Dive the Kittiwake Wreck every Wednesday with Ocean Frontiers on this 3-Tank Boat Trip. The Kittiwake is the ultimate Caribbean Wreck with all decks accessible and shallow enough to be able to enjoy a 60 minute dive and see all the main Wreck features. The ship is a very big wreck at 251 ft and even with crystal clear 100 foot visibility, her stern looms in the distant shadows out of sight. This dive is a signature dive of the Cayman Islands that you definetly want to add to your logbook.
This trip includes dives at two additional dive sites, typically a deeper wall dive for the first site, followed by a dive on the Kittiwake wreck for the second dive, and a 3rd dive on a shallow coral reef.
Chick here to link to the 3-Tank Safari Booking Page
The Kittiwake is Grand Cayman's biggest shipwreck and a haven for marine life. Some divers say they don't like wrecks, and we say they haven't dived the Kittiwake yet. It will turn just about any diver in to a wreck diving fan. The Kittiwake is a true spectacle to behold in front of your eyes. To be present next to this huge chunk of metal sitting at peace on a vast expanse of powder white sand and surrounded by infinitely clear water is truly breathtaking.
Trip Details:
Other rental gear: BCD, Fins, Mask, Wetsuit, Regulator, Instruments, Dive Computer, Nitrox tanks, Camera, Lunch. Gratuities Not Included.
Chick here to link to the 3-Tank Safari Booking Page
Additional Reading:
Ex-USS Kittiwake ASR 13 - Chanticleer Class Submarine Rescue Ship ASR
Built by: Savannah Machinery and Foundary Co of Savannah, Georgia, USA
The ex-USS Kittiwake was a Submarine Rescue vessel (ASR-13). She was part of the 6th Submarine squadron (SUBRON 6) home ported at the Destroyer-Submarine piers in Norfolk, VA.
December 17, 2010, the Kittiwake started her tow to Grand Cayman in a snow and ice storm; a tow that weathered rough winter seas for the better part of her 9 day journey, arriving in Grand Cayman midday on Dec 25, 2010. The 'America' tug boat brought her safely to Grand Cayman.
The primary mission of the Kittiwake was to rescue sailors from downed submarines. She was very much a diving vessel. Many of her stories are still locked away as 'classified'. Over 50 years, she has many stories to tell, from submarine rescues to salvage operations recovering the black box from the Challenger disaster, rescuing a Haitian boat running P-250's non-stop, serving in the Caribbean including Bermuda, St. Thomas, St. Croix, Puerto Rico and Havana, Cuba to name a few stops, to Atlantic crossings to the North Sea, assisting the USS Orion, testing ballistic missiles, recovering dummy missiles from Polaris subs and helping out divers, to running interference for a Trident Submarine missile test (DASO) and almost sinking her from time to time..... she saw the world.
From stories of the crew, there was great comradery and both rewarding and challenging voyages. All in all, the ex-crew are fond of her and say "to know her was to love her, and God bless the USS Kittiwake and those who served aboard her".