best place in the world to see thresher sharks. This tiny oasis is the only place in the world where thresher sharks are consistently seen daily. Combine that with its pristine waters and milky-white beaches, and divers have a perfect destination for a dive vacation.
Coron Bay, Palawan – the destination for wreck dives. The historical World War II shipwrecks of Coron are unique. Coron Bay used to be the harbor for World War II Japanese warships. Eleven of these ships were sunk during an air attack in September 1944. Today the wrecks of serve as reef systems, supporting a number of marine critters. Some of the residents of these wrecks include scorpionfish, nudibranchs, cuttlefish, and octopuses. Divers see the occasional reef shark or stingray, hovering near the wrecks.