Province de Tabuk
Point de repère

Épave d'hydravion Catalina - Province de Tabuk

4.7Commentaires
Épave d'hydravion Catalina, Ras Gasabah Arabie Saoudite
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La description

Pendant plus de 50 ans, un hydravion de guerre est resté abandonné au cap sablonneux reculé de Ras Al-Sheikh Hameed entre la mer Rouge et le désert d'Arabie saoudite.

Histoire

L'avion a été construit à l'origine pour être utilisé pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, mais plus tard, un industriel a acheté l'avion et a planifié un voyage autour du monde avec sa famille. En raison de circonstances imprévues, l'avion a atterri sur la plage d'Arabie et a été pris pour hostile par les habitants, qui ont ouvert le feu sur lui. Cela a rendu l'avion inapte au vol et a entraîné son abandon. Des panneaux de signalisation ont également été érigés sur le site expliquant l'histoire de l'épave.

Paysage

L'énorme épave d'avion se trouve sur la plage venteuse qui a généralement des marées basses. Cependant, les marées peuvent aussi être hautes parfois avec l'eau atteignant l'avion. Debout sur la plage, les spectateurs peuvent voir l'Egypte au loin. Les visiteurs peuvent regarder de plus près cet hydravion militaire américain des années 1930, bien qu'une clôture ait été construite récemment autour de lui pour la sécurité des visiteurs.

Activités

Le site est bien entretenu, où les visiteurs peuvent explorer l'épave et laisser libre cours à leur imagination au cours de cette aventure historique. La route menant à l'emplacement est boueuse mais praticable, et il y a des toilettes à proximité du site historique. En raison des vents forts, le temps reste agréable, ce qui en fait l'endroit idéal pour pique-niquer. Les enfants et même les adultes peuvent profiter de la plage et de ses eaux cristallines, surtout au coucher du soleil. Ce site est parfait pour les visiteurs qui sont dans la région avec un horaire serré car la visite est courte et instructive.

Type de destination
Site historique
Repère

Emplacement

Épave d'hydravion Catalina, Ras Gasabah Arabie Saoudite

Commentaires

Commentaires
4.7
Excellent
de 44 avis
Excellent
32
Très bien
11
Bon
1
Moyenne
0
Pauvres
0
Customer service
1.5
Experience
2.5
Value for money
2.5
Cleanliness
1.5
Safety
2.5
Commentaires
Faris Khider

Faris Khider

01/06/2022 13:13

Avis Google

Definitely needs more improvement but as the place is virgin and nobody changed alot of that place has its beauty
Michael Smith

Michael Smith

12/21/2021 01:30

Avis Google

P23q1OcRetired air conditioning magnate Thomas W. Kendall had a dream. The businessmen resolved to buy surplus PBY Catalinas, American seaplane and ubiquitous, Swiss Army knife of air transport, rescue, seaborne bombing and anti-submarine warfare, and give them a second lease on life as flying yachts for the wealthy. The price couldn’t have been much, the seaplane hadn’t found a post-war, jet-age role, and many serviceable examples were left to rot in desert boneyards. Landseaire89 Kendall began by buying three and hiring a visionary LA-based interior designer to transform the warbirds into a fleet of luxurious, comfortable aircraft, each sleeping as many as fourteen, and complete with bathroom, kitchen and dining areas. Landseaire73 Landseaire72At least one of Kendall’s aircraft was used (and damaged) during the filming of SOS Pacific. But the idea wasn’t to rent them out to Hollywood–Kendall wanted to take his family on a year-long, world-circling adventure with three converted seaplanes and a host of friends. Landseaire82To kick off his bold adventure, private pilot Kendall left on a year-long, world-circling journey with all three planes, complete with his wife (an experienced pilot in her own right), four children, and friends. LIFE photographer David Lees met them in Egypt for an air tour of Cairo, the Suez Canal and Luxor. Landseaire88 After landing in the Saudi Arabia’s Tirana Strait, things began to go wrong. Under pitch black and a strong wind, the group ate dinner and prepared for bed. They heard a yelling from the dunes outside, and the next morning two of the party reported seeing five men watching from a sandy knoll some 150 feet distant. One “carried a machine gun,” according to the witness. …the pleasure trip turned into a harrowing, almost fatal adventure… (LIFE Magazine) The party had become used to seeing armed soldiers and “thought nothing of it,” and soon the children were playing on the beach, collecting seashells. Lunch turned to swimming as the pilots checked the engine. Then came the sound of firecrackers, and splashes of water all around–someone was shooting at the children as they played in a rubber raft. Everyone swam for the plane and huddled on the floor as sporadic automatic fire impacted rang through the plane, like “banging… a steel pipe.” Veteran war photographer David Lees estimated that 3,000-4,000 rounds were fired in their direction, and some 300 impacted the plane over the course of the 40-minute ambush. The parents lay on top of the children, protecting them with their own bodies. Pilot Kendall attempted to make a run for the cockpit, but was stopped by a bullet shot through his abdomen, just below his ribs, and a second through his buttocks. Before blacking out, Kendall managed to get the engines running, just enough to taxi the plane out of the range of fire. The party collected their thoughts and administered first aid to the wounded–and counted their blessings that nobody had been killed. But the Catalina was taking on water, forcing them to abandon the aircraft for a dingy, paddle to shore and surrender to the same men that had been firing at them, reported as Bedouin tribesmen of the Saudi Arabian army, who had somehow mistaken them for Israeli commandos. The group of Americans was brought to Prince Khalid ibn Saud, son of King Saud, who interrogated them about the incident.Soon after, they were treated as guests of honor and repatriated with the assistance of the US Ambassador. The seaplane never flew again. Time has not been kind to the wreckage of the beautiful PBY Catalina. Trapped between the Red Sea the desert, salt, wind, sand and tide have all taken their toll, as have tourists and souvenir-hunters. Some of the following photos date from the mid 1990’s, others are more recent. The ongoing damage to the airframe is clear, and before long she may be reduced to little more than aluminum struts sticking out from the sand.
Ruqaya Alrashed

Ruqaya Alrashed

11/24/2021 21:15

Avis Google

It’s very calm and relaxing place when you visit it on none windy days, I really enjoy visiting it to see the sunset, magical view when there is little clouds.
Feras

Feras

07/30/2021 10:24

Avis Google

Awesome place and clean. Although in one of the plane tires there was a cut and someone put a diaper in it ? There's a bathroom close to it and honestly the bathroom is cleaner than my house ? sadly when we went it was to windy. the roads are not good for small cars.
Melentiev Ruslan

Melentiev Ruslan

07/24/2021 08:08

Avis Google

Drivable road, toilets and water nearby, the area is clean and maintained, strong wind make it fresh and photogenic.
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Maria Precious Malbuezo 1 questions

12/30/2022 17:46

Can we go there using a small regular car?.. Thanks
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