Exploring an Unidentified Shipwreck

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 145

  • @bigchap5794
    @bigchap5794 3 роки тому +191

    Tremendously underrated channel

  • @theshipenthusiast
    @theshipenthusiast 3 роки тому +72

    Fun fact. I actually live about 15 minutes away from a Lusitania prop. Is says LH which I assume means port side prop. Weird that it would be in Texas of all places but I’m not complaining. I got to touch a part of Lusitania.

    • @anthonyhebisen
      @anthonyhebisen 2 роки тому +6

      I had no idea the Lusitania’s propeller was in Dallas till I read your comment . I’ll have to go visit it sometime . I own a postcard of the Lusitania , sent out from the Lusitania from 1911. On the backside of the card, the passenger, agrees to an 8:30 train at Penn station . She simply signs it “ Love, Molly .”

    • @loyaltarbet
      @loyaltarbet 2 роки тому +3

      LH means counter clockwise rotation, typically followed be the diameter of the wheel, then the pitch of the blades, describing how much forward travel, per one complete rotation. So this screw from Lusitania, must've been one which was switched-out at the yard prior to obviously her fateful final passage and U-boat encounter?

    • @theshipenthusiast
      @theshipenthusiast 2 роки тому +3

      @@loyaltarbet They were switched out constantly. I don’t know the last time they were replaced.

    • @leoborn4013
      @leoborn4013 Рік тому

      One of Lusitanias props was used to cast golf clubs as an anniversary celebration…

    • @rustico0
      @rustico0 Рік тому

      @@anthonyhebisenI’m extremely late on this but I have to ask, how did you come across it? That’s a legit piece of history that I’d be jealous to own.

  • @beng6319
    @beng6319 2 роки тому +34

    Mike Brady, you're incredible. I watch your channel all the time and your demeanor is something worth admiration. You're not cynical like a lot of UA-camrs and you keep a positive attitude even dealing with hard subjects. Keep being rad my guy!

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  2 роки тому +11

      Thanks so much Ben! Glad you’re enjoying my work, mate :)

  • @burlatsdemontaigne6147
    @burlatsdemontaigne6147 3 роки тому +36

    The copper sheathing was to protect the wood from shipworm. Great channel!

  • @jack0cat
    @jack0cat 11 місяців тому +3

    Mike your videos are light years ahead of “bottom feeding” hum drum videos.
    Absolutely binge worthy material no matter what the subject I cannot get enough.
    Several are worth watching over and over.
    Totally a class act. ❤️👍

  • @awatea36
    @awatea36 3 роки тому +19

    Great content Mike, the Great Ocean Road was my job for 10 years plus, as I was a tour guide on Day Tours along the journey. Telling my passengers all the stories of shipwrecks along the coast.

  • @jasonheckenlively1172
    @jasonheckenlively1172 2 роки тому +8

    I really enjoy your usual content, but this was a special treat. Thank you for sharing this with us. Your assistant seems like a keeper 😆

  • @flocorgi
    @flocorgi 3 роки тому +13

    One time I went to the Les îles de la Madeleine in Quebec and there was a beach with 6 shipwrecks and one of them was a clipper. It was. So cool.

  • @olteanlevi
    @olteanlevi 3 роки тому +9

    What a handsome ship lover 🥺

  • @dalekinthewater4708
    @dalekinthewater4708 Рік тому +1

    00:07
    Feel you man on that. I went to Long Beach backpacking and I insisted to everyone that we booked a room on the Queen Mary. We did as well

  • @danielintheantipodes6741
    @danielintheantipodes6741 2 роки тому +4

    And when you factor in the heavy gowns women were obliged to wear, they would have had minimal hope of swimming to the shore, even if they could swim. Even if the weather was not ferocious enough to drown even the strongest swimmers. Your channel is totally amazing. I am so glad to have discovered it.
    Thank you for the video!

  • @graemebdh2172
    @graemebdh2172 2 роки тому +2

    Fascinating stuff Mike. Just shows what there is to see on the beach for those with the eyes to sea. Re sailing times from England - my great great grandmother came out in 1857 on a sip that took 90 days. Later in the century clipper ships could do it in about 60 days.

  • @thekmsbismarck7875
    @thekmsbismarck7875 3 роки тому +7

    Great vid! I have a Piece of pipe from the engine room of a whaling ship

  • @jayanderson5823
    @jayanderson5823 3 роки тому +8

    you deserve more views man!

