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PALAU 2029 - TWIN SPOT (BOHAR) SPAWNING EXPEDITION - FULL MOON

15th Dec - 25th December 2029
PALAU 2029 - TWIN SPOT (BOHAR) SPAWNING EXPEDITION - FULL MOON image

THE EXPEDITION - 15th - 25th December 2029

PALAU FULL MOON EXPEDITION — TWIN SPOT SNAPPER SPAWNING

Join Unique Ocean Expeditions for one of the most electrifying underwater events on the planet, where the ocean doesn’t just come alive… it explodes with energy.

Each month, in the days leading up to the full moon, tens of thousands of Twin Spot Snapper (Lutjanus bohar) gather on Palau’s outer reef corners. Driven by ancient rhythms controlled by the moon, tides, and currents, these normally scattered reef predators come together for one purpose — to create the next generation.

What begins as small groups arriving from the surrounding reefs slowly transforms into an enormous moving wall of fish. As the spawning window approaches, the energy builds. The aggregation becomes tighter, the movement becomes faster, and the entire reef changes.

Then, when conditions align, the ocean erupts.

Thousands of snapper rush upward into the water column releasing clouds of eggs and sperm into the current. This sudden explosion of life attracts some of Palau’s top predators, including bull sharks, oceanic blacktip sharks, and grey reef sharks — all taking advantage of one of nature’s greatest feeding opportunities.

But witnessing this event is not luck.

It is timing.

After more than 20 years diving Palau’s reefs, studying currents, moon phases, tides, and seasonal patterns, we have designed these expeditions around being in the right place at exactly the right moment.

Throughout the expedition, you’ll:

• Dive the key aggregation sites during the peak full moon period
• Experience multiple opportunities to witness spawning behavior
• Explore Palau’s legendary dive sites including Blue Corner, German Channel, Blue Holes, Ulong Channel, and world-class drift dives
• Learn through detailed briefings and presentations explaining the science, behavior, and timing behind these incredible events
• Understand not only what you are seeing — but why it is happening

This is expedition diving. Expect early mornings, changing currents, and dives planned around nature’s schedule — not ours.

Between spawning dives, we explore the very best of Palau: pristine coral gardens, shark-filled channels, dramatic walls, historical sites, and some of the healthiest reef systems left on Earth.

All of our Palau expeditions are hosted aboard the Palau Siren Liveaboard, allowing us to move with the conditions and maximize our time at the best locations when the tides, currents, and marine life align.

Massive schools. Hunting sharks. Ancient rhythms. Perfect timing.

This is Palau at its absolute peak.

Miss the moon… and you miss the magic.

OVERVIEW

OVERVIEW image

MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS

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MINIMUM DIVE REQUIREMENTS

Our Palau expeditions are designed for passionate divers who want to experience some of the most spectacular natural events in the ocean.

You do not need to be a technical diver, a professional photographer, or someone with hundreds of dives — but you do need to be a confident diver.

We require a minimum of 50 logged dives and a PADI Advanced Open Water certification (or equivalent). Guests should also have previous experience diving in currents, as many of Palau’s most exciting encounters happen where ocean movement brings marine life together.

Palau is famous for its drift diving, reef hooks, spawning aggregations, and fast-changing conditions. Our guides are there to position the group safely and at the right moment, but divers should already be comfortable controlling their buoyancy, descending without difficulty, and diving as part of a group in open ocean environments.

For specialty experiences such as bumphead parrotfish spawning dives, camouflage grouper night spawning dives, and blackwater dives (when offered), previous night diving experience is required. These are some of the most unique wildlife encounters on the planet, but they require confidence in low-light conditions, good awareness, and precise buoyancy control.

You do not need thousands of dives. You just need solid experience, good dive skills, and a sense of adventure.

PALAU SIREN LIVEABOARD

16 GUESTS
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PALAU SIREN LIVEABOARD

The 40m S/Y Palau Siren was designed by divers for divers to provide superior ease and comfort.

Aboard Palau Siren, scuba enthusiasts will explore pristine, remote dive sites and enjoy lavish accommodations.

The Palau Siren crew of 12 is on hand to ensure guest satisfaction for up to 16 divers.

This intimate liveaboard offers ample space including 8 large cabins equipped with individual climate control, entertainment system and en suite bathrooms.

The SY Palau Siren also features an air-conditioned lounge with cocktail bar, sofas, 42 inch flat screen and movie network.

Massage service is available daily. The decks feature a covered outdoor dining area where meals and refreshments will be served buffet style throughout the day and an upper level sun deck with cushioned loungers.

