7 January 2025 Chess Damant

Explore the underwater world

Port Phillip is a haven for marine life, and the currents that flush through the Heads support amazing soft corals and abundant fish life. You’ll have fun poking around coastal rock pools and intertidal rock platforms – Point Lonsdale is a good place to start – but pull on a mask, snorkel and fins and you’ll see a lot more.

Snorkelling, Port Phillip Bay

Snorkelling, Port Phillip Bay  

Weedy Sea Dragon, Port Phillip Bay

Weedy Sea Dragon, Port Phillip Bay  

Easy access sites

Marine life loves the shelter offered by piers, wrecks and reefs. St Leonards Pier is a great place to jump in, its pylons offering shelter to fish, colourful sponges, nudibranchs, seahorses, and weedy and leafy sea dragons. The wreck of the 1925 paddlesteamer Ozone at Indented Heads is another likely spot, where you’re almost guaranteed to see sting rays.

Ozone Shipwreck 1925, Indented Head

Ozone Shipwreck 1925, Indented Head  

Further offshore

Boats open up new areas to explore. Head out with Sea All Dolphin Swims to the sheltered waters of the Popes Eye, a circular structure originally intended to be the foundations of an island fort but now teeming with marine life. At Chinaman’s Hat, up to 100 Australian Fur Seals await for a play, and you can swim with wild dolphins too.

Sea All Dolphin Swims, Queenscliff

Sea All Dolphin Swims, Queenscliff  

Sea All Dolphin Swims, Queenscliff

Sea All Dolphin Swims, Queenscliff  

Want to go deeper?

Scuba diving opens up a whole new world of possibilities for critters, creatures and underwater terrain. Bay City Scuba run guided dives from Geelong, exploring steep walls, bommies, and the wrecks of submarine and ships, all the way out into Bass Strait.

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