
which has been attracting scuba enthusiasts for decades, continues to get better thanks to the efforts of a forward-thinking and proactive dive community. Of course, there's pretty great raw material to work with: gorgeous reefs, sheer walls, a fleet of wrecks and abundant marine life. But recent efforts to expand the offerings-namely: Shipwreck City, a plan to sink five new wrecks, and Atlantis, an underwater sculpture off Cayman Brac-guarantee that divers will always find something new to discover here.
The majority of divers stay on Grand Cayman, at 76 square miles the largest of the three islands. It has a huge diversity of sites, including plunging walls, dramatically chiseled reefs and world-famous Stingray City. Relaxed Cayman Brac, second in size at 14 square miles, has the most varied topography and offers one of the islands' top wreck dives, the MV Capt. Keith Tibbetts. Little Cayman is low-lying and tranquil, with far more iguanas and boobies than human residents. But under water it's a different story: the island's precipitous Bloody Bay Wall has one of the most exhilarating collections of sites in the world.
