Some Of The World’s Coolest Plane Wrecks Can Still Be Visited

Published on 01/07/2020
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The Medellín Cartel’s Plane Crash In Norman Cay, Bahamas

The water in Norman Cay is so perfectly ice-blue that it almost looks fake. You get more relaxed just looking at these waters, that is until you notice the giant airplane skeleton beneath the shallow surface of the water. This Curtiss C-46 Commando plane has a dark story to share. If you know the name Pablo Escobar, you’ve likely also heard of the Medellín Cartel. In the 1980s, a strip of this island was being used as a home base for smuggling things into the U.S., and it crashed while doing so.

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The Medellín Cartel’s Plane Crash In Norman Cay, Bahamas

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Boeing 737 In Bali, Indonesia

Around the Bulkit Peninsula at the southern end of Bali, Indonesia, there is a mysterious site that awaits you. This rusty, worn down Boeing 737 has become its own tourist attraction in the city, but truthfully, people know almost nothing about the plane. No one really knows how or why the plane got there, but perhaps the weirdest thing of all is that there’s a second abandoned plane just a few miles away from this one.

Boeing 737 In Bali, Indonesia

Boeing 737 In Bali, Indonesia

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