A large shaded diving deck provides individual stations and personal storage lockers.

Guests are also provided with tanks, weights, BCD, regulator, 3mm wetsuit, mask and fins free of charge.

The main lounge offers a fully equipped camera and video station of professional quality.

Palau Siren schedules year round dive trips offering scuba divers the thrill of deep dives, the tranquility of drift dives and the opportunity to encounter huge numbers of pelagic.

Book now to dive the spectacular Palau waters on a Palau Siren liveaboard diving holiday.Large air-conditioned cabins each with their own personal audio-visual entertainment system and ensuite bathrooms with hot water.

All rooms are lavished with luxury extra's including bathrobes, hair dryers, towels, individually controlled mood lighting and individual controls for your air-conditioning unit

Deluxe Twin Cabins – B3, B5, B6 & B7 / B4

The Deluxe Twin Cabins on the Palau Siren are thoughtfully designed to combine comfort and functionality.

Cabins B3, B5, and B7 offer flexible twin or double-sharing arrangements, while B4 features cozy bunk beds for twin sharing.

Each cabin provides ample living space, smart storage solutions, and a relaxing atmosphere, ensuring two guests can enjoy both privacy and convenience during their underwater adventures.

Modern amenities and a serene design make these cabins a perfect retreat after a day of diving in Palau’s stunning waters.

Deluxe Double Cabins – B1 & B2

The Deluxe Double Cabins on the Palau Siren feature a comfortable queen-sized bed, providing a perfect space for two guests to relax after a day of diving.

Thoughtfully designed with both comfort and practicality in mind, each cabin offers generous living space, smart storage solutions, and a serene ambiance.

These cabins combine cozy elegance with functionality, ensuring that every guest enjoys a restful and convenient retreat in the heart of Palau’s breathtaking waters.

DAY 1

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EMBARKATION DAY

  • Sam’s Tours, Koror at 17:00

  • Disembarkation: Sam’s Tours, Koror at 10:00

Transfer to Sam's Tours from Koror Airport* or a local hotel is provided free of charge on embarkation day. Pick-up time from local hotels is usually between 16:30 and 17:00.

*Airport pick-up is dependent on flight arrival time. Guests arriving in the early hours of the morning on embarkation day need to arrange hotel accommodation.

Transfer from Sam's Tours to local hotels or Koror Airport is provided free of charge upon disembarkation at 10:00 only.

Guests with evening or night flight departures who have made arrangements for day use at local hotels will be transferred from Sam's Tours to the hotel but are responsible for arranging their transfers from the hotel to the airport. 

Likewise, guests who wish to leave their luggage at Sam's Tours and explore downtown Koror before their departure are also responsible for

arranging their own transport to the airport.

Marine Park Fees, drills and all safety procedures are carried out on Day 1

Palau Islands permits and fees: (payable onboard only)

  • 7 nights: 230 USD per person

  • 10 nights: 300 USD per person

These fees are mandatory and subject to change without notice. The applicable amount at the

time of your liveaboard departure will be added to your onboard bill to be paid before disembarkation.

DAY 2 - 3

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MOVE TO ULONG

DIVING THE ULONG AREA

The Ulong area is one of Palau’s most diverse regions, offering a completely different experience from the famous walls of the outer reef. Here we explore a combination of channels, coral gardens, historical sites, and current-driven dives where Palau’s marine life is at its very best.

Ulong Channel is one of Palau’s signature dives — a beautiful drift through a natural underwater corridor lined with some of the healthiest hard coral formations in Micronesia. When the currents are moving, grey reef sharks patrol the entrance, schools of jacks and barracuda gather in the blue, and divers finish by flying effortlessly through the channel past huge lettuce coral formations.

The area is also home to sites such as Siaes Corner, Siaes Tunnel, and Shark City, offering dramatic walls, caverns, shark action, schooling fish, and incredible wide-angle photography opportunities. Every dive here is dictated by the tides, and when conditions align, Ulong delivers some of Palau’s most exciting underwater encounters.

Later in the expedition we return to this special area for another one of Palau’s greatest natural events — the Twin Spot Snapper (Bohar Snapper) spawning aggregation at Shark City.

As the full moon approaches, thousands of snapper gather along the outer reef edge, forming huge schools that move together in the current. What begins as a gathering slowly builds in intensity as the fish prepare for their perfectly timed spawning event.

