Last month, I came across a story on the website
The Travel (www.thetravel.com), with 25 rare pictures
of sunken ships most people have never seen before.
Of course, this piqued my interest -- what wreck dives
had I been missing all these years? Unfortunately,
most of them are well-known to divers, but the last
ship description had me laughing.
"Another long-forgotten ship that was sunk by
the German force was the SS Thistlegorm. Before two
German bombardiers sank it in the middle of the 90s,
she successfully carried out three voyages, transporting
aircraft parts and other valuable goods. A decade
later, though, the remains of the ship were [said to
be] discovered by the maritime explorer, Jacques Cousteau. Well, admittedly, the sight must have been
quite spellbinding, yet a bit freakish. As for the ship,
sunk by the Germans, it still resides somewhere in the
pitch-dark sections of the Red Sea in Egypt where it
surely belongs."
Nothing could be farther from the truth. On one
single day during the first week of October, more than
30 dive boats were anchored over the Thistlegorm. That's around 500 divers. It's the most visited wreck
in the world, and many Undercurrent subscribers complain
in their Reader Reports how it's just too busy
with divers. Obviously, don't look for good travel
advice from The Travel.
-- John Bantin