• Private Charter

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This private charter is already fully booked by a dive group, but it shows what is possible. Clubs, CCR teams, twinset divers and wreck-hungry groups can book their own Mutiny Diving charter and plan a dedicated day around their depth, experience and wreck interests.

  • MV Saint Ronan (1959)

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    MV Saint Ronan was barely a year old when fog near the South Goodwin Lightvessel turned her final voyage into disaster. This MV Saint Ronan wreck dive follows the story of a Glasgow coaster struck by Mount Athos in 1959, sliced apart in the Channel, with seven rescued and three lost.

  • Unidentified Wreck – 51°03.277N / 01°18.054E

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    No name, no neat story, no tidy archive entry: this unidentified local wreck dive is a proper Kent coast mystery. Join us as we drop onto an unnamed seabed mark and look for the clues that could reveal whether it is a forgotten coaster, wartime casualty, barge, sailing vessel or something stranger still.

  • Unidentified Wreck – 51°12.617N / 01°35.810E

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This deeper offshore wreck dive heads beyond the usual inshore marks to a more serious Channel site, where depth, tide and distance add real commitment. Expect mystery, machinery, wreckage and the chance to help piece together a story that still refuses to surface politely.

  • U-Boat SM UC-77 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UC-77 spent the war laying mines and sinking ships, then vanished during her own attempt to slip through the Dover Barrage in July 1918. This SM UC-77 wreck dive follows a German minelaying U-boat, 30 lost crew and a disputed final position that still keeps wreck researchers arguing like tired men in a harbour pub.

  • U-Boat SM UB-109 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UB-109 slipped through the Dover Barrage once, sank ships in the Atlantic, then returned to find the door had become a trap. This wreck dive follows a German U-boat blown apart by shore-controlled mines off Folkestone in 1918, with eight survivors and twenty-eight dead.

  • U-Boat SM UB-78 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UB-78 tried to force the Dover Strait in April 1918 and found the Barrage waiting. This wreck dive explores a German Type UB III submarine split by mines off Folkestone, with all 35 crew lost and a seabed identity muddle that took divers years to untangle.

  • U-Boat SM UB-33 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UB-33 tried to slip through the Dover Barrage in April 1918, but the Varne Bank minefield had other plans. This wreck dive follows a German UB II submarine lost with all 28 crew, later entered by Royal Navy divers who recovered secret code books from the dead boat.

  • U-Boat SM UB-55 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UB-55 left Zeebrugge in April 1918 and tried to force the Dover Barrage, but the minefield had other ideas. This SM UB-55 wreck dive follows a successful German U-boat blown open near Dover, with six survivors, thirty dead and a wartime wreck investigation that recovered her gun.

  • U-Boat SM UB-109 (1918)

    U-Boat Long Weekender
    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    SM UB-109 slipped through the Dover Barrage once, sank ships in the Atlantic, then returned to find the door had become a trap. This wreck dive follows a German U-boat blown apart by shore-controlled mines off Folkestone in 1918, with eight survivors and twenty-eight dead.

  • Unidentified Wreck – Offshore

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This deeper offshore wreck dive heads beyond the usual inshore marks to a more serious Channel site, where depth, tide and distance add real commitment. Expect mystery, machinery, wreckage and the chance to help piece together a story that still refuses to surface politely.

  • Unidentified Wreck – Offshore

    Dover Marina Esplanade, Dover, Kent, United Kingdom

    This deeper offshore wreck dive heads beyond the usual inshore marks to a more serious Channel site, where depth, tide and distance add real commitment. Expect mystery, machinery, wreckage and the chance to help piece together a story that still refuses to surface politely.

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