Scuba Diving Cornwall - Gylly Beach
Original video at: by one of our Instructors (under their permission)
Cornish Diving 2017
The Cornish Diving Centre is one of the UKs most active Padi 5 Star Instructor Development Centres, priding itself in the highest levels of customer service.
We specialise in small group tuition, using the very latest teaching techniques and the most up to date equipment. We are passionate about promoting the amazing underwater world in the UK and especially Cornwall. Come and join us and DISCOVER A WHOLE NEW WORLD.
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01326-311265
Gylly beach Falmouth
Diving Gylly beach on a Padi Peak Performance Buoyancy Course.
Porthkerris Divers, Cornwall
Porthkerris Divers is a family run dive centre that offers fantastic shore and boat diving, on site food, self catering accommodation, a relaxing dog friendly beach and activities for all the family.
The gateway to the Manacles - MCZ
Marine Conservation Zone.
WEBSITE:
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EMAIL: info@porthkerris.com
PHONE: +44 (0)1326 280620
DIVING: Gul Rock, Port Gaverne, Cornwall
Watch in 720p. Diving off Gul Rock just North of Port Gaverne. Filmed with a GoPro HD2 on 720p 30fps without the flat lends kit to improve the focus which I need to get. It was fairly rough on the way out but good vis when we got there. Water temp: 11 Degrees Max Depth: 19.4m Dive Time: Around 45 minuets
Cornwall Diving
Diving in Cornwall (Falmouth, Mullion and Penzance) in May 2009 with Oxygene Cranleigh and Dive Action.
Scuba Noobs - Castle Beach Falmouth Shore Scuba Dive April 2015
Scuba Noobs visited Castle Beach in Falmouth (UK) for Scuba diving in the UK for the first time.
We were taken with the excellent Cornish Diving School in Falmouth.
Filmed with a GoPro Hero4 Silver and GoPro Dive Mask (GoPro sits on forehead).with Stephen and Benjamin
Dive on the wreck of the Krosfond (Lizard, Cornwall)
Footage from a dive on the wreck of the Kronsfond, which lies in 63m of water just off hte Lizard penninsular in Cornwall.
Shot using a Paralenz camera and torchlight. This was filmed the day after Huricane Ophelia came through so the visibility was not the best at depth but nonetheless it was an excellent dive.
All footage is the property of James Clark
©2017 Dory Video/James Clark
doryvideo.co.uk
Places to see in ( Coverack - UK )
Places to see in ( Coverack - UK )
Coverack is a coastal village and fishing port in Cornwall, UK. It is on the east side of the Lizard peninsula, about nine miles south of Falmouth. Coverack has several hotels and a youth hostel. The area is a centre for watersports, particularly wind surfing, sailing and diving. The nearby rocks known as the Manacles have been the site of many shipwrecks and as a consequence are now a favourite diving destination.
Near the South West Coast Path is Poldowrian Garden which includes a prehistoric settlement discovered in 1965, dated by archaeologists at 5500 BC. Finds from the site are available for viewing. The roads to Coverack cross Goonhilly Downs (famous for the BT satellite earth station). Coverack Cove and Dolor Point SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) is one of the most famous geological localities in Cornwall, providing an almost continuous section across a mantle-crust boundary. Other nearby SSSI are Coverack to Porthoustock and Kennack to Coverack. Coverack lies within the Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). Almost a third of Cornwall has AONB designation, with the same status and protection as a National Park.
The Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) stationed a lifeboat at Coverack in 1901 following the wreck of the SS Mohegan on The Manacles in 1898 with the loss of more than 100 lives. A boat house with a slipway was built on the harbour. The all-weather lifeboat was withdrawn in May 1972 and replaced by a D-class inshore inflatable. The station was closed completely in October 1978 following the allocation of a faster boat to Falmouth Lifeboat Station.
( Coverack - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Coverack . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Coverack - UK
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Cornwall Sep 2015 Porthkerris Dive 2 Group 1
A shore dive with UoBSAC Ocean Divers on our club holiday to Cornwall in September 2015.
For more information about the club visit
Visit us on Facebook at Bradford City Divers and Twitter @BradfordCDivers
Daily Scuba News - The UK Is A Service Station For Whales
The UK Is a Service Station For Whales
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findings of a new citizen science project have found out that UK waters provide a welcome break when migrating, for the first time ever this new scheme also managed to match a humpback whale that was chillin’ in the UK to a humpback in the Arctic.
