Getting Fresh Water - DIVING in Brockville
1,000 Island City
Gets Number One Rating For Its River Diving
By Stephen Weir (August Diver Magazine)
First
it was an American on-line dive magazine, then it was a chain of Canadian
newspapers and now, Germany’s largest circulation magazine Der Spiegel is the
city of Brockville, Ontario to discover why this is one of the world’s best freshwater
diving destinations. The St Lawrence
River community has shipwrecks, shore diving, good visibility in warm water, a
growing underwater sculpture park and just recently opened state-of-the art
Aquatrarium (both an aquarium and
shipwreck attraction).
‘It’s not common knowledge, but
Canada offers some of the best diving in the world, in some of the most
untouched marine environments. So, what are the best dive sites in Canada? “
asks Scuba Diver Life, a California online dive magazine.
“Brockville! Just across the St.
Lawrence River from New York State, along a stretch of the river between
Rockport and Brockville, there are more than a dozen wrecks to explore,” reads
Scuba Diver Life. “As for that chill, the St. Lawrence River water warms up (in
the summer and fall months).”
Diver Magazine layout photos by Letts/Weir |
Helen
Cooper has been operating ABUCS SCUBA and the Dive Brockville Adventure Centre for over
22 years. Although there is friendly competition
amongst the city’s dive boats (in 2007 there were 22 dive charter operators in
the Brockville area) Helen Cooper has the largest and longest running operation
in the Thousand Island Region. She has four government approved dive charters
boats, a fully approved fill station, mixed gases and Brockville’s only full
service dive shop.
“The
warm waters of the Upper St Lawrence River has always been a draw - averaging
72-75 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer months with no thermoclines and 40' -
50' visibility,” said Ms. Cooper in explaining why Brockville is getting
international notice these days. “ it really is the Canadian Caribbean
here!”
“In
addition to the balmy, clear waters, the world class shipwrecks are a big
drawing card - wooden schooners from the 1800 still pretty much in tact, last
much longer in fresh water that is cold most of the year,” she continued. “ We
have exciting drift dives where you can find torpedo bottles and clay pipes on
the river floor, in addition to seeing the many different fish. The recently
developed Sculpture Park gives divers something new to explore right from
shore!”
The
Sculpture Park is directly off-shore of Brockville’s downtown riverside Canteen
Park and a block from Ms. Cooper’s shop.
There are currently 15 statues placed on the riverbed in two rings – one
inside of the other. There are standing figures, benches and sturgeon placed at
the cardinal points of the radius.
The
sculptures have been cast in concrete and sunk on the bottom by members of the
Save Ontario Shipwrecks society and civic minded volunteers. The statues themselves have been made for the
most part by art classes from Thousand Islands
Secondary School and Brockville Collegiate Institute, working from molds
created by artist /retired art teacher /diver Dave Sheridan and SOS member Tom
Hatch.
The
Sculpture Garden is a work in progress. In June a team of volunteer put ten
life sized works onto the bottom. There
are now 25 pieces in the Garden and more such sinkings are in the works.
“We
are building a memorial underwater at Centeen Park,” said artist David Sheridan.
“There is a grand plan to all of this—It
is more than just a dive attraction. It is meant to honour the scuba divers who
have died in the St Lawrence over the years.
Because the park is relatively shallow (30 to 60 ft) and just a quick
swim from shore, a lot of new Ontario, Quebec and New York State divers are
making their first open water dives right here.
It is accessible and it is also a reminder for all divers to play it
safe, no one is immune to the dangers of the river.”
The dive community, working with the city, is charging
shore divers $10 for an underwater seasonal pass. The money is being used by the city and the
SOS to maintain the park and to pay for the commission of more sculptures.
“There are great
plans for the Park,” continued Mr. Shearton. “The SOS wants to build a better
entry for divers into the water at the Centeen Park. There will, we hope a buoy
set up for dive boats to bring in disabled divers. Exciting new, this year
there will be an underwater camera set-up that will live stream back to our new
Aquatrium (the just opened nearby aquarium
and shipwreck museum)”
Wreck of the Conestoga - weir |
In
addition to the Garden, there are many of
North America’s most visited freshwater shore dive sites in the
Brockville region. These sites are
shallow shipwrecks within snorkelling distance of the shore. Each weekend hundreds of divers drive along the
river hugging Highway 2, stopping at parks near the more popular wreck sites,
where people can dive in safe, close-to-shore sites, for free!
Novices and photographers like the shore dives but “Brockville attracts tech divers as well,” said ABUS
owner Cooper. “There are more challenging wrecks like the Jodery which lies at
240' and the JB King at 140'. These are popular dives because the shipwrecks are
pretty well intact. There is an
opportunity for penetration into the shipwrecks too.”
Novice.
Photographers. Tech Divers. Free Divers. Everyone is coming to Brockville, and
in big numbers. Tourist officials say that divers are coming from Quebec,
Ottawa, Toronto, and from all over the USA - New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Ohio and even California! And the numbers are growing.
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