Route Description - North-Brother Islands 
                            This Red Sea safari takes divers to legendary wrecks and world-class reefs. Explore the SS Thistlegorm and the ‘Ship Graveyard’ at Abu Nuhas, where history rests beneath the waves with the Giannis D, Carnatic, and Dunraven. Drift along Ras Mohamed’s Shark and Yolanda reefs, alive with corals and marine life. For the experienced, the Brothers await with steep walls, vibrant coral gardens, and thrilling encounters with hammerheads, threshers, and other pelagic giants, plus the haunting wrecks of the Numidia and Aida.
	
                            SS Thistlegorm 
The Red Sea’s most famous wreck, the Thistlegorm is a 125 m WWII British freighter sunk in 1941 near Sharm El Sheikh. Split in two after a German air raid, it now reveals a stunning cargo of trucks, jeeps, motorcycles, and wartime supplies—an underwater time capsule. 
 
Brother Islands 
Rising 60 km off Egypt’s coast, the Brothers are world-class dives. Little Brother is alive with colorful corals, dense fish life, and sharks like hammerheads and threshers. Big Brother is home to two wrecks—the Numidia (1901) and Aida (1957)—now coral-covered and thriving with marine life. Strong currents mean this site is for experienced divers only. 
 
Ras Mohammed 
Egypt’s iconic marine park offers dramatic drop-offs, lush corals, and schooling fish. At Yolanda Reef, divers can see the scattered cargo of a freighter—bathtubs and toilets now overgrown with marine life—making it both unique and photogenic. 
 
Gotta Abu Nugar South 
A sandy-bottom site with scattered coral heads, perfect for spotting smaller reef fish and relaxing dives without coral damage risk. 
 
Abu Nuhas 
Known as the “Ship Graveyard,” Abu Nuhas holds four wrecks, including the Giannis D (1984) and the Carnatic (1869). With tilted passageways, easy swim-throughs, and coral-encrusted hulls, it’s a paradise for wreck divers.