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Mafia Island: a diving destination away from the tourist crowds but rewarding for UW photographers

Mafia Island is located in the Indian Ocean, off the East African coast of Tanzania. I learned about Mafia Island from reports of several scubadivers in internet platforms, who consider it an “insider tip”. In November/December 2024 three divers (Lisi, Franz and me) set out towards Mafia in order to experience firsthand the diving and possibilities for UW-photographers.

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Mafia Island is not difficult to reach via international flights from Vienna/Austria to Dar es Salaam/Tanzania. From there, the travel continues with a short 30’ flight via domestic airline. The airport in Kilindoni, the largest village of the island, is small and, accordingly, the airplanes are small too (the photo shows the main building of the airport and, to the left, the nose of the aircraft that brought us there). By default, only 15kg of luggage, including the cabine luggage, are allowed in the small aircraft. It is very positive to note, that one can book extra luggage in advance by EMail with the domestic “Coastal Airline” (https://coastal.co.tz/), in order to avoid unpleasant surprises when arriving with masses of unannounced luggage. This way, our extensive diving and photo equipment was “nullo problemo” (in order to avoid overload of the aircraft, we had to book an extra seat in advance, that remained empty).

 

There are several resorts located on Mafia Island, but only a single one, “Big Blue Mafia Island Diving Centre” (https://bigblumafia.com/) is perfectly positioned within the Mafia Island Marine Park, where most of the diving spots are located (the marinepark fee, that has to be paid for every single day of the stay once upon entrance, is worth every single cent). This resort is owned and managed by Maura, an Italian, who is the friendly contact person for booking and payment. She is married to a local diving instructor, native to the island, who runs the diving base (their son is working as diving guide, one can say it is a true family enterprise; also the other instructors, guides and employees contributed to a very pleasant stay including safe and wonderful diving).

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Accommodation is simple, but corresponds to western standards, comprising tasty half (or, when required, full) board and aircondition. Cleaning and freeing the huts from mosquitoes with pesticides is done twice per day. At this point it is appropriate to mention that effective repellants and malaria prophylaxis are strongly recommended by our Austrian tropical medicine specialists.

Diving is done using Dhow style boats, that provide plenty of space for the few divers. They are made from heavy tropical woods and are powered by an outboard engine. When winds allow, the boats are also able to sail along silently and swiftly. Chole Bay is the heart of the natural reserve and accordingly most diving spots are located within the bay. Depending on weather, diving spots outside the bay can be dived also. Since the tidal range within Chole Bay is substantial, departure times for the two-tank boat dives are dominated by the tide, are highly variable from day to day and were between 05:00 AM and 14:30 PM during the two weeks of our stay. Despite careful consideration of tidal times, substantial currents are possible. At low tide the visibility within the bay can be pretty modest (as low as 4-5m), but at high tide and also outside the bay it can be remarkably good (up to 30m). Taken together, the diving conditions are certainly not easy for UW-photographers. This is more than compensated by outstanding biodiversity and abundance of species that guarantee the presence of great motifs in high number, rewarding those that take up the challenge.

School of common blue-striped snappers (Lutjanus kasmira), outside Chole Bay. Sony A7R5, WACP-C, Sony 28-60mm @28mm, 1/160s, f/10, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Also inside Chole Bay, the quality of hard coral is good. Sony A7R5, Canon 8-15mm @15mm, 1/100s, f/10, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Attracted by me, since I was using the macro setup (when I was equipped with the fisheye lens, mating Nembrothas were almost guaranteed), a giant Potato Grouper (Epinephelus tukula) shows up inside the bay. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, 1/200s, f/9, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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The diving comprises plenty of motifs for wideangle photography, but Chole Bay can be regarded as a true macro destination for UW-photographers as well:

Numerous nudibranch species can be encountered around Chole Bay. Noteworthy to state, our stay coincided with the mating season of the Golden Nembrotha (Nembrotha aurea). These seaslugs are hermaphrodites and mating takes place by connecting the sexual organs, located on the right side of the body, with each other in order to transfer the sperm. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, SMC-1, 1/250s, f/14, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Blue Pseudoceros flatworm (Pseudoceros bifurcus) moves leisurely over hard coral. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, SMC-1, 1/200s, f/14, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Shrimp city is a coral block located inside Chole Bay that is not only populated by countless camel shrimps (Rhynchocinetes durbanensis), but also glassfish, damselfish, anthias, muray eels and groupers. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, 1/250s, f/13, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Longnose Hawkfish (Oxycirrhites typus) sitting on black coral. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, 1/200s, f/13, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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Reef octopus (Octopus cyaneus) peeks out curiously from its shelter. Sony A7R5, Sony 90mm macro, 1/200s, f/18, ISO 100, 2* HF-1 (4500K diffusers):

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A report about diving at Mafia Island cannot be complete without whale sharks (Rhincodon typus). Outside the marinepark, between the African eastcoast, where the impressive Rufiji river ends up in the Indian Ocean, and the west coast of Mafia Island, the Mafia channel is formed. The high input of biomass from the Rufiji river delta causes plankton to bloom within this strait. This results not only in poor visibility (6-10m; and hence (again) challenging conditions for UW-photography), but, at certain times of the year, whale sharks gather for feeding. Snorkeling excursions by boat are offered and we were able to spot up to 15 different whale sharks on a single day (including a touching encounter with a female shark, closely accompanied by her half-grown up offspring).

