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Troppo Lounge

Troppo Lounge

Queensland, Australia

Depth
Depth Icon

27m

Visibility
Visibility Icon

8m - 23m

Entry
Boat Entry Icon

Boat

Experience Level

Beginner

Troppo Lounge

Queensland, Australia

Troppo Lounge
Depth
Depth Icon

27m

Visibility
Visibility Icon

8m - 23m

Entry
Boat Entry Icon

Boat

Experience Level

Beginner


About Troppo Lounge

Troppo Lounge is located on Norman Reef 60Klms East of Cairns on The Great Barrier Reef. The formation of the reef has created a shallow bay full of marine life and rich coral cover. Diving this site you can drop down on the outer wall before entering the bay to a depth of up to 27 meters. The outer wall on the eastern side drops down sharply and has a perfect gutter running straight up into the shallow bay. About 150 meters along this gutter slowly rises to a shallower depth where you will enter into Troppo Lounge. This coral garden is full of shallow overhangs and small coral caves and has a sandy patch in the centre around 6 meters deep with some fantastic giant clams.

Troppo Lounge Dive Info

Terrain & Features

Cave, Drop Off, Deep, Reef, Night, Shark, Wall

Entry Type

Boat

Max Depth

27m

Visibility Range

8m 23m

Experience Level

Beginner

Best Gas Mix

21% – 38%

O2

13% at 25m / 36%

O2
Multi-Level Dive Planner
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Marine Life

  • Anemones
  • Commensals
  • Giant Clams
  • Maori Wrasse
  • Moray Eels
Weather Conditions

Water Temperature
Dive Operators near Troppo Lounge

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Location

Dive Site Hazards

  • Remote Silt Disturbance — Silt can be disturbed metres away from the source.

  • Rapid Stress Escalation — Stress can increase sharply when visibility or navigation degrades.

  • High Cognitive Load Navigation — Complex passages increase mental workload even on a line.

  • Edge-Accelerated Currents — Currents often strengthen along drop-off edges.

  • Depth Perception Distortion — Visual contrast can distort perceived depth.

  • Terrain-Induced Descent — Divers may unintentionally follow terrain downward.

  • Gradual Narcosis Onset — Narcosis may develop slowly, making self-assessment unreliable.

  • Task Fixation at Depth — Cognitive narrowing at depth can reduce awareness of time and ascent rate.

  • Increased Gas Density Breathing Load — Higher gas density at depth increases work of breathing.

  • Hidden Depth Variations — Complex reef topography can conceal depth changes, leading to unintended profile variations.

  • Distraction from Marine Activity — High fish activity can distract divers and delay depth or gas awareness.

  • Rapid Surge Direction Changes — Surge near reef structures can reverse direction quickly, pushing divers sideways into unexpected areas.

  • Landmark Misidentification — Familiar sites can become unrecognisable at night.

  • Light-Induced Tunnel Vision — Focused light beams reduce peripheral awareness.

  • Depth Perception Errors — Reduced ambient light increases depth perception mistakes.

  • Situational Awareness Loss — Divers may fixate on sharks and lose depth or position awareness.

  • Subtle Behavioural Shifts — Changes in shark behaviour may be missed without active observation.

  • Blue-Water Reference Loss — Lack of visual references increases ascent and descent instability.

  • Unstable Visual Ascents — Relying on wall visuals can destabilise ascents.

  • Gradual Depth Creep — Lack of visual bottom reference can cause unnoticed descent.

  • Unsignalled Downcurrents — Downcurrents can form without visible indicators.

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