Latest Contest entries
Planaria rosa   Prostheceraeus giesbrechtii   June 2025
 Canon RF100 1/200 f14 iso125
By Antonio Venturelli
posted 03:20 CST Today (12 hours ago)
Hypselodoris infucata nudibranch_March 2025
 CanonRF100 1/200 f16 iso100
By Antonio Venturelli
posted (4 days ago)
La frogfish
By Tai Olayori
posted (5 days ago)
Doto ussi
By Tai Olayori
posted (6 days ago)
A pair of mushroom coral pipefish
By Tai Olayori
posted (6 days ago)
A favorite in amongst macro lovers.
This sheep Nuru was shot recently in Anilao  Tulamben. 
Shot with a Nikon Z6ii camera  A Marelux strobe  snoot  and a green colored Orcatorch light.
By Tai Olayori
posted (6 days ago)

Underwater Photo Location: Empire Kingfisher

Underwater Photo Location: Empire Kingfisher

How Hot is this Dive Site? click a star to rate it
Lost 18 January 1942 while enroute to Halifax to join a convoy to Britian. Vessel was loaded with war suplies including munitions and ingots of copper and bismuth. Commercially salvaged in 1952 for the copper and bismuth. Current is the major hazard. Dive site is influenced by the significant tides of the Bay of Fundy to the west. Slack tide dives highly recommended. Current can be deceptive. Divers may experience no current at the surface yet find bottom current very difficult to handle. Underwater scooters (DPV's) will be useful. Visibility can be expected to be good, however, lighting conditions will probably be dark. Vessel was opened by salvors using explosives and cargo was removed with surface grabs. Penetration of some sections is possible. Munitions of various types dominate the dive site and should not be handled.
Facts about Empire Kingfisher
Dive types
dayboatwreckdrysuit

Marine Life
small



by Michael Grebler
At 165 feet, a Nova Scotia tech diver examines a portion of the munitions cargo remaining on the Empire Kingfisher wrecked off Port LaTour. Nikonos V, 12mm Sea & Sea lens dual Ikelite 150 strobes, Fuji 400 asa film. Cropped & colour corrected.
add a dive siteShare your knowledge...

Add your favorite dive site to our database


Really Simple Syndication