HMS Culloden

HMS Culloden
Type:
shipwreck, frigate, British Royal Navy
Name:
The Battle of Culloden, where in 1745 the English army massacred the last of the Scottish resistance ( and much of the civilian population ), completing the English conquest of Scotland.
Built:
1776, England
Specs:
( 170 x 47 ft ) 1658 gross tons, 650 crew
Sunk:
Monday January 24, 1781
ran aground in storm - no casualties
Depth:
20 ft

HMS Culloden

The HMS Culloden was a British warship that ran aground during the revolutionary war. The British recovered most of her supplies and guns before they burned her to the waterline. Today she sits in 20-25fsw. Several of her large cannons and timbers can still be seen. The wreck is spread out over a sandy bottom. Most of her artifacts have been recovered over the years but on occasion, a persistent diver will find something. To find the wreck take a compass heading of 330 degrees from the large boulder on the beach. Navigate the wreck beneath the surface due to the surface currents. There is a large bluff to walk down to get to the beach.

Culloden Point

Directions:

Take the LIE ( 495 ) to exit 70 ( south ) proceed to Sunrise Hwy. ( Rt27 ). Travel east on Sunrise to the end, this turns into Montauk Hwy. (Rt.27A). Continue east to the town of Montauk. Turn left onto Edgemere St. which will turn onto Flamingo Ave. Turn left onto Duryea Ave. Take this to the end and turn right onto Soundview Drive. Take Soundview Dr. until it turns into a dirt road and continue about a 1/4 mile and turn right onto another dirt road ( no name ) take it to the end and park.

The Culloden is now a marine park, and scavenging, er ... salvaging, is strictly prohibited.


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no snorkel

Here is an item that is useful in the tropics, but much less so around here. This is because the water here is not nearly as crystal clear as in the tropics, and the depths are often greater. Therefore it is unlikely you will be able to see anything interesting below from the surface.

On a boat dive, a snorkel is totally useless - leave it home. Chances are, the captain and crew will tell you to take it off anyway. The same is generally true for inlet diving where the entry is steep. A snorkel is just one extra thing to get tangled up, and you will probably have enough of that already. A snorkel might be useful in a surface swim from the beach out to a close-in dive site, if it is a good one with purge valve or a dry valve to keep the water out entirely. Even then, you are better off doing a backstroke out to the site, with your head out of the water so you can navigate by landmarks, or an underwater swim if the currents are favorable.