Earl Lowe, Abyssal Diving Charters

Earl Lowe has operated diving charters out of Campbell River since 1995. Over the years, his company has led the charter business in both Campbell River and Quadra Island areas and now operates almost entirely from Quadra Island where accessing spectacular dive sites is especially convenient.

Earl is an IANTD nitrox instructor and gas blender, PADI diving instructor, WCB commercial diver, Level 3 first aid instructor, St. John Ambulance first aid instructor, and BC Ambulance attendant. He also enjoys using his 20 years experience as a professional chef and butcher.

Abyssal Dive Charters has hosted divers from every corner of the world. Whether it's a regular weekend getaway or a once-in-a-lifetime trip, Abyssal is committed to making your stay as memorable as possible. Our company offers everything from a single boat dive to all-inclusive packages of varying lengths.

Abyssal Diving ChartersPlease note: Most dives are made during slack tide intervals in Discovery Passage. Consequently dives are tailored to suit varying skill levels from beginner to advanced.



Read more about diving Discovery Passage ...

The spectacular waters that surround Campbell River are known for their excellent visibility and bountiful life. Abyssal Diving ChartersAbyssal Diving's knowledge of the area, skippering skills, and ability to place divers in choice places at just the right time on a current or drift dive is said to be fairly amazing. This area of British Columbia is also known as a photographer’s Mecca.

In a reader survey, Rodale’s Scuba Diving rated British Columbia as the top dive destination in North America three years in a row. British Columbia continually tops most categories for its abundant sea life and best diving value:

  • • Top macro life
  • • Top fish life
  • • Top wall diving
  • • Top underwater photography
  • • Healthiest marine environment
  • • Top advanced diving




This area earned second-place honours in visibility and destinations to dive with big animals. BC ranked third for its wreck diving.

Northwest Dive News and Canadian Diver magazines also rate this area very highly in the total diving experience in the Pacific Northwest. Jacques Cousteau's team and National Geographic magazine have referred to the Pacific Northwest's diving as the second-best in the world, surpassed only by the Red Sea.

So what are you waiting for? Let's go diving!

Row and Be Damned
Row and Be Damned, Quadra Island, Abyssal Charters drift diving

"Row and Be Damned" is rated one of Scuba Diving magazine's top 10 dive sites in all of British Columbia. It's also a favourite of divers no matter where they enter the current that carries them through a wealth of Pacific sealife. Without a doubt, Row and Be Damned is among the very best scenic, drift-diving experiences on the Canadian west coast.

Marine life here is truly abundant. Expect to see thousands of colourful corals, strawberry anemones, octopus, sponges, Puget sound king crabs, fish, and more fish.

Copper Cliffs
Copper Cliffs, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

Cormorants, mule deer, and bald eagles can be seen atop and along the sheer wall of Copper Cliff which falls 300 feet into the Strait of Georgia. A hundred feet below the surface you'll find a series of ledges that ultimately drop off to the ocean floor.

Everything underwater is huge because of tidal exchanges, Puget Sound king crabs, schools of black rockfish, dogfish sharks, tiger and copper rockfish, red snapper, wolf eels, mosshead warbonnets, giant plumose anemones, orange cup corals, cloud sponges, feather duster tube worms, nudibranchs of many kinds, sea squirts, and curious seals.

HMCS Columbia
HMCS Columbia, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

Our largest wreck, HMCS Columbia is a 2800-tonne, decommissioned, non-modified Restigouche class destroyer escort that was scuttled and sunk here on June 22, 1996 after more than a year of preparation.

This spectacular 366-foot vessel sits at a 35° list to port with the bow at a maximum depth of 120 feet, which was crumpled like an accordion when it hit the rocky ocean floor. The superstructure and wheelhouse reach approximately 60 feet to the water's surface. This allows divers to match skill and comfort level to the elevation of the ship's components.

More than 10 years later, HMCS Columbia has become a thriving artificial reef. Access holes had been cut to open up most of the interior's six decks to properly trained and equipped wreck divers, but we do not recommend penetration. Although the interior may seem sufficiently lit when divers arrive, sediment soon lifts and reduces visibility to zero, a common oversight of novice and experienced divers alike.

