Athens Scuba Park: A
Texas-Sized Vision
By Linda Lee
Walden
Our
story begins in the mid-1980s with avid scuba diver and entrepreneur Calvin
Wilcher. A Texas native, Wilcher ran a heavy equipment business in the
Dallas area until he seized an opportunity to get in on the ground floor of
the cellular phone industry. For two years he spent most of his time on the
road opening cell service in rural areas of Texas.
One day, tired
from the week's work and missing a convenient place to dive in northeast
Texas, Wilcher asked around about a place he might go to blow some bubbles.
Locals pointed him to a nearby clay pit, part of a long-closed brick
factory, that kids sometimes used as a swimming hole.
Wilcher was
unprepared for what he discovered hidden behind the mounds of clay slag
surrounding the pit. Looking down over the sparkling blue seven-acre lake,
he spotted two young boys swimming in the water. He recalls this as the
moment he had his vision. "One boy dived down and I could follow his
form deeper and deeper, to the bottom and back up. I was astounded at the
great visibility," he said. "The ideas just started pouring out of
my head. I knew right then that I had to buy the property and develop it
into a scuba park."
And that is just
what Wilcher did. Fifteen years and lots of backbreaking work later, Athens
Scuba Park is known in northeast Texas and neighboring states as a top-notch
facility for open-water scuba training.
Acquiring the
50-acre (20-hectare) property turned out to be the easy part. For 90 years
the rare white clay deposit had been mined to supply raw material for the
adjacent firebrick factory. When the brick factory closed in 1959, the
buildings crumbled and the site became an illegal dump for all sorts of junk
– large and small. Luckily, however, the two-story-high slag hills
surrounding the flooded clay pit prevented the trash from reaching the
water.
Wilcher's first
job was to bulldoze away the chest-deep sea of trash, including more than
1,000 refrigerators, cars, couches, etc., and level the massive clay hills
to provide diver access to the lake. Then he hauled in 87 truckloads of sand
and soil, planted grass and trees and built a small facilities building.
Working almost
entirely by himself, the preliminary work took two years. Athens Scuba Park
opened in 1989 with two entry/exit docks and one cabin cruiser for an
underwater attraction. But that was just the beginning. The number of access
docks has since been expanded to 10, including one that simulates the deck
of a dive boat. Benches lining its two sides are equipped with tank racks,
the exit ladder swings up, and the dock can actually be fitted with an
outboard motor and moved out onto the lake for specialized training.
For the
convenience of instructors conducting open-water skill evaluations, 10
carpeted training platforms are suspended at depths of 20-25 feet (6-7.6 m)
within an easy swim of the access docks. Each is at least 15 feet (4.6 m)
square and marked by a surface float. Reflective arrows and signs guide
divers from the platforms to major underwater attractions.
Realizing that
divers need more than clear water to keep them interested, Wilcher has
peppered the clay bottom with unusual items. In addition to more than a
dozen boats, divers can visit a golf cart, two buses, a Volkswagen van, a
Jet Ski, a motorcycle and an airplane. The 42-foot (12.8-m), three-deck
houseboat named "Take Two" was used by Clint Eastwood's film crew
during the shooting of "The Dirty Dozen."
Athens Scuba
Park received national media attention in the summer of 2000 when CNN filmed
the sinking of a 75-foot- (23-m-) long, 12-passenger, C-140 Jetstar military
transport jet. The tip of the tail reaches within 8 feet (2.4 m) of the
surface; the fuselage rests on the bottom at 27 feet (8.2 m).
Several sites
within the lake are designed for overhead environment training. A 5-foot-
(1.5-m-) diameter culvert, called the "Black Hole," simulates an
underwater cave. The culvert leads through the bank of the lake and emerges
40 feet (12.2 m) later in a waist-deep pond. For safe penetration, larger
wrecks are fitted with permanent guidelines.
