Top Snorkeling and Scuba Diving in Lennox and Addington County
Ready to check out the best sites in Lennox and Addington County for scuba diving, snorkeling, shore diving, free diving or other ocean activities? Zentacle has 10 dive sites, snorkel spots, beaches, and more. Discover hand-curated maps, along with reviews and photos from nature lovers like you.
No matter what you're looking for, you can find a diverse range of the best ocean activities in Lennox and Addington County to suit your needs.
#1 - Comet
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
Paddle wheels on this wreck still stick up 25' or more. Various items still on-site; boiler, collapsed deck, etc.
2 miles off Simcoe Island, Lake Ontario, Canada
Comet is also known as Comet Paddlewheel.
#2 - City of Sheboygan
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
FANTASTIC, in-tact wooden schooner. Mast is still upright. Buoy maintaintained by POW/Kingston.
Kingston, ON
City of Sheboygan is also known as City of Sheboygan Wreck.
#3 - Annie Falconer Wreck
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
beginner
(0)
http://www.northerntechdiver.com/wrecks/annief/annie.php
#4 - Olive Branch Wreck
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
http://www.northerntechdiver.com/wrecks/olivebranch/olivebranch.php
#5 - George A. Marsh Wreck
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
http://www.saveontarioshipwrecks.on.ca/Diverguides/dguide9.html
#6 - Frontenac Wreck
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
beginner
(0)
http://www.northerntechdiver.com/wrecks/frontenac/frontenac.php
#7 - Katie Eccles Wreck
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
Katie Eccles Wreck is a 0-star rated scuba dive and snorkel destination in Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario which is accessible from shore based on 0 ratings.
#8 - Glendora
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
beginner
(0)
From SOS website http://saveontarioshipwrecks.ca.
Length:314'
Sank Year:1925
Hull Material:Wood
The ship was stripped of her machinery and scuttled.
#9 - George T Davie
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
This wreck is moored by Preserve Our Wrecks.
Sitting in 95 ft on the bottom of lake Ontario near Kingston, Davie is a very interesting wreck - there is the whole crane a few feet off the starboard side; there is an lifeboat; pilothouse; some kind of boiler and the wheel is still standing in its place.
Hazards include the always present zebras and very fine silt - I have witnessed visibility going from 30 ft+ to zero in a matter on minutes after a group of out of control divers descended on the wreck.
George T Davie is also known as Davie.
#10 - Cornwall
Canada, Ontario, Lake Ontario
intermediate
(0)
Cornwall was first named "Kingston" in 1855. She experienced several name and configuration changes in her career from a floating passenger palace in her early days as Kingston to a wrecking tug known as Cornwall. Every name change was a result of a major fire or other accident.
As the Kingston, she burned almost to the waterline in 1872 and was rebuilt and renamed Bavarian. She then burned again a year later and was rebuilt and renamed Algerian. She burned again in 1905 and upon that rebuilt she acquired her final name. She worked into late 1920's and then anguished at the dock for almost a decade before being towed to a ship's graveyard and dynamited. Despite the fact that she was scuttled, the paddlewheels survived as did major pieces of the wreck.
The most prominent feature of this wreck is of course the paddlewheels. These are of different construction that Comet's - they are smaller and the paddles are set on an angle. The boilers are also a key feature.
Lake Ontario , Kingston Amherst graveyard, off the East side of Amherst Island.
Cornwall is also known as Kingston.