Top Scuba Dive Shops in Rancho Quemado

Ready to check out the best shops in Rancho Quemado for scuba diving, snorkeling, shore diving, free diving or other ocean activities? Zentacle has 2 dive shops where you can rent equipment, book dives, and get guided tours. Discover hand-curated maps, along with reviews and photos from nature lovers like you. No matter what you're looking for, you can find a diverse range of the best ocean activities in Rancho Quemado to suit your needs.
Aguila de Osa Rainforest and Marine Adventure Lodg

#1 - Aguila de Osa Rainforest and Marine Adventure Lodg

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Aguila De Osa Dive Center is a PADI Dive Resort set in the epicenter of Costa Rica's natural beauty.

Experience Costa Rica’s finest Pacific coastal diving in the clear, cobalt blue waters surrounding Caño Island Biological Reserve. You will see colorful corals, interesting rock formations and vibrant schools of tropical fish! 

The dive center will provide all equipment and take beginner, intermediate, and advanced divers aboard thier 30-foot Island Hopper on a voyage of spectacular ocean adventures. Rental equipment includes oasis regulators, scuba pro BCD and Oneil or Henderson wetsuits. 

Besides Caño Island, there are 3 coastal diving locations. Here you can find lobsters, black corals, snappers and rooster fish.

Pirate Cove

#2 - Pirate Cove

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Have you ever been to one of those shark-feeding dives in the Bahamas where you all kneel in the sand and watch some mesh-suited guy feeding the fish? Well, if you're tired of aquarium diving and want to see the big fish this is the place for you!

At Caño Island you will encounter both pelagic (open ocean) and Pacific reef fish.

Many species are the same as in the Galapagos Islands. If you like sharks you will see 2-meter long white tipped reef sharks, bull sharks and very occasionally hammerheads.

Depending on the time of year we see humpbacks, Orcas and pilot whales. Dolphins include Pacific spotted, bottlenose and spinners.

It is not uncommon to see manta rays leaping from the water and hundreds of lesser devil rays regularly pass by.

There are too many other fish to list here but many divers especially enjoy meeting the free-swimming moray eels, which are often 2-meters long.