Clark's Point
Lake Winnipesaukee
in Central New Hampshire
Story and photos by Robert N. Rossier
Lake
Winnipesaukee in central New Hampshire offers a wide variety of shore and
boat diving in a spectacular mountain setting. One popular location for
training is Clark's Point in Wolfeboro. This versatile site provides easy
access, with visibility and underwater topography suited to everything from
Open Water certification dives to advanced, search-and-recovery, navigation
and deep diving, to name a few.
Public access to Clark's Point (year-round,
day and night) is through McKinney Park, three quarters of a mile/1 km off
Route 28, where Clark Road makes an abrupt left turn. The stand of evergreen
trees provides a shaded backdrop to this scenic point at the south end of
Wolfeboro harbor. Parking for a half-dozen cars can be found at the
entrance, and additional parking is available along Clark Road. Follow a
stone trail that leads down a steep incline to the waterfront, where a
picnic table provides a convenient location to suit up.
The dive begins in knee-deep water along the
rocky shore, where divers can perform a predive check and acclimate to the
environment. A few yards away from shore, the depth increases to
approximately 15 feet/5m. Prevailing northwest winds occasionally generate
currents in the 28-mile-/45-km-long lake that scour the silt from the
shallow areas of Clark's Point. The remaining coarse sand bottom ensures
good visibility (up to 25 feet/8 m) under most conditions. Throughout the
area, divers will find a plethora of freshwater mussels and small fish. To
the north, a submerged rock seawall provides a convenient means for natural
navigation, with depths increasing to 30 feet/9 m or more.
Progressing westward from the entry point
away from shore, the depth increases to 20 to 45 feet/6 to 14 m, with a sand
and stone bottom strewn with massive boulders and an occasional sunken tree.
Divers will encounter a variety of fish, including bass, cusk, perch and an
occasional catfish. White freshwater sponges decorate many of the boulders.
Roughly 150 yards/137 m offshore, an
underwater cliff drops to more than 80 feet/24 m with a silt bottom (watch
your buoyancy!), providing an excellent location for deep-dive training.
Toward the south, the bottom of the wall slants shoreward, forming a
pronounced overhang.
While Clark's Point is perhaps best known as
a training site, divers have found numerous artifacts in the area, including
antique bottles that bear the name of the former Toby's Pharmacy in
Wolfeboro. Touted as the oldest summer resort in America, the local waters
have claimed everything from dishes, clay pipes and bottles to guns and
false teeth.
As with all dive sites, visibilities can vary
markedly depending on seasonal changes and weather conditions, but
visibility in the 15- to 25-foot range is typical. Winters are cold in the
lakes region, providing excellent conditions for ice diving. The ice usually
clears out by the end of April, and by July the 30-foot water temperatures
climb to the low 70s F (22 C), where they remain until mid-September.
Descending along the wall to depths of 80 feet, divers can expect
temperatures in the low to mid-50s F (13 C), even in summer.
Divers are required to fly a dive flag when
diving anywhere on Lake Winnipesaukee, and the requirement is strictly
enforced by the Marine Patrol. Divers must stay within 75 feet/23 m of the
flag at all times.
While there are no amenities available at
Clark's Point, divers will rest easy knowing that the Huggins Hospital
Emergency Room is less than a mile away at the intersection of Clark Road
and Route 28. (Take a right at the end of Clark Road, and the ER is
immediately on the left.) Police and fire/rescue personnel reside at the
public safety building on the right about one-tenth mile past the hospital.
Emergency 911 service is available in the area, and the Marine Patrol can be
contacted by phone, (603) 293-2037, or marine VHF (Channel 16).
Lake Winnipesaukee Diving
Cradled between the Ossipee Mountains to the
north and the Belknap Mountains to the south, Lake Winnipesaukee in central
New Hampshire provides a fantastic array of diving opportunities. Carved out
of the Earth by glaciers, the lake spans some 28 miles/45 km from northwest
to southeast and 12 miles/19 km across, with nearly 300 miles/483 km of
shoreline and as many islands. The 72 square miles/187 sq. km of water
covers cascading walls and a virtual history book of wrecks to depths of 187
feet/57 m. A complete listing of Lake Winnipesaukee dive locations would
take volumes, but here are a few underwater highlights.
One of the most popular dive sites on Lake
Winnipesaukee is the Lady of the Lake. Scuttled in 1895, the 125-foot/38-m
steamboat lies in 30 feet/9 m of water in Smith Cove in Glendale (near
Laconia). The hull and deck are intact, and divers can enter through the
deck hatches. Smallmouth bass, yellow perch, sunfish, hornpout, carp and the
occasional eel make the wreck their home. Summer water temperatures range
from 65?F/18?C to 75?F/24?C, with visibilities of 25 to 35 feet/8 to 11 m.
The Lady of the Lake is also a popular ice dive in the winter months.
The Horseboat Barge represents one of the
earliest vessels on the lake. Powered by two horses on treadmills, the
design became obsolete with the advent of the steam engine. The wreck lies
in 40 feet/12 m of water off Bear Island. The hull of the barge remains,
with various tools and coal scattered on the bottom throughout the area.
Rum Point on the shores of West Alton is
known for its rock formations and wall diving. The area is rich in fish and
aquatic life. Parker Island is also known for its rock formations, with
numerous cuts, tunnels and exposed veins of quartz. The wall drops from a
depth of 40 feet to about 60 feet/18 m.
The Laker wrecks on the east side of Ship
Island are actually three wrecks that lie in 10 to 40 feet/3 to 12 m of
water, all of which can be visited on a single dive. The area around Ship
and Moose Islands is known for huge rock formations, ledges and walls, with
depths ranging to 100 feet/30 m.
The wreck of the steamboat Belknap on the
north side of Steamboat Island makes a perfect place to enjoy a surface
interval. The wreck, which sank in 1841 while towing a load of logs, lies in
5 to 15 feet/2 to 5 m of water and is a good snorkeling site.
Diamond Island is the site of the Navy's
underwater laser testing site, which dates back to the 1950s. A railway
track used for laser testing lies in 25 feet of water, with staging located
in deeper water. A sunken cruiser, staging and other debris lie at the north
end.
Two dive centers serve the needs of divers on
Lake Winnipesaukee. Dive Winnipesaukee is a full-service dive center located
on the waterfront in scenic Wolfeboro on the eastern side of the lake. The
center offers a full range of certification programs, rentals, and dive
charters aboard their 30-foot dive vessel, Lady-Go-Diva. Check out their
TGIF dive on Friday afternoons. Dive Winnipesaukee is located at 4 N. Main
Street, Wolfeboro, NH; phone (603) 569-8080.
Fathom Divers is a full-service dive center
located in Laconia on the western shore of Lake Winnipesaukee. The center is
open seven days a week April through September, with daily dive charters
aboard their 26-foot/8-m dive vessel (four to six divers maximum), and
weekends only October through March. Fathom Divers offers rentals and air
fills. The dive center is located at 1002 Union Avenue in Laconia, NH; phone
(603) 528-4104.
Accommodations in Wolfeboro
If Clark's Point at Lake Winnipesaukee isn't
close enough to make a day trip, affordable accommodations can be found in
Wolfeboro.
Lake Motel: Located on the northbound side of
Route 28 just south of town. Phone (603) 569-1100.
Wolfeboro Inn: On Main Street (Route 109)
about a half-mile north of Dive Winnipesaukee on the left side. Phone (603)
569-3016.
Lakeview Inn and Motor Lodge: Further north
on Main Street at the top of the hill on the left. Phone (603) 569-1335.