Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay/Bruce's Mark

The dive site Bruce's Mark is an offshore rocky reef in the False Bay area, near Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

Understand
A reef area due east of the main reef at Whittle Rock, and due south of Off-Whittle Ridge, shown on the chart as a shallower area, and known by fishermen, but not known to have been dived before 2021. Reported in March 2021 by Bruce Henderson as "Really beautiful spot, 44 m on the sand and 18 m at top of pinnacle. Massive granite structures with big overhangs. Lots of fish life on the day".

Position
This site is not in a Marine Protected Area. A permit is not required.
 * : S34°14.880' E18°34.880'. The 17 m pinnacles are about 1.7 km east of Whittle Rock

Name
The name "Bruce's Mark" is derived from the position mentioned in the first known dive report.

Depth
Maximum depth is about 44 m on the sand, and the top of the highest ridge is about 17 m. Average depth of a dive is likely to be about 30 m, excluding ascent.

Visibility
Visibility is likely to be similar to Whittle Rock on the same day, but the water circulation in this area is not well understood.

Topography
The reef appears to be made up of three lobes of similar north to south dimension, a wider one to the east, with hogsback ridge pinnacles to the south end, and the other two narrower and deeper, to the west with the shallow area below 20 m to the centre of the east lobe, and a more blocky profile in the area visited. Most of the ref has probably never been dived. The centre lobe runs more northwest-southeast and connects the other two like the middle stroke of an "N".

Geology: Granite corestone outcrop of the Peninsula pluton, surrounded by sand.

Conditions
The site is exposed to wind and waves from all directions, and swells from the southwest, however it is quite deep, so short period waves will not affect conditions on the bottom greatly. Low short swell and light wind is best. The prevailing long period swell is from the southwest, and if long enough can cause surge even on the deep reef. Other waves are generally short period wind waves and chop, but the reef is far enough offshore for a vicious chop to develop in a strong wind, which can be very uncomfortable on the ride back to Simon's Town. The area is protected from north-westerly swell, and to a lesser extent south-westerly swell by the Cape Peninsula, but longer period south-westerly swell will refract round Cape Point, and though attenuated, will reach this area.

Surface currents have been measured at up to about 1.5 kilometers per hour, caused by recent wind, and in a similar direction, offset in an anticlockwise Ekman spiral by the Coriolis effect (the current is offset more at greater depth, but proportionately weaker). The skipper should drop divers off a bit up-current of the shotline, which may not be quite the same as upwind of it, and the drift direction of a boat with significant windage is not quite the same as the drift direction of an almost completely immersed diver. Occasionally the current will extend right down to the deep reef, but usually it is shallow.

Water temperature may vary with depth. A thermocline develops in midsummer, gets deeper in autumn, and dissipates in winter. The visibility may also change significantly below the thermocline. The surface at Whittle Rock nearby can be 18 or 19&deg;C with 10 or 11&deg;C at the bottom, but the difference is more likely to be 5&deg;C or less. Conditions at depth are not easily predictable, and may be better or worse than near the surface. There can be a plankton bloom in the surface layers and a sudden improvement in visibility from 3 m or less to over 10 m in the cold bottom water, or, less often, fairly clean surface water, but dirty at depth. This dirty bottom water is more common at deeper offshore sites in False Bay, such as the wrecks of the Fleur (40 m), General Botha (54 m), and Bloemfontein (57 m). The depth of the thermocline is also not very predictable, but has been known to be between 12 and 20 m in late summer.

In winter the water may be the same temperature from top to bottom, and as there is less sunlight to power the phytoplankton blooms, the visibility and natural illumination can be better even though there is less direct sunlight. There is no specific time of year for diving this site, you just have to wait for low swell and light winds, and take your chances with visibility.

A long period swell may produce significant surge at depth, depending on the local topography. The reef is far enough to the west of False Bay that the diffraction of south westerly waves around Cape Point and refraction over Rocky Bank can dissipate a fair amount of the wave energy that would otherwise cross the reef, but the amount is not easily predictable, though the shoreline break on the Strandfontein coast can give some indication.

A current crossing the ridges can cause turbulence that can be visible in the effect on the murky surface layers in an algal bloom. which may occasionally show large visible eddies in the lee of the ridge. The current is not normally strong enough for this to be a hazard.

