He asked me specifically about "wrecks". As he's a supervisor on an industrial construction site I work on, I think the engineering aspects of sunken ships (and damge to them) may be a bit of a kicker. Most wrecks will have fish and coral on or in the vicinity, so kind of a wash with reefs for beginners.
Kinda the "more power"/Tim Allen approach to diving.. Argh Argh
I have nothing against wreck diving. I enjoy it, that is why I gave you the recommendations for Fla. There are other great wreck dives in the world, but they are not what I would call beginner. Those in Ft Lauderdale area I would.
If you go do the wrecks in Ft Lauderdale and then get some more diving experience under your belt -- when you are ready:
1. in the Fla Keys there are several nice deep wrecks: Duane, Bibb, Speigel Grove, Eagle, Vandenberg. Panhandle of Fla has the Oriskany.
2. San Diego has a group of deep wrecks that are fantastic dives.
3. NC has some of the best WWII wrecks in the world.
4. dive destinations like Roatan, like I mentioned, have nice wrecks. Bonaire has the Hilma Hooker which is very cool. (see my video of it)
5. The grand-daddy of all wreck diving is Chuuk (Truk Lagoon). Those are deep and covered with growth and life, along with the holds still being full of Japanese vehicles and guns and ammo, etc. THAT is serious wreck diving and not a cheap trip.
6. The Great Lakes have lots of wrecks that are well preserved but in non-recreational depth. You would need tech diving for those.
to see some cool videos of all those wrecks, just do a search on YouTube and Vimeo. Lots of people have done them, some great videos out there, especially the wrecks in NC. My video of Hilma Hooker is here:
Bonaire - Hilma Hooker wreck on Vimeo
robin
