Tag: wreck-diving

  • DeeperBlue.com on Bikini

    DeeperBlue.com on Bikini

    The guys from DeeperBlue.com have put a great story on the Bikini Atoll, its history and its current state.

    Read it here and let me know how you like the pics and clips šŸ˜‰

  • USS Saratoga Deck Plans

    USS Saratoga Deck Plans

    …those plans are hard to get. The whole story of what happened in the Bikini Atoll in the 50ies is about to fade away and it should be avoided at any cost, as els wise we are doomed to get through it again.

    Castle Bravo and the Tzar Bomb were both incredible foolish experiments.

    However, here are the plans and I can only recommend to take the trip to Bikini. The USS Saratoga will most probably collapse in the next 5 to 10 years and then there is nothing left as a beacon to remember what happened.




  • Exploring the USS Saratoga

    Exploring the USS Saratoga

    If you are not a tec-diver I kindly suggest to stop here and move to more interesting stuff. You will only see dead boring 20 minutes of: endless, dark, narrow, radioactive, rusty gangways full of slit.

    If you are a tec-diver you are welcome to follow us on an endless, dark, narrow, radioactive trip through rusty gangways full of slit that may probably spoil all your future wrack dives – it is a space travel to an unexplored alien spaceship. Be my guest…

    I prepared myself for this trip for many years and I can only recommend this to everybody thinking about the same. The USS Saratoga will collapse in 5 to 10 years and then this piece of history is gone…

    Equipment:
    12l doubles (20/25 tri-mix)
    52 nitrox 1. stage
    91 nitrox 2. stage
    GoPro 3
    Sola 1200

  • Nuclear Ghost Fleet

    Nuclear Ghost Fleet

    Episode 2 from a Bikini Atoll Wreck Diving Trip. Browsing the wracks before the penetration and browsing the inglorious history of the bikini atoll and operation crossroads.

    The Bikini Atoll became the final resting place for some of the most historically significant warships in naval history and the world’s greatest wreck diving site.

    On July, the 16th of 1945, at 5:29 am the United States won the race for the first nuclear bomb against Germany, Japan and the Soviet Union.

    We have to keep in mind that those four were not ordinary countries. Those were all empires desperately struggling to rule the world. I also doubt, that the result came out of the blue. It was simply the most expensive project in human history. The price of the four bombs that came out of the manhattan project was 20 billion dollars or 65% of all other bombs, mines and grenades used in the war. Germany had already surrendered two month ago and the last wish of Roosevelt to drop one of those bombs on Berlin or Mannheim could not be fulfilled any longer. It was also only a matter of days until Japan would also surrender.

    Time for a good reason to nuke some real stuff and completely take over the unsinkable aircraft carrier Japan without sharing with the Soviet Union was running short for Truman and the military. History is written by victors and we will never know how close this head-to-head race really was.

    However, the final story was that many lives were saved by not simply demonstrating the power, or by a choosing a military target but by wiping out two cities and killing more than 200.000 civilians. Five days after Nagasaki the second World War was over. But the United States of America were not able to withstand the temptation of power and to play with their new toys at the Bikini Atoll.

    ā€œAs soon as the war ended, we located the one spot on earth that hadn’t been touched by the war and blew it to hellā€ (Bob Hope)

    The Bikini Atoll is a remote and sparsely inhabited island in the Marshall Islands group. A lost now tainted paradise in the middle of the pacific ocean that is as far away from any other point as you can get on this planet. On February the 6th the survey ship USS Summer began to bomb its way into the lagon and the preparations for an historic event started at full scale.

    The former inhabitants of the Bikini Atoll are still not back and they will most probably never be able to return or be allowed to return. Radioactivity is still to high to support self reliant living and the Bikini Atoll and its history is something the US does not really like to be to public.

    I want to share with you the tragic history of theĀ Bikini Atoll and the nuclear ghost fleetĀ that we had the luck to explore in 2014.Ā It is already starting to rust and fade away fromĀ the human memory and some things should not be forgotten.

    History becomes legend.

    Legend becomes myth.

