I came back on Feb. 23, 2008. There had been about a week of calm, dry weather and it was a reasonably high tide so I figured the visibility should be about as good as it gets here. Sure enough, it was about 15 feet. That may not sound like much, but it's Mill Bay. The wreck is really starting to fall apart. Part of the rear cabin is collapsed and many of the walls in the superstructure are full of holes. Even the planking on the hull is starting to rot away. I found it strange that I didn't see any fish on this dive. Usually, this wreck is swarming with young rockfish and schools of perch.
BEHIND RUDDER AND PROPELLER
BOLLARD ON REAR DECK
ANEMONES AND FEATHERDUSTER WORMS ON FALLEN MAST
FOG HORN?
DOOR TO WHEELHOUSE
ANCHOR CAPSTAIN ON BOW
TOP OF WHEELHOUSE
SEASTAR AND ANEMONES ON SIDE OF WRECK
PORTHOLE (ILLEGAL TO TAKE)
DOOR TO WHEELHOUSE
ANCHOR CAPSTAIN ON BOW
ANEMONES ON PART OF MAST
CAPSTAIN
LIGHT ON COLLAPSED PART OF WRECK
ANEMONES ON WHEELHOUSE
WHEELHOUSE
COLLAPSED PART OF CABIN
PORT SIDE OF HULL LOOKING FORWARD
PORT SIDE OF HULL LOOKING AFT
COLLAPSING CABIN
COLLAPSED SIDE OF CABIN
ANEMONES ON BOW
ANEMONES IN FRONT OF WHEELHOUSE
TARP NEXT TO WHEELHOUSE
TARP
BEACH
CUT-DOWN TREE NEXT TO STEPS
STEPS
STERN PANORAMA