  • @corycollier
    @corycollier Рік тому

    11 vids into binge-watching your channel and I'm hooked!! I've always been a lover of history, aviation, and especially ships and you got 2 of the 3 boxes checked My good Sir! SUBBED! :)

    • @philnewcomers9170
      @philnewcomers9170 Рік тому

      there is a realy interesting wreck called Halloween owned by Whitehat Willis who owned Cutty Sark I wondered weather if you built acoffer damm around the out line of the wreck the removed the sand you could lift her out of her grave.That one would be worth doing and placing alongside CS in Grenage .I thaught you were American ttfn&ty

    • @philnewcomers9170
      @philnewcomers9170 Рік тому

      by the way whats happened to clipper ship The Caliph nothing has ever been found totaly disapeared? that is the question of questions

  • @Fred-rj3er
    @Fred-rj3er Рік тому

    Really, really love this one. The sort of info applies to all coastlines with wrecks. Excellent. Thank you.

  • @jonesy279
    @jonesy279 2 роки тому +2

    “The sea is coming to get me!” Kinda sums up your whole channel.

  • @Theoriginalmalcontentcorner
    @Theoriginalmalcontentcorner 3 роки тому +5

    Absolutely tremendous work which you do! Thank you for sharing your passion and skillset with the rest of us.

  • @ericmacleod1904
    @ericmacleod1904 3 роки тому +11

    Love the edits and style of your videos, please keep er goin! Lots of potential! You would really love travelling aound the atlantic coast, perhaps with a chonky metal detector

  • @dinoslavski
    @dinoslavski 2 роки тому +3

    This is quite amazing, not related in any way to marine history, but at my family's country home I found a lot of forged iron parts, nails, rivets, part of a door hinge, even a squareish screw nut, and stuff from different eras too, the forged iron bits were mostly from 18th and 19th century, but I also found bits of gray masonry, jewellery and a part of a candelabrum, as well as coins, pistol ammunition cases and shell fragments,

  • @zinniagarden
    @zinniagarden 2 роки тому +1

    Oooh, you are mudlarking a shipwreck! So interesting!

  • @nmgg6928
    @nmgg6928 5 місяців тому

    Oh wow this was so cool! I just found your channel this week and its wonderful. I do hope you consider making more of these adventure videos 😊

  • @cheriemoulang2413
    @cheriemoulang2413 3 роки тому +3

    Great vlog was fabulous meeting you today

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  3 роки тому +4

      Thanks Cherie, you too!! Better weather next time hopefully :)
      ~Mike

  • @emjohnson76
    @emjohnson76 3 роки тому +9

    “The sea’s coming to get me!” 😂Assistant needs to learn the “never turn your back on the ocean” rule. She’ll get you when you’re not looking.
    Also, Assistant deserves a pay raise.

  • @steeliewheelies
    @steeliewheelies 7 місяців тому

    Ah man I love this, thanks for taking us along

  • @rlanza1054
    @rlanza1054 2 роки тому +1

    I absolutely love this outing video finding stuff with your assistant (girl friend).

  • @stevereilly
    @stevereilly 3 місяці тому

    This is really helpful I've been finding similar copper sheet, some with bullet holes!

  • @savingsusanna
    @savingsusanna 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent. Really enjoyed that. You gave a great sense of history. 👍👌

  • @gasparocelloman9852
    @gasparocelloman9852 3 роки тому +6

    Great video. Your enthusiasm is captivating. Have you done a video of the wreck of the Speke on Phillip Island? There’s still quite a large part of the bow and sections of hull plating that are accessible at low tide…or at least that was the case 2 years ago when I last visited.

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  3 роки тому +5

      Great idea! Would love to visit the Speke since there is much more tangible evidence of the ship than this poor mystery vessel!
      ~Mike

  • @grampsinsl5232
    @grampsinsl5232 2 роки тому +8

    You are so incredibly lucky to still have undisturbed coasts like this. In America, every inch has literally been covered with houses and hotels and condominiums except for a few national seashore preserves. In my youth there were still long natural stretches with dunes and tidal pools, but the bulldozers and developers have destroyed all of that.

  • @leaturk11
    @leaturk11 3 роки тому +4

    Years ago, (1962) my family moved to Australia from the UK to Perth, unfortunately my mother couldn't take the heat so we all moved back, my brother was born in the Perth. Sailed on the Stratheden on the way-out and the Fairsky on the way back.

  • @EagleStarLine
    @EagleStarLine 11 місяців тому

    Ive seen this just now and its amazing!

