Monday, May 21st

Last update02:19:37 AM GMT

You are here Home Northeast Dive News
Sidemount: Long Dives, No Pain

The author swimming on a wall by Larry Cohen When a competitive athlete ages, he or she becomes more susceptible to injuries. Minor injuries become a problem, and to continue an active lifestyle, one has to co

See more details
Living Large in the Turks & Caicos Islands

By Nancy BouchaGuest Writer, Dive News Network On our first dive at the Staircase in Provincials, we were greeted by a school of large, 2.5-ft. horse-eye jacks as we dove into the crystal clear water. The reef

See more details
Molested by a Catfish (And Other True Scuba Diving Stories)

By Bill Pfeiffer Several years ago I had the pleasure of joining Rachel Goodale for a dive at one of our local lakes. This was extra special for a couple of reasons. First, Rachel is an exceptional dive buddy

See more details
Amityville Movie: Part IV

…Easy…it sounded sooo easy… We are on site at the canal in Amityville, where Ryan Katzenbach, owner of Katco Media and producer of the docudrama “Shattered Hopes: The True Story Of The Amityville Murder

See more details
Amityville Movie: Part III

In our first two installments we discussed the circumstances leading to our participation in the Katco Media docudrama “Shattered Hopes: The True Story Of The Amityville Murders”, and our initial survey of

See more details
Cape Ann, MA: A New Look at New England Diving

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network We have all heard the stories about how diving the Atlantic Ocean is so different from any other dive in the world but where does one begin? The east coast is massi

See more details
Once is Not Enough: Diving the Prins WIllem V

Text and photos by Cal Kothrade A short boat ride from Milwaukee’s harbor, lies the most dived shipwreck in all of Lake Michigan, the Prins Willem V, or Willie as she is affectionately known to the locals.&n

See more details
Cozumel, MX: A Holiday on Holiday

Celebrating Christmas in the tropics promised to be a grand family adventure this year with no snow, no tree, no turkey, no stuffing and zero stress. During the traditional season of gift giving, Cozumel was th

See more details
U-Boats of North Carolina

By Mike HughesWriter, Dive News Network During WWII German U-boats infiltrated the waters off the coast of North Carolina on many long-range missions. Most were sent to seek out and destroy ships and interrupt

See more details
Ice Diving: The Coolest Type of Diving

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network Ice diving is a way to take the experience of diving to a new level. As the name implies, dives take place under ice, but result in some of the clearest visibilit

See more details
Willow Springs: Pennsylvania's Hot Spot

Story and Photos by Paul L. Miller The TNI’s (Thursday Night Irregulars) are not a dive club or formalized group of any kind but just an informal group of friendly divers who enjoy local diving on Thursday

See more details
About the Northeast and Midwest Dive News Covers Jan 2012

► Photos by Warren Lo. The photos were taken earlier this year at Morrison Quarry in Wakefield Quebec just north of Ottawa, Ontario. Warren has been shooting underwater for about 8 years, and has been tra

See more details
Florida Keys Dive Capital of the World Over a Million Divers Can’t Be Wrong

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network World-Class Diving, Fish Bowl of the World, Diver’s Dream…these all describe the one place that comes to mind first for most divers when you ask “where would

See more details
GRAB A SPEARGUN AND GO!

Spearfishing is an ancient way to fish that many divers get into as a common course of diving. The sport of diving for your own catch has been around for centuries. There are many devices to spearfish, from the

See more details
Freediving: new ocean adventure

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network A dive deep into the oceans blue without scuba equipment is a frightening prospect for most. A diver would not normally jump into the cold waters of the Atlantic Oc

See more details
Hollywood Comes To long Island

By Bill Pfeiffer In March of 2011 I received an e-mail from Gail Bleckman, a producer working with Katco Media, a Hollywood motion picture production company. To make a long story short, she wanted to know if

See more details
About the Northeast Dive News Dec. 2011 Cover

Photo courtesy Performance Freediving. Earlier this year, Performance Free Diving participated in Deja Blue II held in Grand Cayman. The results for the PFD team were awesome, and we congratulate them. Performa

See more details
Bonaire: Second Time's A Charm!

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network You know how you can go see a movie a second time and you are just amazed by all of the things that you notice that you missed the first time around…my trip to Bo

See more details
Kid's Sea Camp: Dad Just 5 more minutes!

By Rick StrattonPublisher, Dive News Network Kids Sea Camp Family Dive Adventures is, hands down, the most amazing trip I have ever done with my kid. My 12-year old daughter Amanda and I had a week we wil

See more details
Ontario: A Shipwreck a Day Keeps a Diver "O.K."

By Alec PeirceGuest Writer, Dive News Network No one really understands just how big the Ontario area is. Most divers dive a specific area and never realize they are barely grasping the vast cache of shipwreck

See more details

Alpena, Michigan: 64 wrecks and counting

  • PDF

By Jamie Farris Writer/Editor, Dive News Network

If you drive to the northern most part of Michigan you get a sense of what it must have been like for the early settlers. The beauty of the mountains, the free flowing rivers and the expansive Lake Huron must have been overwhelming at best for the guy who just traveled thousands of miles looking for a place to call home. Today divers who see Lake Huron as well as the hundreds of miles of mine shafts and lakes in Northern Michigan for the first time still get that overwhelming feeling...followed shortly thereafter with the battle cry...WHERE DO I START? The answer? Alpena!

