Santo Vanuatu Map
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Millions of dollars point or millions of dollars beach, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu
Nicknamed after the ticket the Americans put on their taskforce cars, they tried and did not sold to the French, the English and eventually the natives - again - before planning the whole ticket into the oceans to annoy them all! Diving site with track and wheel cars and various other machinery (and boats!) in approx. 15-25m waters directly on the shore near Luganville, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu.
Here is a brief movie about the different types of wrecks you can find at Million Dollar Point. The wreck turns into a coral wall, so you get the best of both worlds. It' the best of both worlds. So we dived with Santo Island Dive and came from their ship at the eastern end of the wreck, crossed the western part of the wreck at about 25m and then came back at about 15m after we had met the Dedele.
Usually the waters are quite clear (as long as there has not been much rain), as the canal is rinsed twice a day with clear turquoise waters from the North. Everywhere there are many lorries and dual wheelbases of semi-trailers. It is also full of crawler cars and sometimes just such a mess of wrecks that it is difficult to tell the different cars and parts apart.
At some places reefs have begun to bloom. It is also home to a lot of fan and fern and many species of Hogfish have begun to call the place home. Such a place is a recovery tugboat that came much later to recover God knows what, and finally came together with the remainder of them and merged with the entire wreck.
It was also important to keep in mind that the hard water bodies seem to begin at the thinest points, especially those that protrude (into the current, which is obviously tidal) or at the top of the surface, where one might have expected the hand rails to have been. Some wrecks along the coast also seem to have fused with the general conglomeration of rocks and cayenne.
That is in contradiction to the predominantly consisting of structural elements, which are clearly mined. After 70 years of waving a tire in the coastline's brief tide stroke showed a little abrasion and a little of its thread showed through. Corals grow everywhere where there is current: Every single longwall that only protrudes into the creek will soon (relatively speaking) grow corals of one kind or another.