  • @USMCbratt
    @USMCbratt Рік тому +3

    That was incredible! You two have a great eye for finding things. Great videos! I love your channel. Keep up the wonderful work!

  • @ameykurankar2592
    @ameykurankar2592 3 роки тому +13

    Absolutely love all your Ship illustrations! You capture the grandure, the elegance and the sheer power those ocean liners once had very well, Great Job!!!
    And as of your recent video awesome findings!! I liked the music you choose, Would definitely love if you start famous Shipwreck History/Tour video series !

  • @SR_superior_1000
    @SR_superior_1000 Рік тому

    More adventures like these would be awesome!

  • @TracyA123
    @TracyA123 3 роки тому +1

    Wow! That was amazing! What fun that would be! Great video!

  • @ShadowHawkProductions
    @ShadowHawkProductions 3 роки тому

    Well done! Enjoyed watching the video and learning some history!

  • @ALCO-C855-fan
    @ALCO-C855-fan 11 місяців тому +2

    May it be the København?😏😏😏

  • @tarynhoughton5267
    @tarynhoughton5267 2 роки тому

    Just found this video but loved seeing you explore in real life!!!!! I wish you could go to all kinds of shipwrecks and investigate that would be so fun to watch. Also as usual still have a giant crush on you!! keep up the good work.

  • @Matt..S
    @Matt..S Рік тому

    Just remember, when you pick up a shitty old nail or ornament from a wooden box for trinkets:
    "It's worthless. Ten dollars from a vendor in the street. But I take it, I bury it in the sand for a thousand years, it becomes priceless... like the Ark. Men will kill for it. Men like you and me."
    Belloq from Indiana Jones.
    It's not the obvious value of an object, but the history attached to it that makes it precious.

  • @Fuchswinter
    @Fuchswinter 2 роки тому +1

    Guess next time I’m by the sea imma watch out for such pieces (I’m not Australian and don’t live by the sea but a man can dream). I would never have realized what some of these are, this taught me a lot.

  • @atomicbaconrocket8157
    @atomicbaconrocket8157 3 роки тому

    Great video 😁. I've really started to enjoy your content mate, keep it up ❤️

  • @filipdemski8303
    @filipdemski8303 3 роки тому

    Thank you! Waiting for more!

  • @EnzedderEntertainment
    @EnzedderEntertainment 3 роки тому +2

    I would love to see you explore the SS Maheno, also in Australia.

  • @MarloweDash
    @MarloweDash 2 роки тому

    Love your channel!

  • @kennythefrog1
    @kennythefrog1 11 місяців тому

    Omfg this is a hop skip and jump from my grandfolks place. I used to play there or near by when I was a kid and I never knew. Now the name of the place makes total sense.

  • @jaiden_4661
    @jaiden_4661 3 роки тому +1

    Wow.. This Is Cool

  • @Andreyenne
    @Andreyenne 3 роки тому +1

    Great video😊

  • @ronalddominguez6641
    @ronalddominguez6641 3 роки тому

    Your video's are spectacular!

  • @ConWolfDoubleO7
    @ConWolfDoubleO7 2 роки тому +1

    Hey, archaeologist here and as someone who's done maritime archaeology, please put everything back where you found it! Donating to the museums is not helpful to the scientific record and in most cases its illegal for the museum to accept stolen artifacts from government/public land. Contact the museum and they should be able to call for a real archaeologist to systematically describe the site and log it with other known sites. Archaeology isn't just digging around, its grids and measurements and cataloging exact locations of all items. This site is very disturbed so I don't think some exploration is bad, but everything needs to stay where it was for us to reconstruct the site as it was before anything was removed. Context is everything.

  • @ZeldaTheSwordsman
    @ZeldaTheSwordsman 2 роки тому

    Your talk about the sailing conditions brought to mind _"In 1803, we sailed out to sea/Out from the sweet town of Derry..."_

  • @rctommy3200
    @rctommy3200 3 роки тому +3

    Loved the video. Keep up the great work!

  • @WDFJR16345
    @WDFJR16345 Рік тому

    Great content. Can’t help but thinking about the last hands who touched that gear.

  • @WLDB
    @WLDB 3 роки тому

    Great video!

