Oh Crusty, I can’t wait to hear SFRX finds treas
Post# of 7795
The ship must have done a 180 and the top mast must have got stuck in the seabed with the ship being totally upside down.
Over the years the worms must have started at the mast and worked their way up (down) until the ship’s upper deck was flat on the seabed. Then it sank into the sand, and the worms had a massive bowel movement and covered the circa 1554 wreck’s final resting place, but that was only after the hull miraculously parted like the Red Sea and allowed the big ole ballast pile to stay suspended above the seabed until the worms provided a firm foundation for it to rest upon.
Keep up the pump Crusty. It’s most amusing.