The El Dorado, a 157 foot-long, 300-ton, casino boat broke free from her moorings when Hurricane Ivan ripped through Panama City, FL in 2004. She ran aground in Southport, FL. where she sat for several years. A new owner was in the process of restoring the boat when it was carried away by Hurricane Michael last October. The boat ended up across West Bay, sitting on its side just offshore behind the campus of Florida State University Panama City.
Now, the boat’s owner, Lee Irwin, has donated the hard-luck casino boat to become an artificial reef. The plan is to move the boat within the next two months and to sink it in around 100 feet of water, approximately 12 nautical miles south of St. Andrew Bay Pass. The gambler’s loss will be the fish’s gain. The EL Dorado will be an important addition to the region’s artificial reefs, many of which were destroyed by the recent hurricane.
No doubt about it. Winter is with us with a vengeance. On Friday rising waters and ice jams on the Hudson River between Albany and Troy, New York tore 
To celebrate the 250th anniversary of Captain Cook’s voyage to Australia,
Excentric Australian billionaire Clive Palmer made quite a splash in 2012 when he announced his plans to build
There is a tragic irony in the collision of the guided-missile cruiser
The Hawaii State Department of Transportation Harbors division has given the caretaker group, Friends of the Falls of Clyde, until
Recently the containership MOL Empire passed an
In 2013, a 20′ great white shark was caught on video by Mexican shark expert Mauricio Hoyos Padilla off Guadalupe Island. Believed to be the largest great white shark ever filmed and among the largest great whites ever encountered, she was nicknamed “
As the wholly unnecessary and reckless partial government shutdown rolls on, 41,000 active duty US Coast Guard personnel are still doing their jobs, without getting paid. Roughly 8,500 civilian support staff are furloughed, also without paychecks.
For Throwback Thursday, an updated repost of an event from ten years ago — the other “Miracle on the Hudson.”
In November 2015, the German Navy training ship,
Today marks the 100th year anniversary of the Great Boston Molasses Flood, which inundated Boston’s North End sending a wall of molasses, killing 21 and injuring 150.
Much of the media have taken the claims of Boyan Slat at face value. The young Dutch engineer has claimed that his design for a series of floating ocean booms will clean the oceans of plastic. The BBC headline in 2014 which read, “