Our Dive Sites

Learn about all of our dive sites

Aeolus

The site is named after the USS Aeolus, a Navy repair ship that was intentionally sunk in 1988 to create an artificial reef and diving site.

Atlas

The Atlas dive site is considered one of the best wreck diving sites in the world and attracts divers from all over the globe.

Bedfordshire

The HMT Bedfordshire is a popular dive site. The site is a World War II-era shipwreck, which was sunk by a German U-boat in 1942.

Box Wreck

The Box Wreck gets its name from the fact that it was carrying boxes of some kind of merchandise when it sank.

Caribsea

The Caribsea was a passenger ship that was built in 1926 and was used for several purposes, including the transportation of troops during World War II.

Indra

The Indra is a shipwreck that sank in 1942 after hitting a German mine during World War II. The ship was carrying a cargo of wood pulp.

Papoose

The Papoose was used to transport oil during the war. In 1943, while en route to New York from Texas, it was torpedoed by a German U-boat and sank.

Schurz

The Schurz is known for its abundance of marine life, including schools of fish, rays, and sometimes even sharks.

Spar

The Spar is now home to a wide variety of marine life, including schools of fish, octopuses, and even sand tiger sharks.

Suloide

Originally a World War II-era coastal freighter named the Dixie Arrow, built in 1941 and operated by the United States Maritime Commission.

Theodore Parker

The Theodore Parker was a steamship built in 1892 in England. It was originally used as a cargo ship before being converted into a passenger ship in 1901.

U-352

The U-352 was a German U-boat that was sunk by the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Icarus on May 9, 1942, during World War II.

W.E. Hutton

This 422-foot freighter was built in 1920 and sank on March 16, 1942, after being torpedoed by a German submarine during World War II.

Army Tugs

The site consists of two tugboats, the Atlas and the YP-389, which were sunk intentionally in 1988 as part of an artificial reef program.

Yancy

The wreck is a 165-foot (50-meter) long freighter that sank in 1985 and now serves as an artificial reef for a variety of marine life.

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