The fate of many old schooners in the age of steam was that they were converted to cargo carrying barges that were towed by steam powered tugs. This is what happend to the Pesuta; she was used to carry logs to the mills. The Pesuta was under tow by the tug Imbrecaria in December 1928, when she was hit by a gale. Thr force of the wind and the waves snapped the towing cable and the barge ran aground on the east coast Graham Island, north of the Tlell River; part of the Haida Gwaii islands, in north-western British Columbia, Canada. The pounding waves off the Hecate Strait will ensure that this wreck disappears over time.
It takes four to five hours to do the round trip trek to the wreck. One has to study the tide tables before setting out and time the trek to occur during low tide, as much the area on the trek, including parts of the wreck itself, is cover by water during high tide.
This image is a composite B&W and colour. The day we were there, was cloudy and overcast, and even the wreck was fairly monotone. The rusting nails holding the wreck together had stained much of the wood, and I felt that showing these colours added a bit of interest to the overall image. I masked out the ship, during the B&W conversion process and left it as a colour image, with the monotones of the weather wood, showing the rust stains.