This might be one of the largest, most intact underwater wrecks you'll ever see. Unlike other current-swept sites in our area, this area is sheltered from the main current, allowing access at any time of day.

Whiskey Point
Whiskey Point, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

A dive full of colour and life, with clean-swept rocks tiered from 30 to 90 feet, Whiskey Point is another favourite and one that shouldn't be missed.

Strawberry anemones, purple algae, tennis sponges, yellow encrusting sponges, snakelock anemones, giant barnacles, abalone, scallops, ling cod, red Irish lords, kelp greenlings, hairy cancer crabs, octopus and even visiting seals can all be seen here.

Steep Island
Steep Island, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

Steep is a popular dive for visitors and locals alike. Here you'll dive among the "feather dusters", purple tube worms, an experience too fantastic to describe. Some are over three feet in diameter. On this dive you can reach depths of 120 to 130 feet.

Orange, yellow, and white sponges add a rainbow of colour to the dive. Cloud nipple and trumpet sponges are few of the sponges you'll see, rock scallops, swimming scallops, cabezon, ling cod, octopus, kelp greenlings, yellow-eyed rockfish (known as red snappers), and scally head sculpins are all denizens of Steep.

You can also find spiny dogfish sharks here, just as you will at several of our dives in the Quadra Island area. These have never been known to be man-biters, but their appearance can still be formidable, growing up to five feet in length at maturity.

April Point
April Point, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

April Point is a terrific wall dive where you'll see tealia anemones, basket stars, funnel and cloud sponges, soft and hard coral, abalone, Puget sound king crabs, giant nudibranchs, and ling cod. Like any popular dive site in our area, April Point is highly picturesque and typifies the marine environment of the Pacific Northwest.

Argonaut Wharf
Argonaut Wharf, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

The underwater "garden" at Argonaut Wharf is a haven for the giant Pacific plumose anemone, featured in National Geographic and numerous other publications over the years. The landscape here is covered with clouds of these beautiful plants, a site simply never experienced by non-divers and one that represents the beauty of fragile ocean plants that can reach hundreds of years in age when undisturbed.

The area also makes great night dive. At Argonaut Wharf it's easy to see decorator crabs, red or pink dahlia, and numerous fish including flounder, red Irish lords, and cabezon.

Grouse Island
Grouse Island, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

This is a great dive no matter where you enter the water around the island's circumference. Look for wolf eels, octopus, Puget Sound king crabs, decorator crabs, colourful cup corals, sponges, plum anemones, sea lemon nudibranchs, abalone, crabs, scallops, shrimp, and yellow-eyed rockfish.

Ferry wreck
Ferry wreck, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

Located off May Island, the ferry wreck is a nice, easy dive to end the day. Octopus live here around the wreck and along the shallow wall with brightly coloured cup corals, sponges, kelp greenlings, ling cod — and the odd golf ball you might collect as a souvenir from someone who apparently likes to practise his swing from topside.

Seymour Narrows
Seymour Narrows, Quadra Island, Abyssal Dive Charters

The highly planned removal of Ripple Rock in this area decades ago was the largest non-nuclear explosion in the world — and the riddance of one of the deadliest marine hazards in British Columbia.

Today tidal currents up to 16 knots race through this spot, so dives always take place on the slack tides. Rounded ledges start at 20 to 30 feet and then descend well below recreational dive limits. Among them, crevices and crannies abound to hide sealife from the current.

Lots of colour can be seen on this dive including white, Christmas, red snakelock, mauve and pink brooding anemones. You'll also see an abundance of yellow staghorn bryozoans, trumpet and orange ball sponges, chitons, giant red and green urchins, abalone, swimming scallops, kelp greenlings, and lingcod, all which benefit from the nutrients of the fast-moving tides.

Contact Abyssal Dive Charters

1.  Via our  contact page
2.  By direct email: 
3.  Telephone:
Toll-free, N. America: 1.800.499.2297
Otherwise: +1.250.204.3443
4.  Postal mail:
Abyssal Diving Charters
1011 Canyon Boulevard
N. Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada V7R 2K3

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