This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia, which closed in 2021.

Tour Companies Launch New Titanic Dives

But it’s not icebergs you have to worry about — some tickets cost more than $100,000.

Two tour companies plan to start offering dives to Titanic’s watery grave, some six years after the last such company reportedly called it quits.

Companies Blue Marble Private and Bluefish said this month they will begin offering tours of the famous wreck in submersible vessels, beginning in 2018. More than 1,500 people lost their lives at the site as the ship sank on April 15, 1912.

Penny pinchers beware: These trips are going to cost you.

Nearly 105 years after the Titanic sank, two companies have announced plans to provide deep-sea tours of the wreckage to brave adventurers.
John Parrot/Stocktrek Images via Getty Images
Nearly 105 years after the Titanic sank, two companies have announced plans to provide deep-sea tours of the wreckage to brave adventurers.

Blue Marble Private’s eight-day excursion, which features several dives according to its website, will cost $105,129 per person, reports Refinery 29.

According to ABC, Blue Marble described their six-digit fare in a press release as the equivalent ― after inflation ― to a first class fare on Titanic at the time of its 1912 voyage. (Fun!)

Bluefish lists its 13-day trips at $59,680 a head on its website; those trips feature just one dive.

In both trips, passengers will be treated to views of the famous ship’s deck and grand staircase, which lie approximately 2.4 miles beneath the Atlantic’s surface. Bluefish further advertises views of the Marconi Room, from which the ship’s SOS signals were broadcast, as well as Titanic’s boilers and propellers.

Blue Marble touts the trip on its website as a rare opportunity that “very few have seen, or ever will.”

Both companies have offered to provide first-hand views of the ship's grand staircase, seen above before before Titanic sank in 1912.
Krista Few via Getty Images
Both companies have offered to provide first-hand views of the ship's grand staircase, seen above before before Titanic sank in 1912.

“Far fewer people have visited the wreck of the Titanic than the number who have been to space or summited Mt. Everest – this is a once-in-a-lifetime experience and an expedition designed only for those with a truly adventurous spirit,” the company’s website reads.

According to a previous CNN report, the company Deep Ocean Expedition was the last to offer public dives to the Titanic. The company reportedly discontinued their tours in 2012 over a desire to “move on.”

“We’ve been to Titanic 1,987 times and it’s time to do other things,” expedition leader Rob McCallum previously told the news network.

Bluefish will transport passengers in vessels like this MIR submarine, according to the company's website. This one was used to film underwater footage in the movie
Universal History Archive via Getty Images
Bluefish will transport passengers in vessels like this MIR submarine, according to the company's website. This one was used to film underwater footage in the movie

Those interested in venturing out to the site with either Blue Marble or Bluefish shouldn’t expect a vacation of sunbathing and never-ending margaritas. Passengers will instead be treated to lectures and scientific briefings.

According to Blue Marble’s website, its trips are being planned with the help of submersible company Ocean Gate Inc. The partnership will provide first-hand opportunities for passengers to interact with explorers, scientists, submersible pilots and the expedition crew involved in the deep-sea dives.

Passengers will learn how to assist the crew, operate sonar, use the undersea navigation system, and prepare the submersible for diving, according to Ocean Gate’s website.

Close
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia. Certain site features have been disabled. If you have questions or concerns, please check our FAQ or contact support@huffpost.com.