Before sunrise, we return to Shark City as the reef comes alive. The massive concentration of fish attracts some of Palau’s top predators, including grey reef sharks and other ocean hunters waiting for their opportunity. When the timing is right, the aggregation erupts into a spectacular display of movement, energy, and new life.

Witnessing thousands of fish gather with such precision, guided by the moon and tides, is one of the most powerful experiences in the underwater world — and exactly the kind of rare natural event our expeditions are designed around.

Day 2: Departure from Malakal Harbour after breakfast followed by a check dive, and up to 3

subsequent dives, as outlined below.

Your Cruise Director will schedule up to 4 dives per day; 3 day dives and either a sunset or a night dive. A typical diving day is scheduled as follows:

● 6.30am - Light Breakfast followed by a briefing & Dive 1

● 9.30am - Full Breakfast, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 2

● 12.00pm - Lunch, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 3

● 4.00pm - Snack

● 6.00pm - Briefing for Sunset or Night dive

● 7.30pm Dinner

DAY 4 - 6

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MOVE TO NGEMELIS

DIVING NGEMELIS ISLAND AREA

The Ngemelis Island area is home to some of Palau’s most legendary dive sites and represents everything that makes this destination world-famous — dramatic walls, powerful currents, huge schools of fish, healthy coral reefs, and encounters with some of the Pacific’s most iconic marine life.

This is where we find sites such as Blue Corner, Blue Holes, New Drop Off, Big Drop Off, and German Channel. Each site offers something completely different — from hooking in at Blue Corner watching grey reef sharks cruise effortlessly in the current, to descending through the cathedral-like shafts of Blue Holes, or exploring vertical walls covered in sea fans, soft corals, and marine life.

German Channel is one of Palau’s most exciting cleaning stations, where manta rays can appear from the blue and circle gracefully above the reef. Large schools of barracuda, jacks, snapper, turtles, Napoleon wrasse, and reef sharks are regular encounters throughout this area, making every dive unpredictable and full of possibilities.

The Ngemelis reefs are a perfect example of why Palau remains one of the world’s greatest dive destinations. Here, every dive is shaped by the ocean — the tides, currents, and seasons deciding what we may encounter. No two dives are ever the same, and that is exactly what makes this area so special.

Day 4: Departure from Ulong Island Area after lunch followed by a sunset dive on arrival to Ngemelis Island anchorage area.

The following days, your Cruise Director will schedule up to 4 dives per day; 3 day dives and either a sunset or a night dive.

A typical diving day is scheduled as follows:

● 6.30am - Light Breakfast followed by a briefing & Dive 1

● 9.30am - Full Breakfast, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 2

● 12.00pm - Lunch, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 3

● 4.00pm - Snack

● 6.00pm - Briefing for Sunset or Night dive

● 7.30pm Dinner

Day 7

Peleliu Island
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PELELIU ISLAND

DIVING PELELIU ISLAND

Located at the southern end of Palau’s reef system, Peleliu offers some of the most exciting and adventurous diving in Micronesia. Exposed to the open Pacific Ocean, these reefs are known for dramatic walls, strong currents, incredible visibility, and encounters with larger marine life.

Peleliu has a different feeling from many of Palau’s other dive areas — it feels wilder, more remote, and less frequently visited. The currents that sweep around the island bring nutrient-rich water from the deep ocean, creating the perfect conditions for healthy reefs and attracting a wide variety of marine life.

Dive sites such as Peleliu Corner, Peleliu Express, Orange Beach, and Peleliu Wall offer thrilling drift dives, beautiful coral formations, schooling fish, reef sharks, turtles, and the chance of unexpected encounters from the blue. When conditions align, Peleliu can deliver some of the most exciting dives Palau has to offer.

But Peleliu is not only famous underwater.

The island was also the location of one of the fiercest battles of the Pacific during World War II. In 1944, American and Japanese forces fought here in the Battle of Peleliu, leaving behind a landscape filled with history. Today, many reminders remain, including tanks, aircraft wreckage, bunkers, caves, and battlefield sites hidden throughout the island.

During our visit, guests have the option to replace one dive with a guided land tour of Peleliu. This powerful experience explores the history of the island and provides a deeper understanding of the events that took place here more than 80 years ago.

Whether exploring the reefs below or walking through history above, Peleliu remains one of Palau’s most unforgettable destinations.

After Breakfast we leave the Palau Siren by private speedboat and travel south to Peleliu...

