from 1 review
full day
Daily Tour
100 people
All Languages
Few places blend calm, shallow seagrass meadows with teeming coral pinnacles the way Abu Dabbab Bay does. Sitting midway between Marsa Alam and Quseir, the bay’s sheltered shape gifts year-round swimmable conditions and famously gentle currents—ideal for every skill level, even first-time snorkelers. Sea turtles graze the seafloor as dugongs occasionally glide in like mythical sea-cows, while butterflyfish, lionfish, and morays animate the reef edges. This dynamic marine neighborhood has turned “Abu Dabbab Adventure” into a bucket-list phrase for savvy Red Sea travelers.
Abu Dabbab literally means “Father of the Bears,” an old Bedouin nickname that hints at the bay’s protective embrace. The shoreline fans into a horseshoe, blocking wind-driven chop and promising mirror-calm mornings—a natural aquarium just begging for masks and fins. On an average eight-hour tour you’ll:
Depart your hotel at dawn in an air-conditioned minibus.
Reach the bay after a scenic desert-meets-sea drive.
Receive a safety briefing and snug gear fitting.
Plunge into two guided snorkeling sessions divided by a beach-barbecue lunch.
Sunbathe or stroll sugar-soft sands before heading home at sunset.
Guides love to radio-spot the resident green turtles, and with a bit of luck the rare dugong makes an appearance, rewarding patient guests with a slow-motion, grass-munching show.
Wildlife Reliability – The permanent turtle population means sightings 90 % of the year.
Shallow Plateaus – Depths start at barely 1 m, letting non-swimmers wade among fish.
Protected Status – Local rangers limit boat numbers and enforce “look-don’t-touch” rules.
Seagrass + Reef Combo – You get two distinct ecosystems in one dip.
Family-Safe Facilities – On-site restrooms, shade huts, and lifeguards remove anxiety.
Over millennia the Eastern Desert’s limestone eroded into creamy sand that mingled with coral rubble, forming the present beach. Offshore, an ancient wadi once poured nutrients into the sea, nurturing the now-expansive seagrass pastures that dugongs adore. Natural breakwaters—fossilized coral outcrops—interrupt wave energy, while a fringe reef, still building at a snail-like 0.8 cm per year, circles the mouth, coloring aerial photos with turquoise, cobalt, and indigo ribbons.
Green Sea Turtles (Chelonia mydas) – Daily lawn-mowers of the bay’s Posidonia beds.
Dugongs (Dugong dugon) – Elusive but loyal; one individual nicknamed “Dennis” has been recorded here for a decade.
Reef Fish – Parrotfish, Picasso triggerfish, masked puffer, and the occasional guitar shark.
Invertebrates – Blue-spotted stingrays glide over sandy bowls, while nudibranchs hide among sponges.
Corals – Brain, table, and soft-leather corals paint the reef, thriving in 26 – 29 °C water.
While Abu Dabbab welcomes guests year-round, May – October offers bathtub-warm seas exceeding 28 °C. Winter (December – February) brings 24 °C water and chillier morning air; don a thin wetsuit and you’ll feel cozy. Wind usually drops at sunrise, so early snorkels deliver glassy visibility often surpassing 30 m.
Season | Water Temp | Air Temp (Midday) | Visibility | Crowd Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mar – May | 25 – 27 °C | 26 – 32 °C | 20 – 30 m | Medium |
Jun – Aug | 28 – 30 °C | 32 – 40 °C | 25 – 35 m | High |
Sep – Nov | 27 – 29 °C | 28 – 35 °C | 25 – 30 m | Low-Medium |
Dec – Feb | 23 – 25 °C | 22 – 27 °C | 15 – 25 m | Low |
The bay lies 30 km north of Marsa Alam International Airport and roughly 260 km south of Hurghada. Most operators provide door-to-door transfers:
Hurghada – 3.5 hour coastal drive with sunrise desert vistas.
Marsa Alam Hotels – Quick 30–40 min hop.
Luxury Option – 45 min helicopter charter landing on an approved helipad behind the beach café.
Globetrotters can also hitch daily Go Bus services along the Red Sea highway, then grab a 15-minute taxi.
Half-Day Sprint – Perfect for cruisers docking in Port Ghalib. Includes one 90-minute snorkel, fruit snack, and return.
Full-Day Feast – Two snorkels, BBQ, beach volleyball, camel ride add-on, and sunset coffee at a Bedouin tent.
