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The Red Sea’s warm, clear waters and multicolored reefs, have long been one of the world’s premier diving destinations. More than 300 diving centers in the Sinai Peninsula region receive more than 1.6 million divers annually โ an incredible number of visitors and incredible dives!
This summer, a group from NAUI Brazil visited Egypt, beginning with the main tourist attractions of that legendary country โ Alexandria, the pyramids of Giza, and the temples of Luxor and Karnak, where we took a balloon ride to see the sights from overhead.
The following week our group traveled to Hurghada City, o
ne of the gateways to Red Sea diving, and exchanged the desert scenery for the blue sea and seven days of adventure on a liveaboard,
In total, there were 22 dives in a sparkling underwater world with more than 200 species of coral, 1200 species of fish (of which 20 percent are endemic), and incredible shipwrecks, which are one of the great attractions of the region.

In total, it was possible for our group to dive onto 10 different shipwrecks: Carnatic (1869), Dunraven (1876), Chrisoula (1981), Giannis D (1983), the Yolanda‘s cargo debris field (1980-1985), Thistlegorm (1941), the “Barge” (date not known), Ulysses (1887),
We were able to make two dives on the most iconic wreck of all, the SS Thistlegorm. During World War II, the Thistlegorm was bringing supplies from England to 
NAUI has been present in Brazil since 1996 and has trained thousands of divers with our safety standards, who now travel the globe with our flag.