A typical diving day is scheduled as follows:

● 6.30am - Breakfast followed by a briefing & Dive 1

● 9.30am - Full Breakfast, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 2

● 12.00pm - Lunch, relaxation followed by briefing & Dive 3

● 4.00pm - Snack

● 6.00pm - Briefing for Sunset or Night dive

● 7.30pm Dinner

Days 8 - 9

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FULL MOON DIVING

RETURN TO ULONG — TWIN SPOT SNAPPER SPAWNING

As our expedition enters its final days, we return to the Ulong area with a completely different purpose.

Earlier in the trip, we explored Ulong’s famous channels, reefs, and current-swept dive sites. Now, as the full moon approaches and conditions align, we return for one of Palau’s greatest natural spectacles — the Twin Spot Snapper (Lutjanus bohar) spawning aggregation.

Our focus shifts to Shark City, where thousands of snapper begin gathering along the outer reef edge. Over several days, the aggregation continues to build as more fish arrive, creating a constantly moving wall of life suspended in the current.

Each morning, before sunrise, we head out to position ourselves at exactly the right time. These dives are planned around moon phase, tides, and years of observation — giving us the best opportunity to witness the peak spawning behavior.

When the moment arrives, the entire aggregation changes. The school tightens, energy increases, and thousands of fish surge upward into the water column, releasing the next generation into the currents of the Pacific Ocean.

These huge concentrations of fish attract predators including grey reef sharks, oceanic blacktips, and occasionally larger visitors such as bull sharks. The result is one of the most intense and unforgettable dives Palau has to offer — a rare combination of scale, movement, and raw ocean energy.

Between spawning dives, we continue exploring the best sites around Ulong, allowing the tides and conditions to guide our schedule. Every dive has a purpose — whether it is witnessing a major wildlife event or experiencing Palau’s reefs at exactly the right moment.

This is what defines a Unique Ocean Expedition.

Not chasing dive sites.

Following nature.

DAY 10

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LAST FEW DAYS

Day before disembarkation:

For your last full day on board, we schedule up to 3 dives* before the boat cruises back to

Malakal Harbour, where it will remain at anchor overnight.

Disembarkation day: Following breakfast on board, disembarkation is scheduled for 10:00.

*We kindly request that guests check their flight departure times to ensure they leave a

minimum of 24 hours between their final dive and their flight home.

Fishing is NOT permitted on Palau Siren, under any circumstances.

TWIN SPOT (BOHAR) SNAPPER SPAWNING DIVES

TWIN SPOT (BOHAR) SNAPPER SPAWNING DIVES image

THE FULL MOON CYCLE

TWIN SPOT SNAPPER SPAWNING — FULL MOON EXPEDITION

In the days leading up to the full moon, something extraordinary begins to build beneath the surface of Palau.

Across the reef, a silent signal has been sent.

From miles around, hundreds — often thousands — of Twin Spot Snapper (Lutjanus bohar) leave their normal territories and converge on specific outer reef promontories. Guided by instinct, currents, tides, and the pull of the lunar cycle, they gather for one purpose — reproduction.

What starts as scattered groups arriving from different areas of the reef slowly transforms into a dense, fast-moving mass of life. Each day the numbers increase. The schools become tighter. The behavior changes. Layer upon layer of snapper stack in the current as anticipation builds toward the main event.

This is where experience matters.

We begin our expedition ahead of the full moon, monitoring the aggregation as it develops and diving Palau’s famous current-swept sites as conditions start to align. These are not simply warm-up dives — they are part of the journey. We watch the story unfold, seeing the reef transform as thousands of fish prepare for a moment that has been repeated for thousands of years.

Then comes the moment.

Before first light, we head out.Engines running in darkness. Dive gear ready. The ocean quiet. Everyone knowing that beneath the surface, something incredible is about to happen.

As the first glow of sunrise appears over the Pacific, we enter the water and descend into the blue.At first, there is nothing. Then suddenly…

Out of the depths, they appear.

A wall of snapper rises from below, thousands of fish moving together as one enormous giant cloud.

The energy continues to build.

Then everything erupts.

In perfect synchronization, waves of snapper explode upward into the water column, releasing clouds of eggs and milt into the current — the beginning of the next generation.

For a few incredible moments, the ocean is pure chaos.

Thousands of fish rushing upward. Sharks moving through the edges. Currents carrying millions of fertilized eggs into the open ocean.

It is not just something you watch.

You are surrounded by it.

This sudden release of life attracts some of Palau’s most impressive predators. Bull sharks and oceanic blacktip sharks patrol the aggregation, taking advantage of one of nature’s greatest opportunities.

