He shot these on a wreck that nobody knows the name of. It sank in the 1800s and has been called the Brass wreck for as long as anyone can remember. Here's the LDS description:
The Brass Wreck is an unidentified 19th century schooner which lies in 90-95 of water approximately 15 miles ESE of Pensacola Pass. A favorite of local divers because of the variety of marine life it holds, especially tropical reef species. All that remains of the wreck are the iron ribs, ballast, and windlass
Its called the Brass Wreck because divers have been salvaging brass pins out of her since the first local divers went down on her. This weekend, my son got two kinds of treasure -- a nice mess of fish and one of her brass pins as seen in this photo:
The grouper weighted about 15 pounds. We fried up one side of it Saturday night and it was way more than me and my son could eat. Unfortunately, my shoulder is still healing and I had to stay dry this weekend, but next weekend I'm back in the water.
The Brass Wreck is an unidentified 19th century schooner which lies in 90-95 of water approximately 15 miles ESE of Pensacola Pass. A favorite of local divers because of the variety of marine life it holds, especially tropical reef species. All that remains of the wreck are the iron ribs, ballast, and windlass
Its called the Brass Wreck because divers have been salvaging brass pins out of her since the first local divers went down on her. This weekend, my son got two kinds of treasure -- a nice mess of fish and one of her brass pins as seen in this photo:
The grouper weighted about 15 pounds. We fried up one side of it Saturday night and it was way more than me and my son could eat. Unfortunately, my shoulder is still healing and I had to stay dry this weekend, but next weekend I'm back in the water.