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Yap Scuba Diving

Yap Scuba Diving
Yap Top Scuba Diving Locations

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Rating Dive Site Level Reviews
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Gilmaan Wall Intermediate 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Goofnuw Channel Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Goofnuw Mini Wall Intermediate 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Japanese Zero Plane Wreck Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Kurrekurredat Drop Off Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Laura Marie Wreck Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Lighthouse Pass Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Lionfish Wall Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Magic Kingdom Advanced 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Main Channel Advanced 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Manta Cleaning Station Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Manta Ridge Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 Miil Point Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 O' Keef Island Wreck Novice 0
Average Rating = 0.00/5 O' Keefs Passage Advanced 0

Time appears to have forgotten this undisturbed little corner of Micronesia, leaving its culture more intact than the rest of the islands. If you are picturing Island men folk fishing in loincloth and women weaving in grass skirts - you are far from over-romanticizing the reality of Yap as it is today.

Placed west of Micronesia, in the middle of Guam and Palau, Yap consists of four continental islands; Yap Proper, Tomil-Gagil, Map, and Rumung. These quintuplets are tectonically joined by a coral reef pushed up by the geological movements of the Eurasian plate. A further 130 of Yap's islets extend east for 600 miles.

There is a marked difference between the traditional lifestyle in the smaller villages and the densely populated modern capital of Colonia, on Yap Proper. The main island is inhabited by migrants from the Malaysia, Indonesia and New Guinea, whereas the outer islands are mainly Polynesian in ancestry.

Yap's location protected it to a certain extent from Spanish, and later both German and Japanese invasions of Micronesia. The island had its fair share of bombings and was occupied at the end of WWII was by the US, which held it under trusteeship until 1986. Yap now forms part of the Federated States of Micronesia along with Truk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae.

Offshore investments set in stone

Yap's currency is most unlike and other in the global economy. It's made of imported stone. Five different kinds; Mmbul, Gaw, Fe' or Rai, Yar, and Reng make up the varying sizes and values of exchange on this island. They range from 0.3 m (1 ft) in diameter to the largest, which takes as many as 20 strong men to maneuver. The value placed on this currency is that none of it was actually quarried on Yap. The stone was in actual fact obtained through much effort and danger as far away as Palau and New Guinea. This currency is still used to trade on the island today, the disks can transfer ownership in ceremonial circumstances such as land trade or marriage while US dollars are used for wider exchange.

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Most Recent Photos (See all 16 photos)

Streaming light and triggerfish by annamatic3000 Lumpy coral by annamatic3000 Sharks? by annamatic3000 Manta! by tata_aka_T Swimming with Fish by tata_aka_T Teacher Shark by tata_aka_T
Castle of Fish by tata_aka_T Point by annamatic3000 Blue Dawn by tata_aka_T Crocodile fish by annamatic3000 Manta Pass by c.lathe Little Loggerhead Turtle by c.lathe

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