    At the end it passes. Out of all knowledge…

    We should not forget the epic failures along Operation Crossroads and following nuclear test series…

    18 tons of cinematography equipment and 50% of the world wide supply on motion picture film were used. They took fifty thousand stills and a half million of meters of motion pictures.

    On July the 1st, at 9:00 am, Dave’s Dream, a B-29 super-fortress starting from Kwajalein dropped Gilda, a Nagasaki-type plutonium bomb with a yield of 23 kilotons over the target fleet but missed the target by nearly one kilometer. Remember the price for a bomb was 5 billion US dollars at that time.

    The Target ship USS Nevada was painted red. The weather forecast was good to go. The whole world was invited to see the new power of the United States of America.

    Three nuclear bomb tests were planned to demonstrate the new supreme power to the rest of the world. The target fleet included nearly one hundred ships of various sizes from aircraft carriers to surrendered enemy icons. 42,000 men were involved in operation crossroads.

    There is little footage on the initial able test, as most cameras were aimed at a different location. Some of the 114 press observers expressed disappointment at the effect on ships.

    On July the 25th Helen of Bikini showed her beauty. This time it was a stationary device 30 meters below the surface. It was a much more impressive display and also dumped impressive amounts of radiation on the ships, Bikini and the planet.

    …March 1st 2023 marked the 69th anniversary of the Castle Bravo nuclear test. In this piece from last year, a former Peace Corps volunteer shares her experience seeing the impacts of US nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands conducted between 1946 and 1958.

  • Heavy Cruiser Prinz Eugen

    Heavy Cruiser Prinz Eugen

    This is my first documentary based on my Bikini Atoll trip from last year on the MV Windward. The last boat on this planet with a license for dive trips to a lost paradise and a shameful pinnacle of human hubris!

    Well not all humans. It was definitely not my fault and I am just the explorer šŸ˜Ž

    I was right to avoid videography!  šŸ˜‰ Afterwards it takes so much time to turn it into something slightly usable. Before it is even worse, as it would simply block you from your vacation…

    Please enjoy what I have assembled based on footage that was never intended to be used in this context. Most of the footage is from my Backup-GoPro that is mounted on my Canon. It just runs permanently throughout the dive but the material was by far more useful as the stills I got with my camera.

    Also a big thank you to Robert and Peter for their material that was very helpful to turn it into a story. Robert from Wirodive.de organized the trip and was the battle drone pilot, Peter was my trusted buddy!

    …and durring the editing process I learned you need real music, you need a voiceover, FCPX is complex and M5 even more…

    Here is the result on Youtube: Battle Cruiser Prinz Eugen

    This is so far my most successful Youtube clip 600k and counting…
    Screen from Final Cut Pro X on the final project

    Next topics will be:

    • On Tec Diving
    • Life on the MV Windward
    • The Penetration of the USS Saratoga
  • SS Thistlegorm by Night

    SS Thistlegorm by Night

    Fascinating experience to dive the SS Thistlegorm by night. Fascinated to see how recreational divers take an impressive number of risks. Well at least they are not aware of it. How should they after 20 dives? However our managing tour guide (our Instructor from Hell) is surveying the operation from the upper deck of the Blue Pearly and has everything under full control.

    The good point: you get an incredible dive experience

    The lucky point: No casualties šŸ™‚

    httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBqisPMBnhI

  • Red Sea Wrecks

    Red Sea Wrecks

    Yes! Wreck diving is one of the last somehow achievable activities on earth that may bring you into an Indiana Jones feeling. You travel through time and even on heavy dived wrecks as the Thistledorm you are allowed to kill yourself if you wish.

    Actually I am surprised we had no casualties on our Safari considering the setup and events, but finally I ended up with some nice pics and movies and a great time.

    • Thistlegorm is an incredible beautiful wreck – some traffic lights would be helpful
    • Giannis D was the most adventurous one as one in our team really managed to get into a heavy oil bubble and totally mess himself up.
    • and even though the Carnatic was not carrying the money Lawrence of Arabia promised to the Arabs it is a nice spot to dive.

    This is part 1 of 3 (and the movies are still in production)

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