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Wreck Diving in Guadeloupe: The Augustin Fresnel and the Franjack

Published on January 21, 2026 · by Ismael Samuel

Wreck Diving in Guadeloupe: The Augustin Fresnel and the Franjack

When people talk about diving in Guadeloupe, everyone pictures the coral gardens of the Îlets Pigeon. But near the Cousteau Reserve, two deliberately scuttled ships lie waiting, offering the most memorable dives on the leeward coast: the Franjack and the Augustin Fresnel. If you’re looking for an accessible, fish-filled wreck dive in Guadeloupe, these two ships resting on the sand off Malendure (Bouillante) tick every box. I dive them several times a year, and every descent has a surprise in store: patrolling barracudas, a turtle tucked under the hull, a green moray settled into the wheelhouse. Here are the real depths, required certification, budget and marine life to plan these dives on the Basse-Terre side.

Why dive a wreck in Guadeloupe rather than anywhere else?

The Caribbean has dozens of wrecks, but those in Guadeloupe combine three rarely paired advantages:

  • Deliberate, safe dives: both ships were decontaminated and then scuttled on purpose to create artificial reefs. No treacherous metal sheets or ghost nets.
  • Spectacular colonization: after twenty to thirty years underwater, the structures are coated with orange and purple encrusting sponges, sea fans and hard corals. You’re diving a reef shaped like a ship.
  • Unbeatable logistics: both sites are 5 to 10 minutes’ sailing from Malendure beach. You can dive a wreck in the morning and the coral gardens of the Cousteau Reserve in the afternoon.

The west coast of Basse-Terre is sheltered from the trade winds: water at 26-29 °C year-round, visibility of 15 to 25 metres, and generally weak current. The dry season (December to April) offers the most stable conditions, but you can dive here all year.

Vue panoramique sous-marine de l'épave de l'Augustin Fresnel en Guadeloupe, coque recouverte de coraux avec des plongeurs qui l'explorent
L'épave de l'Augustin Fresnel, devenue récif artificiel pour les plongeurs en Guadeloupe. — © Nicolas Barraqué (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

The Franjack wreck: the star, accessible from Level 1 with a guide

Site fact sheet

The Franjack is a former sand carrier about fifty metres long, deliberately scuttled in the mid-1990s between Malendure beach and the Îlets Pigeon. It sits upright on its keel on a pale sandy bottom:

  • Maximum depth: around 22-24 metres at the sand
  • Main deck: about 15-18 metres
  • Required level: Level 1 / Open Water with an instructor; independent diving possible from Level 2
  • Typical duration: 40 to 50 minutes
  • Current: weak to none most of the time

It’s the ideal wreck for a first experience: the ship’s silhouette appears around 10 metres along the descent line, and orientation is obvious on this intact, well-settled vessel.

What you’ll see

Life has literally exploded on the Franjack:

  • Schools of soldierfish and grunts massed in the shaded passageways
  • Green and spotted morays in the nooks of the hold
  • Hawksbill turtles that regularly settle near the hull to rest
  • Barracudas in open water above the mast
  • French angelfish, trumpetfish, porcupinefish all over the structure

Local instructors often take divers through the open hold, wide and bright: a very gentle “penetration,” perfect for getting a first taste of wreck sensations. Keep an eye on the sand around the ship, the territory of stingrays.

The Augustin Fresnel: the Level 2 wreck, deeper and wilder

A former buoy tender resting at 30 metres

The Augustin Fresnel owes its name to the physicist who invented lighthouse lenses: this forty-metre vessel was a buoy tender responsible for maintaining the archipelago’s markers. Deliberately scuttled in the early 2000s off Malendure, it perfectly complements the Franjack:

  • Maximum depth: around 28-30 metres on the sand
  • Deck and superstructures: between 20 and 25 metres
  • Required level: Level 2 / Advanced (diving beyond 20 m)
  • Typical duration: 35-40 minutes due to the depth
  • Atmosphere: darker, more “wreck-like” than the Franjack

The descent into the blue is already a highlight: the dark mass of the tender gradually takes shape, often surrounded by a cloud of glassfish. The bridge and the cargo crane, carpeted with sponges and fire coral, are the most photogenic areas.