 

Whaleshark feeding on krill. Sony A7R5, WACP-C, Sony 28-60mm @31mm, 1/200s, f/7.1, ISO 200:

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Whaleshark fading away into the blue. Sony A7R5, Canon 8-15mm @15mm, 1/250s, f/6.3, ISO 250:

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It was an unforgettable diving trip and fond memories will endure. We already have booked flights and resort for another two weeks in November 2025, in order to visit again this little paradise… 😊

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Recommended Comments

Thanks for sharing... now to research more and add to my list haha. 🤣 🤟

CaolIla

Members

Wouah the last photo... :) ❤️

I was 3 years ago in Zanzibar... we hesitated with Mafia. The main reason was the smal plane to arrive to Mafia. But I heard a lot of very good thing over Mafia.
You confirm that this island is a good destination... I'll probably take a closer look for a next time.

Thanks for this report.

Danke Wolfgang.

Stig

Members

Thanks for the report, lovely photos. I'm especially jealous of the whale shark ones as I wasn't lucky enough to get so close when I was there a few years ago.

I have to mention that there's some great muck diving just off the beach of the resort with frog fish, octopus, gurnards, sea horses and nudis.

Love this Wolfgang! Beautiful images.

Thanks for sharing this, always lovely to read about new destinations.

Maria

Architeuthis

Members
(edited)
On 7/25/2025 at 6:48 PM, CaolIla said:

Wouah the last photo... :) ❤️

I was 3 years ago in Zanzibar... we hesitated with Mafia. The main reason was the smal plane to arrive to Mafia. But I heard a lot of very good thing over Mafia.
You confirm that this island is a good destination... I'll probably take a closer look for a next time.

Thanks for this report.

Danke Wolfgang.

Hi Caolla,

How was Zanzibar? For us it It was the first time in Tanzania. First we considered Zanzibar, but then heard (and read) that the island is full with tourists and also divers - so we decided to go to Mafia (this was also recommended by two other divers that have been both in Zanzibar and Mafia previously)...

Edited by Architeuthis

Architeuthis

Members
(edited)
20 hours ago, Stig said:

Thanks for the report, lovely photos. I'm especially jealous of the whale shark ones as I wasn't lucky enough to get so close when I was there a few years ago.

I have to mention that there's some great muck diving just off the beach of the resort with frog fish, octopus, gurnards, sea horses and nudis.

I must admit we have not been on the "housereef" yet. The weather allowed diving with boat every day. This time I will not leave out this muck diving place (I have heard several positive comments about this place)...

It is certainly not easy to keep up with the whalesharks, even with good fins. They are not moving and seem to rest, but still they glide with considerable speed through the water. E.g. at the second last photo of the feeding shark: it did not seem to move, but look at its dorsal fin and the air bubbles made at the water/air interface...

Best luck I had at spots where there was a lot of krill in the water (resulting in even worse visibility). There I could swim with several sharks at once, sometimes even for few minutes, while they were feeding...

Edited by Architeuthis

RobinD

Members
2 hours ago, Architeuthis said:

Hi Caolla,

How was Zanzibar? For us it It was the first time in Tanzania. First we considered Zanzibar, but then heard (and read) that the island is full with tourists and also divers - so we decided to go to Mafia (this was also recommended by two other divers that have been both in Zanzibar and Mafia previously)...

been to both mafia and zanzibar. I would go back to mafia, I liked it there. We also did shore diving / muck diving, stuff like (hairy) frogfish, seahorse, ghostpipe fish etc we saw in the few dives we did from shore.

Zanzibar I would not go back to, the diving was very poor in my opinion, also very crowded with tourism.

CaolIla

Members
(edited)
5 hours ago, Architeuthis said:

Hi Caolla,

How was Zanzibar? For us it It was the first time in Tanzania. First we considered Zanzibar, but then heard (and read) that the island is full with tourists and also divers - so we decided to go to Mafia (this was also recommended by two other divers that have been both in Zanzibar and Mafia previously)...

