News Time
MV Alta
The MV Alta arrived on the shores of Ireland this week. The ship crashed in 2018 and was abandoned by its crew at sea. The abandoned ship sailed thousands of miles across the Atlantic for more than a year and finally reached the coast of Ireland.
Flying Dutchman
Captain Hendrick Van Der Decken is mentioned in the legends and is also known as the Dutch Dutchman. He is said to have started the journey from Amsterdam to the East Indies in 1641 and never returned. According to the story, his ship sank forever to continue its journey. The Flying Dutchman sees the Flying Dutchman as a sign of future troubles.
North Korean boats
Japan has in recent years begun removing its missing beaches and boats. Most of these ships came from North Korea. In some of them, the staff was found alive while most of the bodies were found. Some were suspected that they might have fled North Korea and arrived in Japanese waters. Others were thought to have been fishermen, who went far beyond the sea.
Ryou-Un Maru
American coastguards destroyed the Japanese abandoned ship Ryou-Un Maru near the beaches of Alaska in April 2012. The ship was hit by waves following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan. The ship had been wandering the Pacific for a year.
Missing in the sea, a sailboat called Niña.
The sailboat, called Niña, was about 15 meters in length. The ship suddenly disappeared in the Tasman Sea during a voyage from New Zealand to Australia in 2013. It was aboard the boat owner, David Dyche, his wife, his son, and 4 crew members. This is Carol Dyche, the mother of David Dyche. She sits with a picture of her son’s sailboat.
Sam Ratulangi PB 1600
Indonesia’s ship, Sam Ratulangi PB 1600, was mysteriously found in August 2018 from the coastal area of Yangon, Myanmar. The 177-meter-long cargo ship was being transported to a ship-breaking yard in Bangladesh, according to the Myanmar Navy due to bad weather, the wires were broken, with which they were being pulled. He was left unharmed by a 13-member Indonesian crew on the occasion.
MV Lyubov Orlova
One hundred meters long, the ship was built in the former Yugoslavia by MV Lyubov Orlova. It was named after a former Soviet Union actress. In 2010, the ship was pulled from Newfoundland, North America, to the Dominican Islands. During that time the wires were broken. The staff then left him there for a day. Experts believe the ship was submerged in international waters.