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Diving The SS Thistlegorm A trip around Thistlegorm today is
like traveling through time and many visitors experience high emotions
during the dive. It is after all a bombsite with highly visible signs
of great destruction and loss. It's also a giant underwater museum, a
war grave, a unique piece of military history and an opportunity to step
into the past during a period when the free world was under threat from
one of the most tyrannous regimes of modern times. Sunk by German bomber planes in World
War Two, SS Thistlegorm has lain at the bottom of the sea for over sixty
years. Located in the Straits of Gubal, Northern Red Sea this famous vessel
has been the subject of much activity and drama during its two lives as
both a seagoing merchant ship and as a world-class diving site. Divers can visit the wreck from Sharm El Sheikh by daily boat or during a weeklong safari. Located on a bed of just thirty metres in good visibility this is the perfect wreck dive where much of the original cargo still remains. The bow is just fifteen metres below the surface and the propeller at twenty-seven. Measuring over four hundred feet long, SS Thistlegorm often requires several dives to complete an extensive coverage, inside and out. Currents may occasionally be strong; however, mooring lines tied by the guide allow divers to make a comfortable descent to the shelter of the wreck. Once inside, divers can explore the ship's holds where time has seemingly stood still. Motorbikes, trucks, guns and wartime cargo, never to reach its destination, lay stacked where it was loaded back in 1941.
Diving SS Thistlegorm requires certification
as a trained diver, beyond entry level, through a recognised scuba training
agency. In any event, divers visit the wreck at their own risk. Crew Interviews:
Excerpts from live interviews with actual survivors of SS Thistlegorm under attack in 1941: Glyn Owen "I heard a plane making what appeared to be a second run or at least sounded like a diving run and my training I suppose came out and I just flung myself out of my hammock on the deck beneath and crouched behind a winch and then there was just two explosions and a mass of flame and my hammock above my head caught fire." Ray Gibson Angus McLeay "I made for the side to jump overboard and the rail was almost red-hot under my hand. I don't know why, but, just as I was going to jump, I looked back and saw the gunner crawling along the deck on the other side. The deck was covered with broken glass and I had to take the bits out of my feet before I could carry the gunner through the flames, which came up to my chest in places." John Whitham Denis Gray "…it seemed like two or three minutes I would think, that this huge explosion took place and of course we were looking in the direction of the Thistlegorm at the time and shortly after the explosion there was a huge sheet of flame which lit up both sides of the Red Sea at that point, we could see it light up the Mount Sinai on one side and Egypt on the other side and all the ships and everything around and then all of a sudden there seemed to be a second explosion and still looking in that d irection we were amazed to see what turned out to be a railway engine and it was red hot with sparks flying from it and it was coming in our direction."
Leigh Cunnigham, Kristina
SS Thistlegorm Albyn Line: Formed 21st June, 1901 Thistlegorm Built: January 1941, Joseph L. Thompson and Sons Ltd, Sunderland Type: Steamship, single
screw
Voyages: Crew: 41 Cousteau's visit: 1955 Position: Sha'ab Ali 27 48.800 N / 33 55.250 E |
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