The event will be located in the college's Morris Lawrence Building, 4800 E. Huron River Drive in Ann Arbor between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
The festival is a partnership between the Ford Seahorse Scuba Dive Club, the Detroit Historical Society's Dossin Maritime Group and the Dossin Great Lakes Museum.
I attended the festival for the first time last year, and it was a tremendous experience. I wrote several stories about the festival and recorded several interviews, all of which are posted on this blog.
I plan on attending again this year and recommend it to you as well.
Tickets for the event are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. For ticket information or program details, visit www.shipwreckfestival.org, call (734) 485-0492 or e-mail glsftickets@aol.com.
Shipwrecks
are always the theme of this event and this year is no exception. The Festival
will provide seminars that include Great Lakes maritime history and shipwreck
presentations along with Saltwater exotic locations and Educational/Technical
topics.
In
the Festival Shipwreck Room they will have a number of entertaining presentations;
Valerie van Heest will share two new Lake Michigan shipwreck programs—including
the wreck of the whaleback Henry Cort. David Trotter will present four new
shipwreck finds from 2011/12 including the 268 foot steamer New York. Jim and Pat Stayer will highlight the 100th
anniversary of the Great Storm of 1913 in their program. Tony Gramer brings us
video on the tug Anna Dobbins lost in Saginaw Bay in
1886. Ross Richards will have a program on Michigan Mystery Losses.
In
the exotic Saltwater Room, Tony Gramer will take us to the Philippines where his
program will include a very special whale shark encounter. Roger Roth will take
us to Hawaii and share his video “Why Dive it Again?” Dave Haas will share his
presentation on the Caribbean destination Bonaire. Jim and Pat Stayer will show
their video of Yap “Sharks, Mantas and Macro.” David Heidemann will share his
images of Diving the Blue Heron Bridge in Florida. Rudy Whitworth will provide
presentations from Indonesia: “Flores – Alor – Komodo” and “Raja Ampat—Papua
Paradise.”
For
the Tech/Ed Room, Rich Synowiec, in his presentation will take us “From Wreck to
Tech Wreck” diving. Luke Clyburn and John O’Shea, were standing room only last
year and both speakers will return with updated presentations. Robert McGreevy
has a historical presentation on the Key Stone
State — she was a side wheel steamer built in 1849 and lost with all 33
souls on board in 1861. Officers from the MI State Police UW Recovery Unit will
have a presentation on the search and recovery of a light plane lost in Lake
Michigan. James Mott will present a seminar on “Gas Management.” David Haas will
take us on “The Digital Journey in Underwater Imagery” and conclude with info on
the latest and greatest UW photo gear.
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