mike_s
Contributor
I found this today by accident.
Looks like they are going to sink this ship off Panama City. I called PCDC and they told me they were hopefull for a sinking date of December 2007. It will be sunk inshore so it's a comparable dive similar to that of the profile of the Black Bart, close to the pass and within depths of open water only certified divers.
Infinity Blu Reef
If you are tired of diving the same wrecks when you come to Panama City Beach, then I have some good news; plans are to sink the 125-foot tugboat Red Sea, late 2007, for a new diving and fishing location. The tug was built in 1970. It is 125 feet long and 32 feet wide. If it lands on the bottom upright in 75 feet of water, the topmost portion should be about 45 feet down
further searching found this story
Red Sea, Blu Reef: Historic Label Also OK'D for 1929 Shipwreck - Science - RedOrbit
Red Sea, Blu Reef: Historic Label Also OK'D for 1929 Shipwreck
By David Angier, The News Herald, Panama City, Fla.
Aug. 9--The Red Sea tugboat is awaiting final clearance to become Bay County's newest artificial reef.
Infinity Blu Development Group loaned a local group the final $30,000 on Wednesday to clean and sink the 125-foot tugboat Red Sea. The new site will be called the Infinity Blu reef, said Mike Gomez, who spearheaded the project.
Gomez said the tug is ready for the Department of Environmental Protection's final clearance, and once the tug passes inspection, his group will move quickly to sink the boat about five miles off shore in the same one-square-mile area where the Strength now rests.
Gomez said the Strength is wasting away and the new ship will supplant it. The group has requested a renourishment permit to sink the Red Sea on the approved plot.
Infinity Blu's interest-free loan will be paid back by a $1 or $2 fee on divers using commercial boats, Gomez said. The fee would apply to all commercial dive trips, even if the dive boat doesn't go to the new reef.
The tug will be scuttled in 70 feet of water. The top-most portion of the wreck will sit 40 to 50 feet below the surface.
This will be the second artificial reef sunk this year. Panama City Marine Institute sank a boat in June about 12 miles from shore.
Gomez said the tug will be a perfect site for divers because of its availability.
Another area tugboat soon might make history.
Bay County spokeswoman Valerie Lovett on Wednesday said the County Commission directed staff members on Tuesday night to begin the process of having the tugboat EE Simpson declared an underwater archaeological preserve.
The Simpson, which was built in 1877, sank in 1929 while trying to assist another vessel.
If approved, the Simpson would join the Vamar and Tarpon as the three archaeological shipwrecks in Bay County waters.
You Tube video of the ship here
More Photo's of the ship here
pcdivecenter.com Photo Gallery - Infinity Blu Reef Project
Looks like they are going to sink this ship off Panama City. I called PCDC and they told me they were hopefull for a sinking date of December 2007. It will be sunk inshore so it's a comparable dive similar to that of the profile of the Black Bart, close to the pass and within depths of open water only certified divers.
Infinity Blu Reef
If you are tired of diving the same wrecks when you come to Panama City Beach, then I have some good news; plans are to sink the 125-foot tugboat Red Sea, late 2007, for a new diving and fishing location. The tug was built in 1970. It is 125 feet long and 32 feet wide. If it lands on the bottom upright in 75 feet of water, the topmost portion should be about 45 feet down
further searching found this story
Red Sea, Blu Reef: Historic Label Also OK'D for 1929 Shipwreck - Science - RedOrbit
Red Sea, Blu Reef: Historic Label Also OK'D for 1929 Shipwreck
By David Angier, The News Herald, Panama City, Fla.
Aug. 9--The Red Sea tugboat is awaiting final clearance to become Bay County's newest artificial reef.
Infinity Blu Development Group loaned a local group the final $30,000 on Wednesday to clean and sink the 125-foot tugboat Red Sea. The new site will be called the Infinity Blu reef, said Mike Gomez, who spearheaded the project.
Gomez said the tug is ready for the Department of Environmental Protection's final clearance, and once the tug passes inspection, his group will move quickly to sink the boat about five miles off shore in the same one-square-mile area where the Strength now rests.
Gomez said the Strength is wasting away and the new ship will supplant it. The group has requested a renourishment permit to sink the Red Sea on the approved plot.
Infinity Blu's interest-free loan will be paid back by a $1 or $2 fee on divers using commercial boats, Gomez said. The fee would apply to all commercial dive trips, even if the dive boat doesn't go to the new reef.
The tug will be scuttled in 70 feet of water. The top-most portion of the wreck will sit 40 to 50 feet below the surface.
This will be the second artificial reef sunk this year. Panama City Marine Institute sank a boat in June about 12 miles from shore.
Gomez said the tug will be a perfect site for divers because of its availability.
Another area tugboat soon might make history.
Bay County spokeswoman Valerie Lovett on Wednesday said the County Commission directed staff members on Tuesday night to begin the process of having the tugboat EE Simpson declared an underwater archaeological preserve.
The Simpson, which was built in 1877, sank in 1929 while trying to assist another vessel.
If approved, the Simpson would join the Vamar and Tarpon as the three archaeological shipwrecks in Bay County waters.
You Tube video of the ship here
More Photo's of the ship here
pcdivecenter.com Photo Gallery - Infinity Blu Reef Project