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Presenter(s): Mark Newman & Shaun Johnson
Writer(s): Shaun Johnson
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To browse our huge range of top brand Scuba gear and equipment for all ages, with fast shipping and 28-day returns, visit
For more helpful product videos plus expert scuba diving advice, head to
1950s 1960s Cornwall and Falmouth, Colour 16mm Home Movies
From the Kinolibrary Archive Film collections. To order the clip clean and high res or to find out more visit Clip ref TA15
1950s 1960s Cornwall and Falmouth, Colour 16mm Home Movies
Scuba Diving in Falmouth UK - SS Epsilon
Diving the SS Epsilon off Falmouth UK
Max Depth on this dive: 24m
An incredible Plankton bloom is surrounding Falmouth at the moment causing visibility issues but we got around 4-6m
Scuba Diving in Cornwall
Me and friends diving at Porthkerris Dive Centre in Cornwall 2008
NAME: Trevor wylde
LOCATION RECORDED: Porthkerris, Cornwall
Seal snorkelling trip with students from Newquay College Cornwall
After a week of pretty windy weather the viz wasn't perfect but the seals were very playful. Trip filmed on 9th June 2017 at Menawethan on the Isles of Scilly. scillysealsnorkelling.com
Places to see in ( St Austell - UK )
Places to see in ( St Austell - UK )
St Austell is a civil parish and major town in Cornwall, England, UK. It is situated on the south coast, approximately 10 miles south of Bodmin and 30 miles west of the border with Devon.
As in much of Cornwall and neighbouring counties, tourism is increasingly important to St Austell's economy. Tourists are drawn to the area by nearby beaches and attractions such as the Eden Project, sited in a former clay pit, and the Lost Gardens of Heligan. The China Clay Country Park, in a former china-clay pit two miles north of the town, tells the story of the men, women and children who lived, worked and played in the shadow of the clay tips around St Austell.
St Austell is home to several public houses, numerous high street retailers, and several independent shops, many of which cater for tourists. The town has a small museum which is situated in the Market House. A Brewery Museum and Visitor Centre is situated on the site of the St Austell Brewery in Trevarthian Road.
Notable Cornish architect Silvanus Trevail designed a number of St Austell's buildings and houses, including the Thin End and the Moorland Road terrace. Of other notable architects from St Austell include John Goode, who contributed considerably during the 1970s to residential developments in the area. Pevsner remarks in his guide to Cornwall that the following buildings are notable:
The Parish Church
The Old Town Hall, in Italian Renaissance style, 1844
Friends Meeting House, 1829, a plain granite structure
Masonic Hall, South Street, 1900[20] and is home to nine Masonic bodies
White Hart Hotel: once contained panoramic wallpaper of the Bay of Naples by Dufour (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum)[22]
Holy Well at Menacuddle.
Three buildings of the 1960s: Penrice School, 1960; Public Library, 1961; former Magistrates' Court, 1966.
St Austell railway station was opened by the Cornwall Railway on 4 May 1859 on the hillside above the town centre. Two branch lines west of the town were later opened to serve the china clay industry; the Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway which is still partly open, and the short-lived Trenance Valley line. The town's bus station faces the entrance to the railway station to offer an easy interchange between buses and trains. National Express coach services call here, a dedicated link operates to the Eden Project, and local buses operate to villages such as Fowey and Mevagissey.
( St Austell - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of St Austell . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in St Austell - UK
Join us for more :
Lamorna Cove Scuba Dive Cornwall 29/08/2019
Scuba dive at lamorna cove Cornwall August 2019
Using Olympus TG - Tracker.
History & Haunting of : Cadgwith Cove ,Cadgwith,Cornwall ,U.K
The 300 year old Cadgwith Cove Inn is right on the coastal path and in the centre of the village of Cadgwith. For centuries it has been the meeting place of fishermen .
The inn is reputedly home to a phantom old fisherman and a ghostly smuggler. A witness outside the front of the inn, smoking a cigarette after the bar had closed, heard a set of disembodied footsteps pass by and around the pub...
