WUC - Our Diving
Wellington Underwater Club offers a wide range of underwater activities, from social club dives and dive trips to tec diving exploration.
We meet regularly for local dives in our beautiful Taputeranga Marine Reserve along the South Coast of Wellington, or around the harbour for more sheltered conditions in a Southerly. We dive all year around and with so many dive sites we usually find a good site in pretty much any weather conditions. Usually our club dives are followed by a coffee in one of the many fantastic cafes around town.
The Club is highly networked in the local marine and conservation community and engages with other clubs and organisations in and beyond the Wellington region.
Training our diving skills, testing new gear and getting ready for the next dive trip is always a motivation. Our members have a wide range of experience that we love to share.
Dive Sites
Wellington is surrounded by water and has a large number of dive sites in easy reach.
So join in with the club and stake a flag in a favourite spot or find a new place to explore.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. the club details of a site you enjoyed and we share it with other club members.
The following link takes you to a Google "My Maps" page with a lot of dive site information
Wellington's South Coast - Google My Maps
Initial "My Maps" created by Jeff Grove.
Dive information kindly created and shared by Pete Humphries.
WUC member: Sophie Mormede
Octopress: Autumn 2024
Dive site: Breaker Bay
One of my favourite Wellington sites, best done at high tide for easier access, also one of the last south coast sites to lose the swell and surge. It's outside of the marine reserve so has less fish than elsewhere on the south coast and meeting a spearo in the corridors can be unsettling. Also far less sea tulips than there used to be, yet the long corridor makes for amazing lights and colours, with walls covered in anemones, nudis... The deeper reef is more open and has more fish life as well as some remnant kelp forest.
WUC member: Erin Hewetson
Octopress: Winter 2024
Dive site: Hole in the Wall, Kapiti Island
Rolling backwards from the boat I’m excited and anxious to begin my first dive at Kapiti Island. I hit the water and its fresh, but not too cold, as we’re lucky to have the sun beaming down on us today. Fur seals watch us closely from the rocks nearby, cautious of these clumsy looking humans weighed down by all their gear. We begin our descent, below us a golden-brown carpet of seaweed looks as though it could fully envelop us if we let it.
Swimming towards the reef wall, barely 10 metres from the water’s surface a hole in the wall appears with an entrance large enough to accommodate a diver (or two). Swimming into this entrance we’re greeted by jewel anemones, nudibranchs, and sponges of all colours lining the cave walls. This cave is expansive and doesn’t feel at all claustrophobic, only encouraging me to stay and explore.
We keep swimming through the cave and eventually the roof opens into a canyon with seaweed covered walls either side of us. I look up and spy fur seals swimming above and then remember a trick a friend once told me – if you spin around in the water, you might convince the seals to come down and play. Tumbling about I made myself dizzy but also invited one of the seals to come down and play, coming nose-to-nose with a whiskered sea dog.
My favourite local dive site is one that I can’t visit every weekend, but this only adds to the charm for me. When the weather and timing aligns, I get to experience a site that feels like another world but is only an hour or so from home.
As a dive club, we are lucky to have access to Kapiti Island’s undersea world thanks to Duckling Charters. If you get the opportunity, I highly recommend making the time to visit this hole in the wall, it might just become your favourite site as well!
Club Dives

Wellington Underwater Club regularly organises Club Dives around Wellington for everyone to join in.
Training

Wellington Underwater Club is promoting and supporting the continuous training of it's members.
Photography

Capturing the beautiful underwater world in photos is a big motivation for many of our divers.
Marine Conservation

Wellington Underwater Club is an active advocate for the marine environment. The Club engagesin marine conservation and monitoring.