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Blog 2: Blue Sports Bermuda

Our wide range of professional gear is ready for you – from masks and fins to high-end dive computers. The true highlight, however, are our guided dives to sunken wrecks around the Bermuda Islands.

You can find me right on the beach at Grotto Bay. Type my phone number into the chat and book a time – I’ll plan an unforgettable trip for you to famous wrecks such as the Warwick, the Caesar or lesser-known sites like Ship 3.

Visit Blue Sports website

Bermuda Wrecks – Compass Whispers

Move the search beam across the map. Click/tap or hold for 1 second to scan a spot. You need to locate three wrecks.

Finds: 0/3 Hint: The needles roughly point towards the wrecks.

✓ Unlocked. The exact position has been successfully discovered.

Bermuda wrecks – discovery map

Pro tip: If several needles point in a similar direction, the wreck is usually hidden somewhere in the angle between them.

Blog 2 · Lost Logbook Cipher

The Lost Logbook Entries

In the old logbook, scattered entries appear about several wrecks around Bermuda. Each entry mentions the ship by name – but not when it went down. Place all logbook entries on the timeline from the oldest to the most recent wreck. If the order is correct, the logbook reveals a phone number for your next dive.

Chronological Wreck Order
Entries placed: 0/7
Caesar Freighter
The sea was calm, but the Caesar struggled with the heavy cargo. Glass and stone ground in the hull when the storm hit us without warning. We held our course, but the night was merciless.
L’Herminie Frigate
When we reached the lee shore, the L’Herminie was already drifting, no longer under control. The frigate groaned while the officers prepared the lifeboats.
Montana Steamer
The Montana lost her engines just before the reefs. The helmsman shouted orders, but the thunder of the surf swallowed every word.
Lartington Ore freighter
The Lartington had a hard voyage behind her. Ore dust lay everywhere. We hoped to reach Bermuda – but the waves had other plans.
Pollockshields Steel hull
The Pollockshields pounded through the swell when the compass started acting up. An electric smell hung in the air just before the hull hit something hard.
Cristóbal Colón Liner
The fog was so thick that even the Cristóbal Colón could no longer hold a steady course. The metallic clatter of the railings was the last thing we heard before the bow ran aground.
Constellation Cargo schooner
The Constellation had seen better days. When the mast broke, we knew she would not survive the night.
Correct order (oldest → most recent wreck):

1. Caesar
2. L’Herminie
3. Montana
4. Lartington
5. Pollockshields
6. Cristóbal Colón
7. Constellation
Basic tip: The correct order follows the years from your blog entry “Why so many wrecks?”.
Place all seven entries and then check your order.
✅ The chronology of the wrecks is correct – the logbook reveals its final note:

“For wreck dives: call Michael at 293-2915.”

The sea answers you with an echo from the deep…

You have found coin .

Continue with the next blog. Optional: Many ships have stranded off Bermuda. Where should we dive?

We offer exciting dive trips to most wrecks.

Blog 2 · Wreck Riddle

The Cannonballs of Bermuda

Are you curious when the ship sank on which I found these cannonballs? Enter the name of the wreck – or the year, if you already know the solution.

Recovered cannonballs from a wreck off Bermuda
Findspot of the cannonballs – a clue to a historic wreck off Bermuda.
Tip: Use the clues from the blog post “Why so many wrecks?” to find the correct wreck.