What first
attracted Wilcher about the former clay pit was the unusually good
visibility, which can be attributed to several factors. The lakebed is
composed of heavy white clay. It is filled by spring water filtering through
many thin layers of clay and receives little runoff from the surrounding
countryside. The pH level of the clay prevents sustained growth of algae and
few fish live there. In the summer, visibility is consistently more than 50
feet (15 m) and sometimes as much as 80 feet (24 m). During the late-winter
and fall rainy seasons it can diminish to as little as 15 feet (4.6 m) and
silting does occur where a group of novice divers congregates near the
bottom. Dive professionals cite the exceptional visibility as one of the
highlights of diving Athens Scuba Park.
During the
summer, the scuba park takes on a tropical atmosphere. Since the lake's
maximum depth is only 35 feet (10.7 m), the water heats up to the high 80s
Fahrenheit (low 30s Celsius). Most divers need only swimsuits to be
comfortable from mid-May through fall. Winter, however, brings a far
different experience. While air temperatures in northern Texas fall from the
90s F (30s C) to near freezing in January and February, water temperature
can plummet to less than 50 F (10 C). Full wet suits or dry suits are
necessary.
In following his
vision, Wilcher has not ignored topside necessities. The original building
was expanded to include a dive store with air fills and gear rentals
(including SASY , Supplied Air Snorkeling for Youth). The bathhouse is being
expanded from two to eight hot-water showers. Nearby is a 30-foot- (9-m-)
long gear rinse rack with several hoses and two cold-water showers.
The name scuba
"park" is appropriate. Wilcher and his wife, Shannon, strive to
create a relaxed atmosphere that can be enjoyed by divers and their
families. A paved section is set aside for overnight RV parking and grassy
tent camping areas line the shore. Shaded picnic tables are scattered about;
barbecue pits invite cookouts. A sand volleyball court and a horseshoe pit
have been constructed and a floor slab from the old brick factory is used
for basketball. Alcohol is not permitted in the park.
In season once a
month, a live band is hired to play at the bandstand; at other times piped
music entertains. Each summer the Wilchers throw a luau party, an underwater
scavenger hunt and several underwater treasure hunts. Fall brings an
underwater pumpkin-carving contest broadcast within the park on closed
circuit TV. "Calvin loves what he does," Shannon says, "and
that's why it works."
Although the
park has never had a diving accident, oxygen and first aid supplies are
available on-premises. The nearest recompression chamber is at Mother
Frances Hospital, 35 miles (56 km) away in Tyler, just a few minutes by
Flight for Life helicopter.
The park
averages 200-300 people per day on a summer weekend and 15,000 annually. It
is used for open-water training dives by an estimated 54 eastern Texas dive
stores, plus others from Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas. Since the CNN
spot, individuals have come to dive from the far corners of the States and
overseas. Although Calvin and Shannon Wilcher are scuba instructors, their
staff instructor, Jim Duncan, handles most of the 100 or so certification
courses conducted annually by the park's in-house dive training center.
Shannon devotes her time to administrative duties and private training. In
addition to constantly improving the park, Calvin has embarked on a new
training venture – advanced search and recovery using high-tech detecting
equipment.
Athens Scuba
Park is less than a mile from the town square of Athens, Texas, population
15,000. About 60 miles (97 km) southeast of Dallas in the midst of scenic
lake country, this small town offers weekend divers several choices of
accommodations and plenty of restaurants.
Wilcher's vision
is still growing. In addition to the new shower house and lake dredging that
are planned for this year, Wilcher expects to erect additional shade
pavilions, enlarge the RV parking and offer scuba kayaks. The best thing
about the vision though, is the family atmosphere. "People who come
here generally come a lot," Wilcher says. His goal: "To make them
feel like it's their place."
Athens Scuba
Park is open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday in the spring
and summer, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. the same days in the fall and winter.
Admission is $15 per diver. For more information, visit www.athensscubapark.com
or call (903) 675-5762.