Diving German WW1 minelaying submarine UC-42.
Propeller boss of one of WW1 sub UC-42's propellors. She lies sunk approx 5nm south of Roches Point. Photo ©Timmy Carey
Sidescan sonar image of Wreck of 1692 (to be confirmed) discovered by Carroll O'Donoghue, owner/operator of HARPY, in 2015.
A selection of our underwater survey hardware. We're ready when you need us.
Wreck-diving off the Old Head of Kinsale
Commercial Divers working on undersea pipes outside Kinsale harbour.
Recovering Diver after ascent from Lusitania wreck.
Sunset in Kinsale, pictured from the quays.
La Belle Poule pictured in Kinsale during the stage to Kinsale of Le Figaro yacht race in August 2010.
One of a pair (the other being Le Étoile) of identical training schooners built for the French Naval Academy in 1932 by the Chantier Naval de Normandie, in Fecamp, they displace 280 tons, measure 123 feet overall with a beam of 24 feet and draft 12 feet and the height of the main mast above the waterline is 107 feet. Based on late 19th Century 'Paimpolaise' fishing schooners, they are crewed by one officer, ten petty officers, five non rated and about twelve trainees who change after a week or two aboard. The 500 square meters of sail is supplemented by a 285hp auxiliary engine. During World War II both schooners were able to decamp to Portsmouth where the Free French continued to use them for training and both thankfully still ply the waves.
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