Wreck Dives
Wreck Dive: HMNZS Waikato
2The HMNZS Waikato was built for the New Zealand Navy by Harland & Wolfe Ltd in Belfast. She was the first Leander Class frigate to be built for the Royal New Zealand Navy and was launched by HRH Princess Alexandra on 18 February 1965.
The Waikato and the HMNZS Canterbury served the Armilla patrol during the Falklands conflict, freeing British ships for deployment.
In 2000 the Waikato was sunk as an artifical reef outside Tutukaka in Northland, after she was decommissioned in 1998 and had been stripped leaving her gun turret and one propeller.
During service she carried modern air and surface warning radar and navigation aids along with undersea detection equipment. The ships twin 115mm guns (4.5in) had a long range and a high rate of fire. She also wore two 20mm Orlikeon machine guns on the wings, a quad Seacat anti-aircraft missile launcher, six 12.75m anti-submarine torpedo tubes, one anti-submarine warfare Limbo mortar Mark 10 and a Wasp Helicopter capable of delivering depth charges and the Mark 46 anti-submarine torpedo.
The ships crest features a Taniwha, a water monster and legendary guardian of the Waikato people and their river.
The HMNZS Waikato broke in two a couple of years after her sinking.
One of the Northland storms sent the bow about 12m apart from the stern section – the ship has broken apart just in front of the bridge.
Diving the wreck of the Waikato is relatively easy although she is a deep dive.
The hangar sits in around 19m. Moving past the hangar to the sand sees you in around 27m.
She is pretty easy to find providing the weather plays ball.
There are normally two buoys on the wreck – one on the bow section and one on the stern next to the helicopter hangar.
She is a large ship, easy to navigate (on the outside for your first few dives) with a lot of interesting features and a lot of growth (as you would expect after 11 years underwater).
Magenta jewel anemones, schooling fish, crayfish all make their home on this artificial reef.
The HMNZS Waikato and her sister ship HMNZS Canterbury are two of my favourite wreck dives that I can visit time and time again and find something new each time.
I regularly take students on their first wreck dive on this ship, whilst on a separate dive with one of my buddies, we can spend an hour on the bottom covering small sections each time.
A piece of New Zealand history underwater, it is not uncommon to find a diver that served on her or knew someone who did.
I would love to hear if you have dived this wreck – let me know what you think.
If you have not, and would like to, let me know.
More information:
Official Website of the HMNZS Waikato Association
Wreck diving with Yukon Dive Charters
Trip Report : Diving the Rainbow Warrior
0It was pouring with rain when we left Auckland and it only seemed to get worse as we headed towards Paihia.
I had been looking forward to this weekend in what seemed like forever. The weather was not going to get me down.
This was the fourth time I had planned to dive the Rainbow Warrior and I was hell bent on doing it!
The Rainbow Warrior is a special wreck.
From Wikipedia – Sinking of the Rainbow Warrior:
The sinking of theRainbow Warrior, codenamed Opération Satanique,[1] was an operation by the “action” branch of the French foreign intelligence services, theDirection Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (DGSE), carried out on July 10, 1985. It aimed to sink the flagship of the Greenpeace fleet, the Rainbow Warrior in the port of Auckland, New Zealand, to prevent her from interfering in a nuclear test in Moruroa.
Fernando Pereira, a photographer, drowned on the sinking ship. Two French agents were arrested by the New Zealand Police on passport fraud and immigration charges. They were charged with arson, conspiracy to commit arson, willful damage, and murder. As part of a plea bargain, they pleaded guilty to manslaughter and were sentenced to ten years, of which they served just over two.
The scandal resulted in the resignation of the French Defence Minister Charles Hernu.
We headed out from Matauri Bay with Paihia Dive.
Myself and my dive buddies almost filled their RIB (rigid inflatable boat) but we are used to working like this, so we shuffled our gear together as close as possible and still managed to fit at least another 5-7 divers who were doing their Advanced Open Water course.
I have to say I was really impressed with how the crew handled us – and our gear – would totally recommend the team from Dive Paihia!!
Dropping down on to the stern – two things caught me by surprise.
The Rainbow Warrior was smaller than I expected. I knew she was colourful but the amount of colour blew me away.
I spent an hour on her on my first dive (backgas of 21% and a 42% in a stage cylinder) with my 60mm macro lens.
The second dive was a little shorter.
I’d go back again for sure but next time with a wide angle lens.
Images from by buddies:
- Me, Ian and Alice heading to the bridge – HMNZS Canterbury / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
- me photographing my buddy on the HMNZS Canterbury / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
- me on the Rainbow Warrior / Photograph by Jonathan Gatland
Dive One Data || Depth: 25.2m | Time: 60 mins | Temp: 22 degrees |
Dive Two Data || Depth: 23.8m | Time: 36 mins | Temp: 22 degrees |
More photographs (wide angle) and a trip report; Martin Wallis Photography – Diving the Rainbow Warrior

Diving the Rainbow Warrior - Martin Wallis







