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Reservations: 1-800-848-7078
Phone: 284-495-5513
Fax: 284-495-5347
Email:
Info@divebvi.com
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The Flying Cloud is back...
The British Virgin Islands SCUBA Organization and the BVI
Tourist Board are thrilled to announce that they are in the process of
securing and bringing this 208 ft Barquentine HOME to the waters that
she sailed in for so long.
Built in 1935, for the French Navy, OISSEAU DES ISLES (Bird
of the Islands) served as a cadet training ship. During World War II, she
posed as a decoy, spying for the Allied Forces. She was based in Tahiti.
After the war, she was used to transport cargo along the Baja coast. In 1968
she joined the Windjammer fleet. She is 208 ft long, 32 feet wide and her
draft is 16 feet. She weighed in at 400 tons (before charter guests and
rum!)
Flying Cloud sailed the waters of the Sir Francis Drake Channel with many thousands of loyal guests who came back year after year. The Flying Cloud, and the British Virgin Islands, became HOME. She was retired from active service in 2002. The upkeep expenses to keep her in the fleet for paying guests was prohibitive.
The Windjammer Fleet and Captain Mike Burke have always
thought that she should be in the BVI waters for her retirement, and before
they went into receivership this past fall, gave permission for the BVI
SCUBA Organization to secure the wreck, which had already been donated to
the Trinidad Museum.
Kevin Rowlette of Husky Towing has volunteered to tow her
from her current resting place at the dock in Port of Spain in Trinidad. At
which time she will rest on the FLYING CLOUD'S old hurricane mooring in
Great Harbor on Peter Island while the BVI SCUBA Organization prepares her
for sinking. The VI Shipping Registry, along with the BVI Ports Authority,
Conservation and Fisheries, with input from the BVI SCUBA Organization will
decide on her final resting place in the territory.
Obtaining this ship truly complements our already spectacular
selection of premier wreck dive spots that numbers 10 in total with the RMS
Rhone, sunk by hurricane in 1867, as part of her crown jewel. The Flying
Cloud will be another important part of our crown. The sinking date,
program, and chance to dive this historic wreck will be released as more
information becomes available.
Donations are being requested in order to help bring this historic ship back to the BVI.
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