Folk Night at Cadgwith Cove Inn
Just up the road from the inn is a holiday home named The Corner House it is said that here in 1988 it was reported that this dark monk like figure was seen to rise and float along a corridor near the bathroom...
Corner House, as featured in English Cottage Interiors by Hugh Lander, is a delightful traditional fisherman`s cottage. It is full of character with a lovely old polished Cornish range at one end of the 22 ft living room. Situated only 100 yards from the sea, the cottage stands at the beginning of one of the cliff walks, which runs to an old mill and then on to Kennack Sands. A visitor once wrote the house wrapped its arms around us immediately and gave us a big hug. We loved it!!
The village has its origins in medieval times as a collection of fish cellars in a sheltered south-east facing coastal valley with a shingle cove. Fishing subsidised local farmers' livelihoods. Cadgwith was originally called 'Porthcaswydh', becoming 'Por Cadjwydh' in Late Cornish, and is derived from the Cornish word for 'a thicket', literally meaning battle of trees, probably because the valley was densely wooded. From the 16th century, the village became inhabited, with fishing as the main occupation. Subsequently, houses, lofts, capstan houses, and cellars constructed of local stone or cob walls and thatched or slated roofs were built along the beach and up the sides of the valley leading to Cadgwith's characteristic Cornish fishing village appearance. In recent times a very small Anglican church was built, next to the path from the car park down to the seafront, dedicated to St Mary.The Lizard Peninsula has a treacherous coastline due to a combination of submerged rocks and weather factors (gales, storms, or fog). There are numerous wrecks on the rocks off Lizard Point known as The Stags, and The Manacles which lie near Coverack, and there are a number of other rocks off the coast of Cadgwith known as The Craggan and The Boa. Deep sea diving onto the wrecks is quite popular.
cadgwith storm 2014
Diving Cornwall in England
In Cornwall every summer the population is doubled. The subtropical climate and the wide sandy beaches attract thousands of English tourists. This summer, you can add two more diving Dutchies to them. Attracted by the an underwater world that is unknown to me, England has been on my list for many years. Every time Dennis and I found an excuse not to go, but this year we finally managed to go and after a drive of approximately nine hours, we arrive in the most South-western part of the country, in Cornwall. A beautiful peninsula with green sloping hills and a capricious coastline.
For more videos, please take a look at nudibranch.nl
DIVING THE WRECK OF THE SPIRIDIAN VAGLIANO, THE MANACLES, CORNWALL,UK
I FILMED THIS YESTERDAY DIVING FROM PORTHKERRIS DIVE CENTRE, WITH DAVE BROWN AT THE HELM OF THE CELTIC KITTEN.
A GREAT LITTLE DIVE, THO IT FELT RATHER COLD IN OUR WETSUITS AT 8-9 DEGREES CELSIUS.
VIS WAS PRETTY GOOD AND DUE TO THE FACT IT IS STILL JUST SPRING, THE KELP HAS NOT GROWN YET, SO IDEAL TIME OF YEAR TO DIVE.
SORRY THAT THE VID ON THE WRECK STARTS RATHER DARK, BUT I FORGOT TO CHANGE ISO SETTINGS ON THE CAMERA AS I AM STILL FAMILIARISING MYSELF WITH IT. A CANON 650D.
PLENTY WRASSE AND POLLACK ON THE WRECK....ONE WAS ALMOST 18 INCHES LONG. NORMALLY YOU GET CONGA EELS AND NUDIBRANCHS ETC.
THE WRECK IS ON THE OUTER PART OF THE MANACLES WHICH IS A SITE OF MANY TRAGIC WRECKS, THE MOHEGAN IS NEARBY AND CAN BE INCORPORATED INTO THE DIVE.
WE SET OFF FROM PORTHKERRIS DIVE CENTRE THAT HAS 2 MAIN BOATS AND A RIB. FANTASTIC CREW THERE, AND IS ALWAYS A PLEASURE DIVING WITH THEM. THERE IS A VERY NICE SHORE DIVE FROM PORTHKERRIS ALSO AT DRAWNA ROCKS. THEY HAVE A COMPRESSOR ONSITE TO AIR AND NITROX REFILLS ARE AT HAND.
I HOPE YOU ENJOY, SUBSCRIBE IF YOU WANT TO SEE MORE DIVE CLIPS AS I WILL ALWAYS BE UPDATING!