Sudbury scuba dive group to mark major milestone - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury scuba dive group to mark major milestone

John Varney joined the Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club in 1975 with his late wife so they could do an activity together as a couple. The Sudbury man is still active with the diving group, which is marking its 60th anniversary this year. The aquatic club still offers scuba diving training, but the eight week course is conducted at the Laurentian University pool.

Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club marking 60 years of training, community service

The Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club teaches new divers during an eight week session to get certified. That training goes on at the pool at Laurentian University. (Supplied/John Varney)

John Varney and his late wife Diane, joined the Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club in 1975 to be able to do an activity as a couple.

The Sudbury man is still active with the diving group, which is marking its 60th anniversary this year. The club began in 1958, trainingat apool inFalconbridge.

The aquatic club still offers scuba diving training, but the eight week course is now conducted at the Laurentian University pool.

Varney is the current vice president of the club, and helps teach new scuba divers how to diveso they can obtain their certification.

"I just like being underwater. I think I'd dive in a swamp if I had to."

In order to receive their certification, all new divers must do four dives in open water as part of their exam. Varneysays that happens at Fairbanks Provincial Park.

"It's nice clear water up there."

In order to get their certification in scuba diving, all divers must do four dives in open water. For the Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club those 'exams' happen at Fairbanks Provincial Park, west of Sudbury. (Supplied/John Varney)

"The site that we use is an old boat launch, but a very short distance off shore there's a drop off in either direction,cliffs that go down to about 70 feet, very quickly," hesaid.

Community clean-ups

The diving group also provides clean-ups in local waterways, including Fairbanks, around Bell Park onRamsey Lake, and the harbour at Little Current.

"There's car batteries, mufflers, tires, and you name it, it ends up there," Varney said in reference to the clean-up at Little Current.

He says club members usually find lots of bottles deep underwater.

"If we think they're antique kind of bottles weleave them there so that divers can see them in the future, but if they're broken and pose a hazard [wepick them up]."

Impressive shipwrecks

Varneysays he uses his scuba diving skills to check out shipwrecks deep underwater.

"I was able to get an archeological license to do underwater work for all the water surrounding Manitoulin Island, which is a big area."

Underwater archeology requires a government licence if divers plan to pick up artifacts from shipwrecks.

Varney says there are lots of shipwrecks around Manitoulin Island. He says he recorded about 18 to 20 wrecks in thatarea.

"There's one between Kagawong and Spanish, it's a 300 foot steel haul freighter that's down there. The deepest part of it is about 140 feet deep and the shallowest part is about 75 feet."
Long-time scuba diver John Varney of Sudbury, has explored many of the shipwrecks around Manitoulin Island. This one is east of Little Current. (Supplied/John Varney)

"It's impressive."

Varney has recorded about 1,600 dives since he started in the mid 1970s, most have been in northern Ontario. All four of his daughters are also certified scuba divers.

Anniversaryplans

The Sudbury Dolphin Aquatic Club is planning several anniversary events this year to mark its six decades of existence.

Varneysays there will be an invitational dive in July at a location still to be determined. There isalso dinner and dance being planned for October. He adds they hope to haveolder charter members of the group be a part of that event.

"I've dreamed up a little thing that if anybody does 60 logged dives in our 60th year we'll have a little award for them, a crest or a wall plaque, something like that," he said.

Varney says he continues to dive and still enjoys teaching others. He stays active in the groupfor hislove of being underwater.

"I just love scuba diving."

"You know the phone never rings when you're down there. It's quiet. It's peaceful and of course you're weightless."