Hi Wolfgang

We was in Zanzibar in a period where the big tourist ruch is finished that's mean in january 2023

You can read my report (in french, but you can translate the page)
Compte Rendu Zanzibar du 20/01 au 05/02/2023 - Compte-rendus de voyages - Plongeur.com - Le site de la plongée sous marine

If you have some question ask here or in a MP (in Deutsch ist es ok , und besser für mir)

Short response : the weather was not the best, in the north.. in the south itwas really good.. overall it was ok but I probably don't go back... I need to try Mafia

Edited by CaolIla

Christian K

Members
(edited)

Pemba Island in that region also interesting. Was many years ago, spent a week on Manta Lodge on its north tip. Very different to Zanzibar as it sits outside the continental shelf and has very deep waters all the way up to its shores. Kind of fjordlike ”gaps” that cuts into the island with 100+ meter deep walls. Pemba channel 1000 meters deep. Don’t know if there are any good DC:s now. Mafia and Pemba would make an interesting combo.

Edited by Christian K

RickMo

Members

We are booked to dive Pemba next month. Going out with Afro Divers, which have good equipment and a good reputation. I'll report back.

Adventurer

Members

Nice writeup Wolfgang, thanks for the report.

Architeuthis

Members
(edited)
13 hours ago, RickMo said:

We are booked to dive Pemba next month. Going out with Afro Divers, which have good equipment and a good reputation. I'll report back.

Last year friends went to Pemba Island with Afrodivers in June (not the best time of the year, but they could not travel at another time, due to their jobs). They reported about substantial amounts of coral bleaching, just happening shortly before their visit, must have been May or June 2024. As far as I understood them, huge areas of hard coral were just white and not yet covered by algae and dead, what is the irreversible end stage. There is hope that the corals managed to recover - please have a close look on the corals and tell us...

Edited by Architeuthis

Christian K

Members

”Best” season for Pemba is November to April roughly. Outside that period chances for good conditions are a less. It is very tide dependent. Only a short window every day is good which means only two good dives a day. Intimate, local experience and knowledge absolute critical. There were fields of dead coral already 20 years ago—dynamite fishing had been practiced by local military according to the dive center—but very limited. It seemed to have escaped the big bleaching in 1998 that hit the Indian Ocean badly, Maldives in particular. But for the most vast areas of living, beautiful coral. Visibility incredibly clear and lots and lots of fish. Roaring currents. Also bigger schooling fish like barracuda and trevally, and game fish. No sharks or mantas. It was inmo a lot better than diving around Zanzibar.

CaolIla

Members
17 minutes ago, Christian K said:

No sharks or mantas. It was inmo a lot better than diving around Zanzibar.

This species can be watched at the fish market... Probably like we see that in Zanzibar

Christian K

Members
(edited)
57 minutes ago, CaolIla said:

This species can be watched at the fish market... Probably like we see that in Zanzibar

Yes, unfortunately so. According to locals there used to be plenty of manta rays, but all fished out since 25-30 years ago. There’s a reef in the Fundu gap that they called manta reef or manta point, which is a cleaning station. No more. Still was an incredible dive even w/o mantas. Explosion of life. The best area inme together with the reefs that dropped off into the abyss north of Pemba. It is an oceanic island different to the other ones in the archipelago , in some ways like Sipadan compared to the other islands in the Sulawesi sea off NE Sabah.

Edited by Christian K

CaolIla

Members
(edited)
4 hours ago, CaolIla said:

This species can be watched at the fish market... Probably like we see that in Zanzibar

HB__2913 Kizimkazi, Tanzanie, Zanzibar - Tanzanie.jpg


It was not a good experience... but on the other side this people didn't have anything... they need to eat... Who I am to say that this is bad. ?

Edited by CaolIla

Christian K

Members
2 hours ago, CaolIla said:

HB__2913 Kizimkazi, Tanzanie, Zanzibar - Tanzanie.jpg


It was not a good experience... but on the other side this people didn't have anything... they need to eat... How I am to say that this is bad. ?

Sad indeed. Manta rays and sharks are seldom eaten though, very poor meat. Finns dried and sold to the Chinese. Meat become animal fodder. Still, it’s their part of the world and they’re free to do as they wish with their natural resources.

RickMo

Members
10 hours ago, Architeuthis said:

Last year friends went to Pemba Island with Afrodivers in June (not the best time of the year, but they could not travel at another time, due to their jobs). They reported about substantial amounts of coral bleaching, just happening shortly before their visit, must have been May or June 2024. As far as I understood them, huge areas of hard coral were just white and not yet covered by algae and dead, what is the irreversible end stage. There is hope that the corals managed to recover - please have a close look on the corals and tell us...

Will do. I've resigned myself to expecting bleaching just about everywhere, given the global mass bleaching event: Seeing images of bleaching across Cape Kri a month after we were there last fall, and saw healthy corals, was gutting. But we're both optimistic by nature, and whatever the hard coral situation the reef fish, macro life and occasional whale shark at Pemba will give us joy.

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