But this is more than a feeding event.

It is one of the ocean’s most important cycles — a perfectly timed exchange between reef and open ocean. The tiny eggs released during these spawning events begin an incredible journey, drifting with the currents before eventually returning to the reefs as the next generation.

This is why timing is everything. Too early, and the aggregation is still building. Too late, and the moment has passed.

Miss the timing… and it’s gone.

Get it right… and you witness one of the greatest underwater spectacles on Earth.

BLACKWATER NIGHT DIVES

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BLACKWATER NIGHT DIVES

THE BEGINNING OF LIFE IN THE OPEN OCEAN

During our expedition, weather and ocean conditions permitting, we will also have the opportunity to experience up to two very different blackwater night dives — one BONFIRE STYLE near a deep drop off and one TRUE BLACKWATER offshore in the deep ocean.

Blackwater diving gives us a rare window into one of the least-seen parts of the marine world — the nightly migration of tiny ocean creatures rising from the depths. Throughout our journey we have focused on spawning aggregations, watching thousands of fish gather and release eggs and sperm into the water column. Blackwater diving allows us to continue that story, searching for the next stage of this incredible journey as new life begins drifting through the ocean.

Our inshore blackwater dive takes place within Palau’s protected lagoon system. These dives often reveal the early larval stages of reef animals that will eventually settle back onto the very reefs we have been exploring. Tiny juvenile fish, larval crustaceans, cephalopods, and other planktonic creatures appear in forms completely different from their adult stages.

Our offshore blackwater dive takes us beyond the reef edge, suspended over much deeper water. Here we enter the world of the deep scattering layer — an enormous vertical migration where strange and rarely seen animals travel upwards from the depths each night. Transparent creatures, deep-water larvae, squid, jellyfish, and alien-like life forms drift past our lights in a world few people ever experience.

For us, blackwater diving completes the circle. During this expedition we may witness multiple species gathering in huge numbers to reproduce, from Blue-Lined Sea Bream to Bumphead Parrotfish. These spawning events represent the very beginning of the next generation — and blackwater diving offers a glimpse into what happens after those tiny eggs enter the ocean currents and begin their incredible transformation into life on the reef.


WHAT'S INCLUDED

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What's included

10 Nights Accommodation

3 Means Per Day

4 Dives Per Day

Tanks, Weights & Fills

Experienced U.O.E Leader

What's not included

Marine Park Fees - $300

10% GST Tax On All Products Sold Onboard

Nitrox - $130

Gratuities

PRICING

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EXPEDITION LEADER

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EXPEDITION LEADER - RICHARD BARNDEN

Richard Barnden is the founder of Unique Ocean Expeditions, a specialist scuba diving travel company created to bring divers closer to some of the ocean’s most extraordinary natural events. An award-winning underwater photographer, Richard has spent nearly two decades exploring, guiding, and documenting marine life throughout the Pacific Ocean.

After more than 20 years working in the waters of Palau, Richard developed a deep understanding of the timing, locations, and conditions needed to witness some of nature’s rarest underwater encounters. His work focuses on predictable marine events shaped by moon phases, tides, and seasonal behavior — including fish spawning aggregations and blackwater night diving.

Through years of observation and photography, Richard has documented events that few divers ever experience, from mass spawning aggregations involving thousands of fish to the mysterious larval stages of marine life found during blackwater dives.

Unique Ocean Expeditions was created to share these moments with small groups of passionate divers — combining experience, patience, and timing to be in the right place, at the right time.

Richard moved to Palau in his early twenties as a video pro and later became the cruise director of multiple live-aboards where he continued his passion of filming. After building a large collection of data and photos of spawning aggregations which at the time he knew very little about he went on to spend the next decade trying to understand their predictabilities.

Richard now organises multiple spawning expeditions in Palau each year, these spawning expeditions are tailored around lunar phases to observe fish reproduction mainly during the early hours of the morning. By night Richard spends most of his time with his guests photographing plankton and their environments, a relatively new kind of night dive called blackwater diving.

His long-term research has played a key role in unlocking some of the spawning patterns of species such as the camouflage grouper and Lutjanus bohar. As a photographer, he is well known for capturing these fleeting, high-energy moments—from explosive spawning events to the surreal, otherworldly creatures encountered during blackwater dives.

Combining deep field knowledge with a relentless pursuit of the extraordinary, Richard continues to push the boundaries of exploratory diving—bringing his guests face-to-face with some of the ocean’s most spectacular and least-understood phenomena.