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Friday, August 21, 2009
Phuket’s 'Coral Reef Squadron' 90% destroyed: TDA
The ten aircraft were transported to Phuket in a convoy of flatbed trucks in April last year.
Fish and other marine life quickly colonized the aircraft, until they were ravaged by monsoon season currents.
PHUKET CITY: Phuket’s ‘Coral Reef Squadron’ sunk off Bang Tao Bay last November is 90 percent missing or destroyed, the Thai Dive Association admitted today.
Rainer Gottwald, head of the Thai Dive Association (TDA) technical committee, said TDA divers visited the site on Wednesday and were only able to find one of the 10 aircraft that formed the artificial reef.
Storms and heavy monsoon season currents were to blame, Mr Gottwald said.
Failure to follow instructions by some members of the team who chained the aircraft to large concrete blocks, and subsequent
damage by trawlers
,may also have played a role, he said.
The destruction of the site was ‘very upsetting’, given all the work and expense put into the project by the TDA and the numerous other agencies and organizations involved, he said.
The project was initiated by the Bangkok-based For Sea Foundation and funded to the tune of 4 million baht by the Cherng Talay Tambon Administration Organization, which hoped the reef would boost tourism in the area.
The project also received a great deal of private-sector sponsorship.
Mr Gottwald said the TDA would have to learn from its mistakes and would probably use train wagons instead of aircraft in future projects.
The ‘Coral Reef Squadron’ consisted of four Douglas C-47 Dakota Skytrain military transport aircraft and six Sikorsky S-58T helicopters.
The TDA divers were only able to find one Dakota during the dive on Wednesday, which followed a series of heavy storms, he said.
TDA divers will survey the area to try and learn more about the fate of the aircraft when sea conditions improve, he said.
Mr Gottwald said he did not think currents would carry the aircraft to the shore, because if that were going to happen it probably would have done so already.
The missing aircraft were probably buried beneath the sand, he said.
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– Stephen Fein
Phuket,
Thailand
17:13
local time (GMT +7)
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