T&I Underwater Services, LLC

T&I Underwater Services, LLC United States Navy Veteran Owned & Operated

Hey Savannah!Restore your old rotten piles beyond their original strength with SnapJackets!call for a free estimate, cal...
04/04/2026

Hey Savannah!
Restore your old rotten piles beyond their original strength with SnapJackets!

call for a free estimate, call for free information, call to have your piles inspected!

Diver Assisted installation 1' below mudline. Concrete is pumped into the jacket to fill all voids in old pile.

Another 8 Snap Jackets going in on betz creek! This customer is Making the right choice to strengthen current dock piles...
03/11/2026

Another 8 Snap Jackets going in on betz creek! This customer is Making the right choice to strengthen current dock piles beyond original strength!

Call us today for a free quote ☎️ (814)270-0896

03/05/2026
Another dock, another satisfied customer with SnapJackets! Call 📞 (814) 270-0896 for a free Estimate today!
03/05/2026

Another dock, another satisfied customer with SnapJackets!

Call 📞 (814) 270-0896 for a free Estimate today!

8 Snap Jackets going on in Grays creek!! Long point residents can call today for  free estimate! Stroll Long Point(814) ...
02/26/2026

8 Snap Jackets going on in Grays creek!! Long point residents can call today for free estimate! Stroll Long Point

(814) 270-0896

Finished project Huge shoutout to Decks & Docks Savannah you guys are awesome! Frederica Yacht ClubSt Simons Island, Geo...
07/28/2025

Finished project
Huge shoutout to Decks & Docks Savannah you guys are awesome!

Frederica Yacht Club
St Simons Island, Georgia

46 Snap-jackets installed ✅
14 cubic yards of concrete poured✅
5 completely severed piles restored ✅

If driving new piles isn't the answer for your dock, the solution will most likely be Snap-jackets!

Call us today for your free estimate!

(814) 270-0896

We are delighted to offer a preview of our 46 Snap-jacket project in Brunswick. Following this project, we have a commit...
07/11/2025

We are delighted to offer a preview of our 46 Snap-jacket project in Brunswick. Following this project, we have a commitment for 40 additional piles in the Savannah area. Who's next?!?

Friday funday!!!4 Snap-Jackets installed, Monday we PUMP👍
01/10/2025

Friday funday!!!

4 Snap-Jackets installed, Monday we PUMP👍

08/04/2024

With tropical storm Debbie 🌀 swiftly approaching Savannah, it is always good to keep a proficient diver on speed dial 📞

T&I Underwater Services, LLC is there for your underwater needs!

06/15/2024

For most of human history, shipworms, aka Teredo worms, have been a bane to mariners. Technically a clam rather than a worm, shipworms, which burrow into and destroy wood in seawater, have been known and feared from the time humans began traveling on the seas. Ancient Egyptian and Phoenician seafarers are known to have coated the hulls of their vessels with wax in an attempt to mitigate shipworm damage. In the Classical Period, Greek and Roman sailors used pitch, tar, and lead sheathing to deter the shipworms. Warships, for which those methods were unsuitable, were beached and dragged ashore when not in use.

Shipworms continued to plague sailors in the Age of Exploration. Most famously, on Columbus’s return from his fourth voyage to America two of his ships were destroyed by shipworm damage and the other two had to limp into Jamaica where they were stranded for months. Captain Cook lost a ship to shipworm damage and many historians believe shipworm damage was a contributing factor in the defeat of the Spanish Armada. Shipworms weakened the hull of the Essex, which was rammed and sunk by a whale in 1821, inspiring Melville’s Moby Dick. According to at least one historian, throughout history shipworms have sunk more ships than pirates.

In their never-ending battle against the shipworms, sailors continued to coat the hulls of vessels, trying a wide variety of coatings, including tar and leather. Shipbuilders also began constructing double-hulled ships, with a false outer hull, which the worms/clams could eat harmlessly. In the 18th century, the British Navy began sheathing its ships with copper, an important technological innovation that not only protected the ships from shipworms, but also had the unintended benefit of making them faster than their unsheathed opponents, which played a major role in the British navy becoming the world’s most dominant.

The damage caused by Teredo worms was not confined to ships. Piers, docks, buoys, and wooden seawalls have also been their victims. During a shipworm population explosion in the 1730s, shipworm damage to the wooden piles in the Dutch seawalls caused a major crisis there, which was resolved by replacing the wood with stones. (It was during this surge of shipworm damage in Europe that the British navy began using cooper sheathing, changing the course of world history). In 1902, shipworm damage caused the wooden support beams on a dock in Tampico, Mexico to collapse, killing at least 60 people.

With the advent of steel and fiberglass hulls and building material, shipworms are no longer as feared and threatening has they have historically been, although they are still estimated to do about $1 billion in damages each year worldwide. Interestingly, scientists are still trying to determine exactly how the worms/clams digest wood, an answer that has proven surprisingly elusive.

The image is an 1834 illustration of a shipworm (Teredo navalis) and some shipworm-eaten wood.

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Wilmington Island, GA
31410

Telephone

+18142700896

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