Alpena is the home of the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary and boasts only 11,304 year around residents according to the 2000 census. The population swells far beyond that in the summer with the influx of divers and other vacationers. Alpena serves as the commercial and cultural hub of Northern Michigan and is anchored right on Lake Huron.

The Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary is number 13 in the national marine sanctuary system which extends from American Samoa to Massachusetts. The Thunder Bay sanctuary was established to protect the water's shipwrecks and was the first Great Lakes sanctuary that focused solely on a large collection of underwater cultural resources. It covers 448 square miles of northwest Lake Huron, off the northeast coast of Michigan's Lower Peninsula. One of the draws to making this area special for divers is Lake Huron's cold, fresh waters. This combination has created an environment that is good at preserving the hundreds of shipwrecks that litter the lake. Divers can see many of the wrecks as they were when they sank. The Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary along with the Thunder Bay Maritime Museum and a multitude of divers, continue to explore the waters of Alpena in order to bring history alive through the many shipwrecks.

Often called the "Sunrise Side" because it is located on the east shoreline of Michigan, commercial fishing and diving are huge are attractors to Alpena. Being located on Lake Huron's Thunder Bay doesn't hurt either considering that it is one of the country's largest national marine sanctuaries. Due to its status as a marine sanctuary, the waters around Alpena are guaranteed to be teeming with all sorts of untouched artifacts. Steve Kroll of Great Lakes Divers in Rodgers City just north of Alpena says that the Thunder Bay area is a diver's dream. Kroll ferries divers out to some of the more famous shipwrecks in the area and he loves his job. "I have the dive shop for equipment and repair and I am a PADI open water dive instructor but what I truly enjoy is diving," Kroll says. "I like taking people out and seeing their faces after having seen a shipwreck like The Florida." To add to his love of the area Kroll has been diving the Alpena area for over 30 years and he says there are still wrecks to be discovered. "The waters around Alpena are still full of mystery," Kroll says. The Florida was a wooden two deck steamer built in 1889. She went down after a collision with the Canadian steamer George Ruby. Four people lost their lives when the Florida went down. She is located just shy of False Presque Isle.

From the wooden schooners of the mid 1800's to the wooden and steel Steam Freighters of the late 1800's there are shipwrecks to be found at almost every level around Alpena. Long referred to as Shipwreck Alley there are shipwrecks scattered from 20 ft to 200 ft. or more. Most divers agree that many of the wrecks 130 ft or more were untouched by early salvage attempts and have been protected by law since the 1980's so they still hold their original structures from when they sank making for an incredible diver's playground of historical shadows.

Joe Sobczak who owns Thunder Bay Scuba in Alpena says that Thunder Bay is closest for his divers but they also dive the Alpena Underwater Preserve. "People come fo

r the shipwrecks and between Thunder Bay and the Alpena Underwater Preserve we keep them busy," Sobczak says. "Divers make a bead line for the wrecks after seeing some of the documentaries about them. We get a real cross section of divers here, experienced, inexperienced, technical, adventure divers...they all come." Sobczak says that one of the more interesting wrecks in the area is The Windiate which was used on the Deep Sea Detectives in an investigation. "The Windiate was a canal schooner," Sobczak says. "The yard arm is still there. The cargo holds are tight. Other than being underwater she looks like you could raise her up and sail her away." The Windiate was built in 1874 and went down in a storm. It lays 4.5 miles off False Presque Isle.

Kim Parker, owner of Aquatic Adventures of Michigan in Brighton dives Thunder Bay a lot. "It is great to have historic wrecks outside our backdoor," Parker says. "We get a lot of divers from all over the United States and I don't think I have ever seen a diver leave disappointed." Parker's favorite is The Grecian. The Grecian was built in 1891 and is a steam, bulk freighter. She lays some 2.5 miles off Thunder Bay Island and still has a lot of artifacts aboard. She sank in 1906 when, in rough weather, her tank tops gave way flooding her cargo holds. The Grecian rests at 108 ft.

So if you are craving the beauty of the mountains, the clean air of a lake breeze and the mystery of a sleeping past, Alpena, Michigan just may be the next spot for a map pin. There are 64 known wrecks in the Alpena area and who knows how many more are out there just waiting to be discovered. ■

    

  

  

  

 

The Great Annual Fish Count

The Great Annual Fish Count

On July 28, 2012, The New England Aquarium Dive Cl...

Read more...
Thank You for Helping Name the California Sea Lion Pups

Thank You for Helping Name the California Sea Lion Pups

Thank you for helping name the California sea lion...

Read more...

Social

facebook  twitter  youtube  linkedin  email


Dive Directory

dd_footerimage

Tropical Dive Directory

tdd_footerimage

Activities Calendar

activitiescalendar2

Follow us

Follow us