BootsnAll Travel Network



Townsville: Diving the Yongala Wreck

yongala boat.jpg

21st January 2007

We arrived in Townsville on Thursday 18th January. Our reason for visiting on our way to Cairns was to dive the Yongala wreck. We had heard lots of positive stories about the dive, although perhaps the most convincing argumet to do it was put forward by Dan, who simply told us when we left Sydney, ‘dive the Yongala or I will kill you!’

The Yongala was sunk during a cyclone in 1911, 89kms off the coast of Townsville, with the loss of 124 lives. It lay on the sandy ocean floor in 30m of water until it was discovered in 1958. The wreck is in the open ocean, but has developed into a semi man made coral reef, as the ship has become completely covered in soft and hard corals. The wreck also provides shelter from the strong currents in the area, and has become a haven for all sorts of marine life. As such, the dive is listed as the number one dive in Australia, the number one wreck dive in the world, and in the top ten of all dive sites across the planet!

Unfortunatley we presumed that trips would go out to the wreck every day from Townsville. This was mistake number one. We had missed a trip the previous day, and the next boat wasn’t going out until Saturday. We needed to get to Cairns by Sunday, but decided it would be worth hanging around for, so put our name down for the Saturday trip.

You would expect that killing a few days in the second largest city in Queensland would be easy, mistake number 2! There is absolutley nothing to do in Townsville! Whilst we have been away we have come up with a new scale for measuring how vibrant a nightlife a city has, it is a simple relationship that states that ‘the quality of nightlife is inversley proportional to the number of nights you spend at the cinema.’ Until now Invecargil on the South Island of New Zealand held the record for a one night stop over, and one night at the cinema. Townsville laughed in the face of Invercargil and we spent 2 of the 3 nights we had there couped up in the cinema (it would have been 3 out of 3 but for a lack of funds!).

We did take a day trip out to Magnetic Island off the coast of Townsville, which was a nice place and also home to the largest Koala colony in Oz. We took in a walk through the rain forrest that covers the island, and even saw our first venomous snake, a brown snake (the tenth deadliest in the world!).

Saturday eventually came round, and we were picked up at 5.30am outside our digs by Adrenalin Dive. We headed off to get kitted up and boarded our boat along with about 12 others to make our way out to the dive site. Until now all our diving has been done either from the shore or on shallow coral reefs, so heading out for 4 hours into the ocean on a small boat was a new experience, and the thought of jumping into the water, at such an exposed site was beginning to make us both a little nervous!

However, nerves about the dive were soon completely forgotten, as the sea sickness kicked in! Charlotte has suffered sea sickness before, and true to form was first to make use of one of the numerous buckets supplied on board. However, it was only a little while longer before everyone on the boat had their heads overboard, me included, donating our breakfast to the fish! Not the best preparation for days diving!

When we eventually arrived, we were given our brief by the dive master, which included the fact that there are 3 big bull sharks (these are man eaters!) that are commonly seen around the wreck. Rather than giving us harpoon guns to defend ourselves we were told that if we saw them, simply ‘don’t panic, they rarely show interest in the divers!’ We were also briefed about the strong currents, that, if you loose grip of the guide rope during the decent can take you miles further out to sea before you know it. The currents at this particular site have claimed lives of inexperienced divers before, great when you consider this was our first dive since qualifying as open water divers!

Once in the water we began our decent down the guide lines. Going down to a wreck is a strange experience, as you decend you pass through a strange stage where you can no longer see the surface, and can’t yet see the wreck below. Bizzarely it induces a kind of vertigo feeling, and as this dive was deeper than we had ever gone before (and were technically qualified to go to!) this stage lasted longer than expected. However once the wreck came into view it all became worthwhile!

The Yongala itself has a really spooky feel to it, however, as the dive master had warned us before entry, it is the size and number of fish on view that can become overwhelming. He was not wrong! There were litterally ‘clouds’ of small fish, that engulfed you reducing visibility down from the actual 10m to no more than 1m, it was crazy! Add to this schools of Barracuda and Giant Trevally, that would often dart into the clouds of little fish for a feed and this was absolutely another world experience!

We also saw massive loggerhead turtles, loads of sea snakes and huge Batfish. Glancing out away from the wreck gave glimpses of some huge shadows, but thankfully the bull sharks didn’t turn up for our dive! One of the group did see a grey nurse shark but unfortunaltey we missed it! The highlight of the dive though was definitley the Queensland Groupers! These fish are enourmous, one even has his own nickmname, VW, because he is thought to be the same size as the famous beatle car! We saw this fella towards the end of our dive, just sat under the hull of the boat. It is estimated he is 2.5m long and weighs 800lbs, when I saw it for some strange reason I thought it was a couch that had fallen out of the boat (maybe this was the mind bending nitrogen narcosis kicking in!).

We did 2 dives in total on the wreck before heading back to the safety of dry land. It was an incredible experience, but boy did you have to earn it! 8 hours round trip on a dive boat in those conditions needed to deliver something spectacular, and it certainly didn’t dissapoint!

yon maori.jpgyongala turtle 2.jpgyongala toilet.jpgYongkla lots of fish.jpgsea_snake.gif

Note: These Photos are not our own but taken from Google Images to provide an idea of what the dive was like!



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0 responses to “Townsville: Diving the Yongala Wreck”

  1. karen says:

    Dad has been telling us about the huge fish you saw. Sorry we missed your phone call the boys would have loved to have heard about the dive, but they thought it was great to hear your voices anyway and are very excited about going to another wedding!!!! Hope you enjoy Cairns and looking forward to hearing about the diving there, I will get Sal to read this later when she calls in, don’t think she has seen a fish that big in all the dives she has done.
    Take care love to you both
    K and Co x

  2. Pete & Margie says:

    I’d almost swear your Dad once told me he used to have one of those Queensland Groupers in his fish tank… apparently it outgrew the tank and just had to go! Or was it that one that just got away on the Ouse?! Either way – sounds fantastic diving – congrats especially to a guy who a few months ago was afraid of sharks! Sounds like Townsville hasn’t changed much! Sorry can’t get hold of the Queensland local – appears to be out of town. If you decide to drive up onto the Atherton Tablelands when in Cairns (worth a go for a different climate) my favourite waterfall is Millaa Millaa falls – beautiful if you can avoid the tourists! Pete

  3. Linda says:

    Wow – That dive (and the trip out there and back) what an adventure! How long did each dive last and more to the point the going down the guide rope bit each time? How deep was it? Like to know the nitty gritty of these things!!!

  4. admin says:

    Hi Linda!

    The dives lasted as long as our air did, which was about 45 mins on the first dive, and a little less on the second!

    We went down to about 24m, the ocean floor is at about 30m where the boat sank, with the top of the wreck at about 16m! The descent on the rope is the scariest bit (although it takes no more than 3-4 mins to get down!), the visibility when descending was only about 5m, so your mind starts to wander as to what might be out there in the murk!

    Thanks for the comments by the way, it all adds to our travel diary for when we get home!

    Take care, Chris and Charl

  5. admin says:

    Hi P&M!

    We hope you are both well and enjoying the winter weather!

    Its Australia day today, and looks like our cricketers are about to take yet another absolute pasting (surely the match officials should just cancel the series now, I’m beginning to fall out of love with watching cricket!).

    I think Dad has plans to renovate the house and convert the whole bottom floor into a saltwater aquarium so he can house a grouper if I bring him one home, unfortunatley I can’t get it to fit into my rucksack, so will have to see if I can find hime one in the north sea when I get back!

    Take care, Chris and Charlotte

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