  • @sapnadavis5814
    @sapnadavis5814 3 роки тому

    THAT'S A NICE VIDEO......👍🏻

  • @christianjaramillo1065
    @christianjaramillo1065 3 роки тому +4

    1:12 he said NOT to bumb into the coast

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  3 роки тому +2

      I thought they were easy instructions too!
      ~Mike

    • @yakko7737
      @yakko7737 3 роки тому

      @@OceanlinerDesigns lol

  • @jhfdhgvnbjm75
    @jhfdhgvnbjm75 8 місяців тому

    11:00 Sad Pikachu face :O

  • @sltz3
    @sltz3 3 роки тому +1

    “Sea’s coming to get me”
    *walks away*

  • @dirkhartman9572
    @dirkhartman9572 2 роки тому +2

    If you like to identify the wreck, look up wrecksite, make an account and look up the part of the coast you were, almost all ships wrecked are on there

  • @djscottdog1
    @djscottdog1 3 роки тому

    Amazing channel

  • @INKDRAILS
    @INKDRAILS 6 місяців тому

    Great adventure Mike! Did you give those pieces you found to a museum? Would be interested to see if they could date them. Cheers

  • @the4tierbridge
    @the4tierbridge 3 роки тому

    Can we have another video on this? It’s so entertaining.

  • @mickeydee3595
    @mickeydee3595 3 роки тому +1

    There is a mahogany Portuguese ship from around the 1500s somewhere in Warrnambool. :)

  • @johnransom1146
    @johnransom1146 Рік тому

    Looks way better than mud larking on the Thames

  • @DB-hb1go
    @DB-hb1go Рік тому +2

    Poor Guy was born 120 years to late

  • @MalteseSparrow
    @MalteseSparrow 2 роки тому +1

    Not going to lie, I was hoping for a 'Legend of the Mahogany Ship' comment before realising you were nearer to Lorne than Warrnambool XD

  • @drewdolce
    @drewdolce 6 місяців тому

    He looks so different here 😮

  • @chuckaddison5134
    @chuckaddison5134 3 роки тому

    Before the steam engine became common, sailing ships were truly at the mercy of wind and wave. Wrecks were common. Being caught offshore in a storm with the wind blowing onto the land was often a death knell for sailing ships.

  • @chelseapinkardships
    @chelseapinkardships 3 роки тому +3

    Twas not a good time to be a ship in the Bass Straight Triangle! Tassie's northern coastline is much the same - especially King Island and Flinders Island, which are absolutely littered with wrecks!

  • @RockTuner
    @RockTuner 3 роки тому +4

    I'm curious. Are you planning on going to the wrecks of the Maheno, Sygna, and whatever is left of the Cherry Venture? Maybe other visible wrecks?

  • @balloondog8
    @balloondog8 3 роки тому

    Great video, I also enjoy ship related things. Your illustrations are beautiful and have so detailed. Let's try to go for 5k subscribers!

  • @chris-hz2wd
    @chris-hz2wd 3 роки тому +1

    The holes in the rock at 12:25 are creeping me out

    • @catseye2260
      @catseye2260 3 роки тому

      It looks very disturbing

    • @zhackiethedog
      @zhackiethedog 3 роки тому +1

      That's coral

    • @medea27
      @medea27 Рік тому

      Looks like limestone, which is common along that coastline... possibly an ancient coral as it was all underwater millions of years ago.

  • @graceygal2664
    @graceygal2664 3 роки тому +5

    What liner is your profile picture
    It looks like queen elizabeth if she had the same bow of queen mary

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  3 роки тому +5

      You're right. It is a bit of an easter-egg; QM and QE smooshed together. :)
      ~Mike

    • @bernardcassidy6497
      @bernardcassidy6497 3 роки тому

      The Bow of that ship in the storm was the Aquitania

  • @jadethornton7975
    @jadethornton7975 3 роки тому +1

    SHOW MELBOURNES VERY OWN POLLY WOODSIDE - Love From St Kilda :)

    • @OceanlinerDesigns
      @OceanlinerDesigns  3 роки тому +1

      You read my mind! Planning on paying a trip once she’s opened up again!
      ~Mike

    • @jadethornton7975
      @jadethornton7975 3 роки тому

      @@OceanlinerDesigns yeah I've been meaning to see her myself

    • @goosehubtheshipnerd
      @goosehubtheshipnerd Рік тому

      @@OceanlinerDesigns my friend goes to Australia a lot I’ll send him to see it and take photos for me back in America if he’s going this year (he’s been twice so maybe maybe not I’m not sure)

  • @MatthewAnderson707
    @MatthewAnderson707 2 роки тому

    The metal rigging would help to identify the time period the vessel was wrecked, would it not? A construction or retrofit date of possibly late 19th Century, 1870s or 1880s? If you can, get a sample of any wood that looks foreign or bluestone and try to get it identified by region, from an arborist or geologist. That's how Clive Cussler and his team identified the wreck of Mary Celeste in Haiti.

