Posted by: Clare | 3 June 2011

Dive sites: A Frame

Tony surveying the rocks at A Frame

Tony surveying the rocks at A Frame

Shore diving in Cape Town can feel quite adventurous, often requiring as much mountaineering skill (with 20 kilograms of kit on your back) as it does buoyancy control! A Frame (also called Oatlands Point) is one of the most special shore entries on the western False Bay coast, and we visited it on a recent cloudy Sunday with perfect sea conditions. It requires a bit of walking and a tiny bit of climbing, but it’s nowhere near as strenuous as a shore entry at Shark Alley, for example.

A Frame (Oatlands Point)

A Frame (Oatlands Point)

To reach A Frame, drive past Simon’s Town golf course and Fisherman’s Beach, and park – almost immediately after the beach – on the left hand side of the road between the two houses with interesting roof features (one has a solarium vibe going with some British flags, the other has a clock). One used to be able to cross the grass of an empty plot and walk straight down to the rocks, but that plot has been fenced off (with a white picket fence!) now, so one has to use the little path to the right of it, under the No Parking sign.

The entry that we usually use (the northern entry) is over a large piece of rough granite known as “slippery rock”. There’s a conveniently placed rock to hold onto when entering and exiting – basically you inflate your BCD, hold onto your fins, put your mask around your neck, and walk in as far as you can. Then either giant stride off the edge of the rock, or slide down on your bottom until you’re in the water (warning: this can be hard on your suit!). Put your fins on as soon as you are floating – you’ll be in 3 metres of water already so you won’t be able to stand. There’s a lot of kelp there so use it to keep still, and move slowly and steadily. The exit is similar – come as far as you can with fins on, take them off, stand up, watch the waves (if any) and grab onto the rock by the exit as soon as you can reach it.

When you climb in at A Frame you’ll be landing in a sandy basin surrounded by rocks. The depth is about 4 metres, and there’s not a lot on the sand, but it has a peculiar beauty to it and it’s very sheltered. The rocks are to the south and east are where your primary interest will lie, however.

The site is rich with invertebrate life – massive anemones of all colours of the rainbow, abalone, urchins, sea stars, nudibranchs and fairly prolific fish life characterise the area. A Frame is partly inside the Castle Rocks restricted zone which means no fishing or harvesting of marine life is allowed.

There are kelp forests around most of the rocks, and on the day we dived this site in May we had spectacular top to bottom visibility. My favourite part of A Frame is the large swim-through to the north of the big white rock that breaks the surface. This is a dog-leg cave formed by three or four huge rocks that almost meet at the top. There’s a narrow gap where your bubbles can escape (which I am grateful for, because none of the creatures in the cave are drowned in air then!) and three entrances/exits. Inside the swimthrough you’ll find urchins, anemones, nudibranchs, sea fans and lots of fish taking shelter. A torch is recommended. It’s short, not scary, and spectacularly beautiful. A huge orange wall sponge can be found at the spot we prefer to use as an exit – the opening opposite goes out into quite shallow water where you can get tossed about by the surge.

Dive date: 22 May 2011

Air temperature: 20 degrees

Water temperature: 14 degrees

Maximum depth: 7.3 metres

Visibility: 12 metres

Dive duration: 37 minutes

Klipfish outside the swim through

Klipfish outside the swim through


Responses

  1. […] A-Frame (Oatlands Point) Albatross Rock Alpha Reef (Outer Spaniard) Ammunition Barges Andre se gat Ankers Antipolis Bakoven Rock Balcony Bantry Bay Batsata Rock Bikini Beach Blouklip (Bloukrans) Blousteen Ridge Blue Rock Quarry Boat Rock (Bakoven Rock) Bordjiesrif Brunswick Buffels Bay Caravan Reef Castle Rocks and Parson’s Nose Castor Rock Cement Barge Clifton Rocks Container Bay (Mike’s Bay) Coral Gardens (Oudekraal) Coral Gardens (Rooi-els) Cow and Calf Dale Brook D-Frame (Oatlands Reef, Wave Rock) Di’s Cracks Die Josie Die Perd Dreadlocks Reef Fan Reef Finlay’s Point (Jenga Reef) Finlay’s Deep Fish Hoek Reef Fisherman’s Beach Froggy pond Geldkis Geldkis Blinder Hakka Reef (Middelmas) Hangklip Ridge Het Huis te Kraaiestein HNMS Bato Insanity Reef Justin’s Caves Kalk Bay Harbour Wall Kanobi’s Wall Klein Pannekoek Klein Tafelberg Reef (Salad bowl, Yacht wreck)) Kruis (Crosses) Ledges Logies Bay Long Beach Lorry Bay Maidstone Rock MFV Orotava MFV Princess Elizabeth Mike’s Point Miller’s Point Muizenberg Trawlers Murray’s Bay Harbour (Robben Island) Mushroom Pinnacle MV Aster MV BOS 400 MV Daeyang Family MV Gemsbok MV Katsu Maru MV Rockeater MV Romelia MV Treasure Noah’s Ark and the Ark Rock Wrecks […]

  2. […] looks good for shore entries and we will dive with the cowsharks if the swell is small or perhaps A Frame and or Sunny […]

  3. […] and sheepishness like those that Kate is clearly experiencing in the photo above (taken at A Frame), but you won’t drown or be trapped forever amid the slippery brown […]

  4. […] course at Long Beach, and on Sunday we’ll be doing some shore dives – hopefully at  A Frame and the Clan Stuart, conditions permitting. Please let me know in good time if you’d like to […]

  5. […] recent dive at A Frame yielded some fantastic specimens. I particularly like the one above, who is bravely regrowing not […]

  6. […] be very cloudy and for some this relates to cold. I will decide Saturday afternoon but will dive at A Frame or Windmill Beach. There is a 3 metre swell which may just make A Frame difficult. Windmill Beach […]

  7. […] the boat dive we plan to dive at A Frame and then move to Long Beach for a third dive. Grant is doing three launches on Saturday so if the […]

  8. […] Diving dives, so I’ll spend most of the time at Long Beach and, conditions permitting, Windmill, A Frame and/or the Clan […]

  9. […] directly out into the bay from Windmill, there is a reasonably large and healthy population. Like A Frame, we saw many false plum anemones, and the Cape rock crab population at Windmill seems particularly […]

  10. […] dive, the swell is small, very little wind and there is still some moon. I will do a night dive at A Frame or the Clan Stuart if there is enough interest. Seals on Klein Tafelberg […]

  11. […] I dived with tourists primarily and had 6 metre visibility with 17 degree water. We also dived at A Frame and saw gully sharks in the swim-through. I only saw two, but there have been up to 8 seen at once […]

  12. […] to relax into whatever situation they find themselves in. Most of these specimens were found at A Frame and Long Beach. […]


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