A quick update on a previous post, by the time you read this (and lets not hope for any Spiegel Grove calamities) the USS Vandenburg should have become a new artificial reef for scuba divers.
Regular readers will remember back in February the story about plans to sink another to decommissioned US Navy warship in Florida. Well hopefully the 160m-long former Second World War missile tracking ship, USS Hoyt S Vandenberg should now be resting at the bottom of the sea some six miles off Key West.
The plan was to sink the ship today at 10am (EST).
No word yet on whether it has gone ahead. While we wait for video of the sinking which I'll bring as soon as its available, here's some earlier footage of the sinking of a replica at the Stevens Institute of Technology's Center for Maritime Systems test-sinks a scale model of the USS Vandenberg.
Once on the bottom the USS Vandenburg will join the USS Spiegel Grove and USS Oriskany as a diver's playground and the local economy and the attraction will benefit to the tune of an estimated $6.2 million a year.
For more, log on to www.sinkthevandenberg.com/
Thanks to Neutral Dive Gear blog for the heads' up. Live. Dive. Thrive is the author's moto. Doesn't get any better than that. The blog is certainly worth checking in with and the clothes look great too.
Regular readers will remember back in February the story about plans to sink another to decommissioned US Navy warship in Florida. Well hopefully the 160m-long former Second World War missile tracking ship, USS Hoyt S Vandenberg should now be resting at the bottom of the sea some six miles off Key West.
The plan was to sink the ship today at 10am (EST).
No word yet on whether it has gone ahead. While we wait for video of the sinking which I'll bring as soon as its available, here's some earlier footage of the sinking of a replica at the Stevens Institute of Technology's Center for Maritime Systems test-sinks a scale model of the USS Vandenberg.
Once on the bottom the USS Vandenburg will join the USS Spiegel Grove and USS Oriskany as a diver's playground and the local economy and the attraction will benefit to the tune of an estimated $6.2 million a year.
For more, log on to www.sinkthevandenberg.com/
Thanks to Neutral Dive Gear blog for the heads' up. Live. Dive. Thrive is the author's moto. Doesn't get any better than that. The blog is certainly worth checking in with and the clothes look great too.