Just a quick question but are wrecks peoples little secrets or do you guys let others know of a few that have been fishing?
If the latter please let me know of a couple?

If you have the name of the wrecks I'll look them up on my database.
Pay the fees for a years membership of the wrecksite ( £25ish)and look all the wrecks up in striking distance of your boat , the site will tell you all about all the wrecks in the area , which ones are still intact , which ones are no longer there , what they were , how they sunk ....... all kinds of information , put the interesting ones in your plotter and go plot them out one day when it's calm and you can zip around easily. Once you have them all in there , like the lads say , it's a case of going round them one by one looking for the one with the fish on it , sometimes it's obvious just by looking at the fishfinder , sometimes it's not so obvious and you have to do a drift or two to see what's there , if you find one with fish on , make it a priority visit next time out but don't bank on it having fish on it again , sometimes they are still there (or maybe they have gone and another shoal has arrived , who knows?) and sometimes they have vanished without trace.
What I do is head with the tide , if it's ebbing when I go out I'll head north and fish the wrecks up there , when it turns I'll head back south fishing the wrecks on the way , saves petrol

Usually there are enough fish about in ones and twos to keep me interested without doing the full circuit , occasionally I hit a wreck teaming with fish and only move off it when I'm aching or bored with catching them , and very rarely I run about like a headless chicken from wreck to wreck catching absolutely nowt.
Go look for them , it's much more satisfying finding them for yourself than being put on them by another skipper
Ray