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Maltese patrol boat P29

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Name
  
Boltenhagen (GS09)

Laid down
  
8 October 1969

Commissioned
  
19 September 1970

Length
  
52 m

Beam
  
7.12 m

Builder
  
Peenewerft shipyard

Launched
  
22 May 1970

Decommissioned
  
1990

Weight
  
366.8 tons

Maltese patrol boat P29 P29 Patrol Boat Wreck Malta Gallery divingiscoolcom

Boltenhagen (GS09) was a Kondor I-class minesweeper built in East Germany. After the Volksmarine was disbanded just before the reunification of Germany, she was sold to Malta in 1997 and renamed P29 and was used as a patrol boat. After being decommissioned, she was scuttled as a dive site in 2007 off Ċirkewwa.

Contents

Maltese patrol boat P29 1000 images about Malta Wrecks on Pinterest Boats Maltese and

East Germany

Maltese patrol boat P29 The P29 now sits on a sandy bottom at a maximum depth of 37m In

The minesweeper was laid down on 8 October 1969 at Peenewerft shipyard in Wolgast. She was launched on 22 May 1970 and commissioned on 19 September of that same year. She was the eighteenth ship to be built within the Kondor I class, and was named Boltenhagen after the town of the same name in Rostock. She was used to patrol the river banks between East and West Germany, as well as a minesweeper.

Germany

Maltese patrol boat P29 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

After the reunification of Germany, the minesweeper was decommissioned along with most of the Kondor I-class. However, it was then used as a patrol vessel by the German Federal Coast Guard. The name Boltenhagen was retained but she was given the pennant number BG31. The ship's guns were dismantled, the radio and radar equipment was changed, and it was repainted. BG31, the last Kondor-I in the German Coast Guard, was decommissioned on 30 June 1996.

Malta

Maltese patrol boat P29 Dive Site P29 Patrol Boat Malta Scuba Diver Life

The former minesweeper was then purchased by Malta on 24 July 1997 and was given the pennant number P29. She rejoined her sister ships Ueckermünde and Pasewalk which were purchased by Malta back in 1992 and were given the pennant numbers P30 and P31. P29 became a patrol boat within the Offshore Command of the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta. Since the former minesweepers were purchased unarmed, some light armament was then added by the AFM.

Maltese patrol boat P29 holidaydivercom

P29 was then used to secure the Maltese coast against smuggling and border control operations. She was decommissioned in 2004 and was bought by the Malta Tourism Authority in September 2005. She was cleaned and then was scuttled on 14 August 2007 off the port of Ċirkewwa to serve as a diving site and artificial reef.

Wreck

Maltese patrol boat P29 P29 Patrol Boat web2 Diving in Malta with Dive Systems

The wreck now lies at a depth of around 35 metres but the entire dive may be done at 25 metres. The highest point is situated only 12 metres deep from the surface. Since it was quite recently sunk compared to the MV Rozi and other wreck sites in Malta, it requires some time to attract a good amount of marine life inside and around it. However, since its sinking, Alicia mirabilis, squid, flying gurnards and rays have already started settling on the former patrol boat.

In 2013, P29 was listed among the "10 Most Incredible Sunken Ships on Earth" by Amazing Beautiful World, although this list has been disputed.

Images of the wreck of P29

References

Maltese patrol boat P29 Wikipedia