Augustin Fresnel: a dive to plan seriously

At 30 metres, no-stop time runs out fast. My rules for this site:

  • Dive it as the first dive of the day, with a fresh computer
  • Plan a 3-minute safety stop at 5 metres; the mooring line makes the ascent easier
  • Level 1? Some clubs run the Level 2 course on site (5 to 6 dives), with the Augustin Fresnel as the “qualifying” dive
  • Nitrox, available in Bouillante, usefully extends bottom time
Plongeur à l'intérieur de l'épave du Franjack en Guadeloupe, gravissant une structure métallique avec la lumière filtrant par les ouvertures de la coque
Exploration de l'intérieur de l'épave du Franjack, spot de plongée emblématique de Guadeloupe. — © Christophe Foucault (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Budget, dive clubs and logistics from Malendure

How much does a wreck dive in Guadeloupe cost?

Prices are consistent across the Malendure dive clubs:

  • Exploration dive (Franjack or Augustin Fresnel): 55 to 65 € with full equipment
  • 2-dive day package (wreck + Cousteau Reserve): 100 to 115 €
  • 6-dive package: 280 to 320 €, the smart deal if you stay a week
  • Level 1 course: 330 to 400 €; Level 2: 350 to 450 €
  • Nitrox supplement: 5 to 10 € per tank

Book 48 hours ahead in the dry season: the morning rotations (departures at 8 a.m. or 10 a.m. from Malendure) fill up fast between Christmas and Easter.

Where to stay to dive smart

Sleeping on the Basse-Terre side changes everything: in Bouillante or Deshaies, you’re less than 20 minutes from the boat departures, versus 50 minutes to an hour from Le Gosier or Sainte-Anne. My favourite plan: 3-4 nights on the leeward coast to combine the wrecks and the Cousteau Reserve, then switch to Grande-Terre for Caravelle beach and the Pointe des Châteaux.

That’s exactly what we make easy at Hostel Toucan: our rentals in Guadeloupe around Bouillante and Deshaies are booked directly, with no platform fees, with free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival and WhatsApp support 7 days a week — handy when the club shifts the next day’s rotation and you have to reshuffle your schedule. And to build the rest of the itinerary (Soufrière, Carbet waterfalls, Les Saintes), our complete guide to Guadeloupe gathers our field scouting.

Do you own a property in Bouillante or on the west coast? The diving clientele fills the slow weeks: discover our concierge service for owners.

Bonus: the Petite-Terre wreck and the archipelago’s other sites

The Malendure duo doesn’t exhaust the subject. In the Petite-Terre nature reserve, off Saint-François, the scattered remains of an old wreck can be glimpsed in the lagoon in a few metres of water: not a structured scuba dive, but a nice snorkelling goal during a day trip (95 to 120 € for the catamaran outing, iguanas and juvenile lemon sharks included). Around Les Saintes, the legendary Sec Pâté remains reserved for very experienced divers.

Final tip: keep your deep dives at the start of your stay and respect 24 hours without diving before your return flight from Pôle Caraïbes airport — the perfect buffer day for the Soufrière or the Mémorial ACTe.

FAQ

What certification do you need to dive the Franjack and the Augustin Fresnel?

The Franjack (22-24 m max) is accessible from Level 1 or Open Water, with an instructor; Level 2 divers can move around independently. The Augustin Fresnel, resting at around 28-30 metres, requires Level 2 / Advanced. The Malendure clubs offer both courses on site.

When is the best time for wreck diving in Guadeloupe?

You can dive all year at Malendure, with water between 26 and 29 °C. The dry season, from December to April, offers the most stable conditions and the best visibility (often 20 metres and more). Just avoid the rare days of heavy westerly swell, which can cloud the water on the wrecks.

How much does a wreck dive at Malendure cost?

Expect 55 to 65 € for a fully equipped exploration dive, around 100 to 115 € for a two-dive day package and 280 to 320 € for a six-dive package. The Level 1 course costs 330-400 €. Book 48 hours ahead in high season.

Can you go inside the wrecks?

On the Franjack, guides take divers through the open hold, wide and bright: an easy penetration for a guided diver. On the Augustin Fresnel, the passages are narrower and reserved for experienced divers accompanied by an instructor. In all cases, you touch nothing: the structures have become genuine living reefs.

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