Our philosophy is simple. We want to encourage you to dream. BIG!
Then we help you plan your trip, get the most out of it while you're traveling and help you
share your experience with friends.
St. Michael is one of the two small shallow wrecks at Zonqor Point in Marsaskala on the southeastern coast Malta. St. Michael was a former tugboat working in Grand Harbour of Valletta. She was purposely scuttled in May 1998 together with another tugboat, Number 10, to create an artificial reef and scuba diving site.
St. Peteris a historic Great Lakes schooner that shipwrecked in Lake Ontario near Pultneyville in Wayne County, New York. She was built in 1873 and measured 135.7 ft (41.4 m) in length, 26.0 ft (7.9 m) in beam, and 12.1 ft (3.7 m) depth of hold. At the time of her sinking on October 27, 1898, her hold was filled with 607 short tons (551 tonnes) of "chestnut coal."
It ...
M. Davidsen was the name of a passenger ship in Iceland which began operations in 1891. It was 217 Gross register tonnage and 35.25 m (115.6 ft) long by 6.21 m (20.4 ft) wide by 4.86 m (16.0 ft) deep. It had room for 14 passengers. The ship was purchased from Denmark for 225,000 Icelandic króna in 1919 and used to move people and goods between Reykjavík ...
The Superior Producer is a cargo freighter sunk in December of 1977 and is now sitting upright at a depth of 100ft/30m. Sport Diver Magazine rates the Superior Producer as one of the Caribbean's best wreck dives.
It is available for diving only during cruise ship off-season.
During her maiden voyage, SV Saint Mary (1890) was loaded with general cargo was wrecked near Whale Point, Falkland Islands. The captain felt responsible and committed suicide.
Her keel was laid at the Charles Minott yard in Phippsburg in the, fall of 1889: She was to be 242 feet in length, fortytwo feet in beam and eighteen feet deep.
Sweepstakes (also known as Sweeps) was a Canadian schooner built in Burlington, Ontario in 1867. It was damaged off Cove Island then towed to Big Tub Harbour, where it sank in September 1885. The remains ofSweepstakeslie in Big Tub Harbour, located in the Fathom Five National Marine Park, in Tobermory, Ontario. This schooner is said to be one of the most popular wreck...
Fifteen vessels have been deliberately sunk on the landward side of Moreton Island to form a breakwall for small boats and a wreck dive and snorkel site. The Tangalooma Wrecks are a shallow dive with depths from 2-10m. Even in this shallow water, the wrecks attract an large amounts of marine life.
Tangalooma Wrecks make a good drift dive near the top of the tide. You...
The “Telamón” is one of the few half sunken wrecks in the Canary Islands. This 136 metre long boat, originally called “Temple Hall” sprung a leak in 1981 and ran aground in Arrecife port in Lanzarote and since it could not be repaired it was manoeuvred a few hundred metres out of the port with the intention of grounding it. There it spli...
Temple Hall was a British cargo ship. In 1981 she ran aground off the coast of the Canary Island Lanzarote, Spain, and as of 2018 still remains in position adjacent to the islands power station.
The cargo Ship Temple Hall was built by Caledon Shipbuilding & Engineering Company Ltd. in Dundee, Scotland in 1954.
The “Austin Smith” (aka HMBS Flamingo) was originally a 90-foot Bahamian Defense Force Cutter that was decommissioned in 1995. It was being towned to San Salvador to be sunk as an artificial reef when the ship sank while in route. The Austin Smith now sits in 60 feet of water in the Exuma Cays, Bahamas, .56 miles east of Normans Cay.
On May 10, 1980, the ...
The Bermuda is a 150 foot wooden schooner foundered and sank in the spring of 1870 in Murray Bay on Grand Island. Her top deck is just 12 feet below the water’s surface where she has remained for 128 years. The wreck is intact, remarkable condition for a shallow wreck.