  • @LT82659
    @LT82659 3 роки тому +2

    No one needs to know this, but...today is my birthday! I wanna see how many bday wishes I can get :) Also, amazing vid! I never expected so many parts of a shipwreck to just be lying there.

    • @thehistorickid9100
      @thehistorickid9100 3 роки тому

      Mine is in 8 days

    • @LT82659
      @LT82659 3 роки тому +1

      @@thehistorickid9100 Oh awesome! Since I'm prolly never gonna see you again, happy early birthday!

    • @thehistorickid9100
      @thehistorickid9100 3 роки тому

      @@LT82659 thanks and happy birthday to you too

    • @jadethornton7975
      @jadethornton7975 3 роки тому

      Happy birthday stranger

  • @Blahblah-56
    @Blahblah-56 2 роки тому

    Hey there’s a ship wreck called the edwina may behind the tooriden air port maybe you could visit that one

  • @AndyHappyGuy
    @AndyHappyGuy 3 роки тому +1

    You’re like part time explorer 2.0

    • @dschehutinefer5627
      @dschehutinefer5627 2 роки тому

      ... my first thought was he's turning into ship Steve Irwin. XD

  • @Prattycakes1
    @Prattycakes1 3 роки тому

    10:10 im pretty sure that bug is a maritime earwig

  • @peterbockholm3176
    @peterbockholm3176 2 роки тому

    12:30 What is it that he lays the find on, is it some kind of stone?

    • @medea27
      @medea27 Рік тому

      It looks like limestone, possibly an ancient fossil coral as much of that coastline was underwater millions of years ago.

  • @samdryden7944
    @samdryden7944 Рік тому +1

    so wait, we're not friends any more?

  • @goosehubtheshipnerd
    @goosehubtheshipnerd Рік тому

    You know mike maybe holiday for you would be ship related as you can’t seem to get your mind off it

  • @bruceismay5440
    @bruceismay5440 3 роки тому

    Maybe the ship caught fire and it got bad to they beached the ship to escape, hello from Queensland

  • @jakehopkinson2031
    @jakehopkinson2031 Рік тому

    I sacrifice these words to the algorithm.

  • @Cat-ls1jr
    @Cat-ls1jr 2 роки тому

    Poor crab!

  • @federicoviolino6784
    @federicoviolino6784 3 роки тому

    Yes yes yeeees

  • @commqual
    @commqual 3 роки тому

    intresting

  • @TheNerdyNetworkBOYS
    @TheNerdyNetworkBOYS 2 роки тому

    You live in Victoria I do too

  • @thehistorickid9100
    @thehistorickid9100 3 роки тому

    Great vid man I make vids about ships to

  • @clydecessna737
    @clydecessna737 3 роки тому

    Australia has too many trivial laws.

  • @ninja650rn
    @ninja650rn 3 роки тому

    From ashes to ashes

  • @flame23rt
    @flame23rt 9 місяців тому

    No way.

  • @majuuorthrus3340
    @majuuorthrus3340 2 роки тому

    Not just voluntary immigrants - I suspect some of the people who died in shipwrecks may have been convicts, punished by transportation. Most of those were petty criminals or political prisoners (e.g. trade unionists).
    I feel that transportation alone was excessive punishment, but a horrible death by drowning or exposure is so far beyond warranted for these poor people.

  • @GMCOGRE
    @GMCOGRE 5 місяців тому

    dude, take a metal detector with ya.

  • @FormerlyEpicjcat
    @FormerlyEpicjcat 3 роки тому

    Hi

  • @BNuts
    @BNuts Рік тому +1

    Please use gloves as appropriate next time. Wouldn't want to cut your hands on anything, right?

  • @MrSvenovitch
    @MrSvenovitch 3 роки тому

    Look into the lens dude, not at the screen ;-)

  • @TeethToothman
    @TeethToothman 8 місяців тому

    (ΘдΘ)

  • @FalconsEye58094
    @FalconsEye58094 3 роки тому

    Forgive me I thought you were British

  • @DREADNOUGHT.01
    @DREADNOUGHT.01 Рік тому

    Wait I’m confused, so there’s some rotten metal, a cable and some other trash that washed up on that beach, and that means it’s a ship wreck?, I’m not hating I love this channel but, I dunno maybe I missed something