102-Year-Old Abandoned Ship is a Floating Forest

 If you’re looking to explore something that is nothing if not unique, you’re in the right spot.  This is a majestic 102 year old ship that was originally constructed to move troops back and forth in 1911.  It’s obviously seen better days in terms of its structural integrity, but it’s pretty cool to look at this and see just how great it looks with nature taking over it.




 Named the SS Ayrfield, this ship is now a tourist attraction that adds some life and vitality to an area that is known for all of the ship carcasses floating around.  It gets lots of attention from locals and tourists alike and is pretty incredible to see that something can be repurposed like that, and all from nature’s hand, not man’s.  It makes us think that maybe we can find a way to reuse everything that man as made so that finally nature and man can live hand in hand, protecting each other and enjoying life in the way that is was meant to be lived.  It maybe a reach, yet, but time will determine whether or not the SS Ayrfield is any indication of our future or not.  For the time being, it’s pretty neat to look at.

 The SS Ayrfield is one of many decommissioned ships in the Homebush Bay, just west of Sydney, but what separates it from the other stranded vessels is the incredible foliage that adorns the rusted hull. The beautiful spectacle, also referred to as The Floating Forest, adds a bit of life to the area, which happens to be a sort of ship graveyard.




 Originally launched as the SS Corrimal, the massive 1,140-tonne steel beast was built in 1911 in the UK and registered in Sydney in 1912 as a steam collier which was later used to transport supplies to American troops stationed in the Pacific region during World War II. The ship went on to serve as a collier between Newcastle and Miller's terminal in Blackwattle Bay.

 Eventually, in 1972, the SS Ayrfield was retired and sent to Homebush Bay which served as a ship-breaking yard. While many ships were taken apart, about four metallic bodies of vessels that are over 75 years old currently float in the bay, though none are enveloped by nature quite like the Ayrfield. The ship continues to attract visitors to its majestic presence, rich with mangrove trees.


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