Chikuzen Wreck Anegada

Chikuzen Wreck Anegada BVI. Often called the second-best dive in the BVI after the RMS Rhone. I suppose on the broader picture, it is the second-best dive. Although, in my books, for fish life, nothing outranks it around here.

This wreck is an fabulous dive. Scuba diving the Chikuzen is one of the highlights of this writer’s diving career.

You will see fish and quantities of fish that you will not see elsewhere. The Chikuzen is in 75-80 feet of water in the middle of nowhere but sand flats. As soon as she sank back in 1981 it was attracting schools of fish. The official name of the ship is M.S. Chikuzen Maru and she was built in Japan in 1960. Back before the days of GPS one would need to keep a narrow gap between the eastern tip of Scrub Island and the western end of Ginger Islands. When you were over the wreck, you would have a gap in the middle of your index finger. 🙂


🐠 #ChikuzenWreck #BVIDiving #ScubaDiving

Chikuzen Wreck Anegada BVI
Chikuzen Wreck Anegada BVI

History of the Chikuzen Wreck Anegada

The boat is 246 feet long and was initially built in Shimizu, Japan. The Chikuzen had been operated as a longliner in the Korean fishing fleet. She spent the last couple years of her life tied up to a dock in St Maarten being used as a cold storage facility.

The story has it that in September of 1981, a storm threatened St Maarten and the harbormaster ordered it moved, as they were concerned that it would damage the docks more than it already had been doing. The owner took it to sea, opened all the seacocks, and tried to sink it. It did not sink. It was then set on fire to sink it. Still, there is no sinking.

The Chikuzen was then abandoned to drift out to sea. She sailed the 70 miles to the BVI, trailing plumes of smoke behind it, and threatened to put up on Marina Cay to quite a bit of local concern.

A St Croix ocean tug eventually took it under tow until the tow rope snapped and shattered a crewmember’s legs. It was abandoned again and sank close where it now lays. It lies on her port side. The starboard rail comes up to about 45 feet from the surface.

Look for the Goliath Groups on the Chikuzen Wreck
Look for the Goliath Groups on the Chikuzen Wreck

What Will I see?

It is a majestic sight with its railings, winches, and two massive masts sticking out almost parallel to the seafloor.

Up until the hurricanes of 2017, several large refrigerated holds held lots of fish and were wide open. They collapsed in Hurricane Irma.

If you look carefully, there are a couple of plaques on various pieces of equipment in Japanese or Korean. I don’t know the difference!

“The Chikuzen is located well offshore (7 1/2 miles NW of Tortola) in a desert of sand. Because of the barren surroundings, the Chikuzen attracts a huge quantity and variety of fish. The wreck is in about 75 feet of water and has no protection from sea conditions. Because of this, coupled with its distance from Tortola, The Chikuzen rarely sees divers.”

Before Hurricane Irma
Before Hurricane Irma Chikuzen Wreck

Fish Life on the wreck of the Chikuzen

Large schools of fish sit everywhere in and on the Chikuzen. The first thing you notice as you are going down to the wreck are the literally hundreds, if not thousands, of barracuda that are hanging in mid-air.

You need to dive this wreck several times, as you are so busy looking at the fish you can forget to see the wreck. There is a large grouper, and I am talking about hundreds of pounds that lives on the wreck. Usually, only the first person sees him, and he is gone. You can often find Cobia hanging out by the stern.

LARGE southern stingrays are in the sand. You can go right up to these beautiful rays by ensuring they see you and move closely on their side. Patience is rewarded for some when they allow you to stroke underneath their wing.

The wreck is also on the path of the migratory whales! Some fish you can find on-site include Horse jack, Almaco jack, Lookdowns, Pompano, King mackerel, Saucer eye porgy, Chubb (all huddled underneath the boat’s bow), and Atlantic Spadefish.

Some of these fish I have not spotted together anywhere else.

Schooling Fish on the Chikuzen
Schooling Fish

Location of the Chikuzen Wreck Anegada

GPS Position. N18’37.143 W064’30.969

This site can ONLY be dived when the seas are completely calm. There is a National Parks mooring ball on the site, usually with its tagline in horrible shape. At the bottom of the mooring, there will be a chain across the bottom running to the wreck.

When the seas are flat and calm, this is an exciting snorkel to watch the tons of barracuda in the water column. Typically, there is a tiny current at the surface, but could you put out a trailing line at your yacht’s back to hang off? So…What are you waiting for? An entire week can be built around yacht charters and SCUBA diving quickly.

The story and pictures are good if you can find a copy of George and Luana Marler’s Book Burning Freighter, The Story of the M.S. Chikuzen Maru (printed in 2006 and only found lately in paperback occasionally).

How do I book my SCUBA diving Yacht Charter?

H2O Luxury Yachts can find the best boats for SCUBA diving yacht charters! Two of our principals ran Sail and SCUBA charters in the Caribbean for over 400 weeks of charter vacations.

Let’s NOT do the math on how many years that is, LOL.

We are SCUBA Instructors with both PADI and NAUI.

The number of dives we have done is in the many thousands.  Anegada holds some of our most cherished memories regarding SCUBA diving.

We can talk about SCUBA diving and places to go all day long! Contact us by any means you would like


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