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The dives are steadily getting more comfortable and also jam packed full of adventure. Each and every dive is just amazing in some way and often, when I get back on the boat and am sitting for a minute, I can hardly believe was has just happened.
The other thing that started to happen was the setting in of the reality of where we were diving and what historical significance it held. There were many places I saw bones. Some situations based on where the bones were found, you could tell how the person perished, one in particular that I will never forget. Although there is this huge amount of awe, wonder and lot of adrenaline in the dives themselves it was not just all adventure. There was a part me that felt privileged to witness such a big part of world war two history but to also be conscious and respectful of those who lost their lives here. There are constant reminders on the wrecks this is in fact, a war grave.
Diving four dives a day makes me exhausted. I am in bed sleeping every night by 830 and sleeping soundly though the night. I’m used to the constant rocking of the boat now and for the most part can pee in the middle of the night without hurting myself in some way on the way to the bathroom.
9th Dive
120ft
40min
Saw some boots in one of the holds. Was a weird feeling. Beautiful masts on this boat.
10th Dive
104ft
47 min
Crazy engine room tour again, gauges in there with glass still covering then, clock on the wall of the engine room. Loved the prop on this boat, that was the deepest part of the dive. Bottles on the wall in one of the holes totally still stacked because there were packed so tightly. Some of the wooden crates still intact.
11th Dive
105ft
52 min
The most unbelievable dive that can ever be done. This was the ride of a life time and the biggest test of my courage to date. Sam had me so far inside the ship, I had no idea which way was up. Through the dark hallways, doors, different floors of the superstructure. Literally so dark you could not see your hand in front of your face. The flashlight was my friend. It was a crazy maze of steel that we negotiated for about a half an hour. More than once I got stuck and had to wriggle out. And also more than once, I would be pulling myself or having to try two or three different ways before finding the right way to fit through some of the openings with your tank on. For the guys at work who know what I mean: this is the ultimate confined space. My heart was racing after this dive. Adrenaline was pumping through my whole body. What I wrote in my journal was; “this is what dreams are made of”.
12th Dive
82ft
49 min
Cool wreck, this one was blown in half. Was a cool gun on the bow and some amo had been brought up around it for display. Lots of bullets. Three trucks on this wreck with most the body work on them rotted away. Lots of tiny fish on this dive. Very awesome masts to decompress on.
Stubs.
- Row of bullets on top of gun
- Explosion proof light cover
- Bullets and gun
- Bullets
- Rounds of amo on and near gun
- Yellow is one of the last colors to get filtered out under water, so yellow fish always look good
- The bow
- Part of superstructure
- Swimming outside the super structure
- Ventured around inside the door
- Tires from and old truck, most of the body is gone now
- Other divers down inside the cargo hold. It got crowded down there, so I took off to explore the decks
- Truck tires
- Truck tires
- Mast. This is one of my favourite pictures
- Tractor wheel
- Front of tractor
- Medicine bottles
- Swimming through the cargo holds
- Tractor inside one of the holds
- Many medicine bottles
- Dropping inside a cargo hold
- Stunning
- All of the ships were at least 300ft +. The largest being 500ft +
- Wreck on her port side. All in the lagoon are but one
- Swimming the decks
- All the glass is gone
- Rio De …. J
- This was one of my favourite wrecks
- Beer bottles everywhere!
- Drink up
- Inside one of the holds
- Entering the ship
- Beery bottles
- Decompressing actually became relaxing
- Mast
- Super structure
- Super structure
- Super structure
- Dropping into the super structure. These are where are the awesome dives are at
- More bottles
- Display
- Swimming the wreck
- View from decompressing
- View from decompressing
- These fish were so cute, they just kept swimming in and out of that little hold
- One of my other faves. Prop.
- Prop
- Prop
- Anchor line covered in coral
- Bam! Thanks to Sam, who wrote my name in all kinds of creepy places 🙂
- Swimming through the holds
- In this hold, the beer bottles were so tightly stacked that many of them are still up right in the wall.
- Stacked beer bottles
- Not a great pic but you get the idea
- More bottles
- Swimming into a hold
- Exit point
- A clock
- Gauges inside the engine room
- Dropping into the wildest ride of my life. The dive through this engine room was insane. Spent about 20 minutes of the dive in pitch darkness making our way through the engine room
- Mast. Now they are over taken with coral but a great place to decompress and just hang out and watch fish
- Side of mast
- Mast
- Cargo holds
- Railing on deck
- Back of gun
- Gun
- Cargo holds
- Gun
- Lanterns and a crazy thick school of fish
- Lanterns
- Bow gun
- Bow gun
- Boots inside one of the holds
- Dropping into a hold
- China
- Dropping into a hold
- Cargo hold
- Side railing
- Lifeboat holder
- Swimming along the deck
- The galley – kitchen
- Swimming up to the super structure
- Massive ship
- Cargo hold
- Deck
- And another cargo hold
- Deck and railing
- Deck
- Deck
- Ladder
- Ladder and cargo hold
- Mast
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