VIP Private – Custom timetable, dedicated marine biologist, underwater photographer, and chilled coconut mocktails.
Respect for marine life equals longer, richer experiences. Keep fins off seagrass, apply reef-safe sunscreen, and maintain a two-meter gap from turtles. Photographers should disable flash, as it startles skittish dugongs. A no-touch policy preserves fragile branching corals that can take decades to recover from a single kick.
Trained guides carry oxygen cylinders and satellite phones. Lifeguards monitor a flagged swimming zone; beyond it, motorboats are restricted to idle speeds. The nearest hyperbaric chamber sits 25 minutes away in Port Ghalib, although incidents are rare thanks to the bay’s shallow topography.
UV-proof rash guard
Wide-brimmed hat & polarized sunglasses
GoPro or compact camera with red filter
Quick-dry towel & reef-safe sunscreen
Waterproof phone pouch
Power bank—desert heat drains batteries fast
Toddlers can paddle safely near the shore; the soft gradient keeps water waist-deep for meters. Floating donut rings prove invaluable for grandparents wanting to glimpse clownfish without exhausting kicks. Many operators supply child-sized masks upon request—confirm during booking.
Morning sun backlights turtles feeding on the seagrass—a photographer’s dream. Switch to manual white balance around 4 m depth to recover lost reds. On land, climb the low dunes flanking the bay for an aerial perspective that frames the reef as a painterly turquoise comma.
Egyptians adore generous hospitality; returning a warm “Sabah el Kheir” (good morning) earns instant smiles. Swimwear is fine on the sand, yet covering up while walking to the café shows respect. Most vendors accept Egyptian pounds and euros—carry small notes for quick bargaining.
Ticket revenue supports ranger patrols and turtle nesting studies. Volunteers log sightings through the “Red Sea Guardian” app, feeding data into the national biodiversity archive. By visiting, you directly fund mooring buoys that stop anchor damage.
Expect aromatic charcoal-grilled kofta alongside tahini-dressed salads. Vegetarians can relish koshari—lentils, chickpeas, and rice doused in tomato-garlic sauce. Fresh mango juice rounds off a lunch overshadowed only by that cerulean horizon.
Expense | Low-Cost Group | Mid-Range Shared | VIP Private |
---|---|---|---|
Transfer (pp) | Included | Included | Included |
Bay Fee | Included | Included | Fast-track pass |
Lunch | Included | Included | Gourmet menu |
Optional DSLR Permit | 10 € | 10 € | 10 € |
Total (approx) | 55 € | 75 € | 150 € |
Craving solitude? Book a dedicated marine biologist and slip overboard from a zodiac far from crowds. Adventurous spirits can join rare night snorkels, lighting up phosphorescent plankton.
Zero single-use plastic straws—paper or stainless alternatives.
Solar-powered beach showers reduce diesel use.
Reusable lunch boxes cut daily waste by 2 kg.
Local employment scheme hires 80 % staff from Marsa Alam villages.
“Swimming shoulder-to-fin with a turtle larger than my suitcase rewired my definition of ‘wow.’” — Ava R., Canada
“The guides respected every creature; even my eco-activist teens were impressed.” — Samir K., UAE
Medusa Jelly Stings – Flush with vinegar, don’t rub.
Mask Fogging – A baby-shampoo smear beats spit every time.
Sunburn – Seek shade by noon; the desert sun shows no mercy.
How likely am I to see turtles?
Sightings hover around 9-in-10 tours because the resident herd grazes year-round.
Do I need to be a strong swimmer?
No. The bay’s gentle slope and provided life jackets make floating effortless.
What about dugongs—are they guaranteed?
Nature sets her own schedule; guides share real-time radio intel to maximize chances.
Is the tour suitable for children?
Absolutely. Shallow entry, safety briefings, and kid-size gear keep youngsters happy.
Can I bring my own equipment?
Yes, but operators sanitize theirs daily if you prefer to travel light.
Is there cellphone coverage?
Full 4G signal exists; however, unplugging lets the reef work its magic.
If you crave a Red Sea day where every snorkel kick reveals living mosaics of coral, and where turtles glide so close you hear them exhale, Abu Dabbab Adventure should top your itinerary. Add in effortless logistics—hotel pickup, hearty lunch, expert guides—and you’ve got an epic, value-packed escape that transforms casual travelers into lifelong ocean advocates.
Magawish - Private Insel Tranfer