The Fenella Ann is almost upright, tilted about 20 degrees to starboard as the keel rests on a level shingle and sand seabed.
Below the stern is a simple square flat rudder and a 4 bladed propeller, nothing sophisticated. Just a few metres off to starboard from the stern are the remains of part of the scallop dredging gear, a rusty steel frame with toothed plates and chains stretched across it.
The visibility is typically so good that you can see most of the wreck and well off to the side. Further out to starboard, scattered piles of white sacks are the remains of the Fenella Ann's catch of scallops, fallen over the side as the boat sank. Most are now dead, but a few have survived where the sacks have split open and allowed them to escape. In the distance further sacks can be seen scattered to the north.
Back on the wreck, posts with pulleys projecting either side of the stern are spreaders for the gear. Immediately forward of these the aft most mast is the trawl gallows, used for lifting the trawl boards.
Next forward, a square coaming surrounds the hatchway to the hold. Looking up the entire goalpost mast system and rigging is quite spectacular and covered in a fur of hydroids.
Some of the catch which didn't fall over the side is a pile of scallops resting against the starboard gunnel, still mostly alive and partly burying another frame from the scallop dredge.
The main features of the aft deck is the main goalpost mast which stands a bit like a rugby goal across the deck, and between the legs the winch.
I wouldn't advocate a zigzag dive profile here, so the mast is really something to look up at rather than to swim up at this stage of the dive.
The Fenella Ann was rigged for using either of 2 different sets of gear. A trawl net for "queenies" over the stern, and dredges for scallops, one set over each side.
When rigged for trawling, the net would be laid over the stern. To recover the catch, the net would be hauled up, but not back into the boat. The Fenella Ann would then turn to bring the net alongside and just the tail end of the net containing the catch would be hauled up with one of the emptying derricks and emptied onto the deck.
The scallop dredging gear is a little more complex. 6 dredges comprising a chain net behind a steel frame with toothed plates and chains stretched across, as seen off the stern, would be spread along the length of a steel beam. One of these beams would be towed from each side of the Fenella Ann, dragging along the seabed and catching the ploughed up scallops in the chain net. The spreaders would keep the towing lines from fouling.
To recover the catch, the dredges would be hauled alongside and the beams pulled inboard to lie along the gunnels using a line over a block at the top of the main goalpost mast. The chain nets carrying the catch would still be hanging over the side at this point. Each dredge would then be tipped inboard and the scallops emptied by pulling a line over emptying derrick from the base of the dredge.
Back to the deck of the Fenella Ann and forward to wheelhouse. Looking in the doorway at the rear, to the left is the toilet and to the right the galley stove. The box structure running up outside on the starboard side is the engine exhaust.
Following the starboard side further forward, a pair of old rubber tyre fenders are still attached to the rail.
Above these on the side of the wheelhouse, a curved plate still bears some trace of the name "Fenella Ann" and would also have held a life buoy against the side of the wheelhouse.
The bow deck is clear. From the seabed in front of the bow, just look back and up to see the forward tripod mast, the wheelhouse and, in good visibility the main goalpost mast silhouetted above.
Back to the wheelhouse, and on the roof at the front of the wheelhouse is a searchlight. The windows at the front are intact, but on the port side the main window is broken providing a good view inside. There is all the usual equipment that most divers will be familiar with from hard boat diving. A small spoked wooden wheel, radios, echo and radar display. The Fenella Ann's compass was originally from a Spitfire fighter aircraft, though this has been recovered.
Amongst the forest of equipment on the wheelhouse roof, the tallest item in the centre is the radar antenna. Immediately forward of this is a cooking gas cylinder to power the galley stove. Then at the back a rhomboid skeleton on a thin mast is a radar reflector, to ensure that the mostly wooden Fenella Ann would give a nice strong echo on any other ships radar set.