Get in
The site is only accessible by boat. It is about 10.2 km from the slipway at Miller's Point, but boats also leave from Simon's Town jetty. On a good day in a fast boat it is about a half hour run from Simon's Town Jetty, a distance of about 16.2 km.

Anchoring is not recommended. The holding ground is unreliable, and there is a good chance that the anchor will either drag or foul, possibly both, and a rope rode may chafe through during a dive. This is a site where only the suicidally foolhardy would dive from an unattended boat, and besides dragging or fouling, the anchor tackle will do undesirable and unnecessary ecological damage. Leave the boat in the charge of a competent person who will be able to pick up stray divers and call for help in an emergency.

Do
Dive at the known drop points listed here, grouped by sector of the reef, and explore the local reef around each point, or follow one of the routes. Alternatively, dive at an unsurveyed place and let us know what you find.

Bruce's Mark East Lobe
The Southeast Pinnacles area has two hogsback ridges aligned north-south magnetic with a steep narrow gully between them, and a third, smaller, parallel ridge a bit deeper to the west, rising to 21 m. The high point is at about 17 m on the middle ridge. To the east of the ridges the reef falls away steeply to a bit over 27 m, then a little further east, another steep slope reaches the bottom sand at about 43 m. There are at least two places on the eastern side of the 30 m contour where the sand is very close to the contour. At one place the depth was measured at 36 m. To the west and north the slope is flatter and quite a large area lies above the 27 m contour. On the day of the first survey the surface water was very murky from a red tide, but below 15 m it opened up and was dark but clear and cold, with visibility estimated at about 15 m. Echo soundings indicate a large area of reef below 30 m to the west. The eastern ridge's southern end is shaped somewhat like the bow of a ship, with a triangular flattish top, peaking at about 22 m, so it is called forecastle ridge. The drop from the top of this ridge to the forecastle area is abrupt, with a large, but not very deep overhang on the southeastern side, and a steep sloping ridge drop at the northern end. The western ridge is much larger, and extends over 100 m to the northwest. At 21 m it is quite a bit wider at the northwest end, and there is a section to the west that barely reaches 21m, separated by an irregular narrow gap. The reef close to the ridges is mainly massive outcrops of bedrock with weathered gullies, but further north there are large boulders and flatter outcrops. The 30 m contour is fairly narrow below the pinnacles to the south, and gets much wider to the north. The profile of the northern sector is relatively high on the east side, and a lot flatter to the west.
 * : S34°14.880' E18°34.880'. The 17-m pinnacles at the southern end of the eastern lobe

Bruce's Mark West Lobe
A group of large angular boulders scattered over an area of granite outcrop with sandy bottomed gullies and a pinnacle reaching a shallow point of 23 m near the sand edge at about 38 m depth, some 30 m to the northeast of the pinnacle. About 23 to 33 m on bearing 250° true from the pinnacle the boulders form a couple of swim-throughs. The first recorded dive was through a murky surface layer to clearer water below 20 m
 * : S34°14.835' E18°34.610'. The 23 m pinnacle near the middle of on the western lobe.

Marine life
The reef life is very similar to that on other granite reefs in the same depth range in central False Bay.

Photography
The reef is mostly fairly deep, and while the visibility can be relatively good in this part of False Bay, natural illumination is seldom going to be really good, and artificial lighting will almost always be desirable for colour. There are some impressive vistas due to the topography, which will work best with wide angle, and there will always be subjects for macro work.

Suggested routes
The site is not well enough known to suggest specific routes.

Hazards
No known site-specific hazards.

Skills
The site is quite deep. it is almost entirely below the recommended depth range for entry level divers, but there is a large area above 30 m, the depth generally accepted for ordinary recreational diving.

Equipment
A DSMB is recommended to alert the boat crew to your position when surfacing, and to help fishing boats keep away. Nitrox can significantly extend no-stop dive time in this depth range.

Nearby
Other offshore dive sites of False Bay:







Back to the Alphabetical list of sites, or list of reef dive sites in the Whittle Rock and surrounds offshore area

Other regional dive sites:
 * Dive sites of Table Bay and approaches,
 * Dive sites of the Cape Peninsula west coast
 * Dive sites of the Cape Peninsula east coast


 * Dive sites of False Bay east coast
 * Fresh water dive sites of the Cape Town Metropolitan Area