Question Monroe County, MI - Great Sulfur Spring

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

How much actual physical damage to gear is yet to be assessed. I suspect, and hope, more stench than actual damage. The water itself didn't smell particularly bad to me today--unlike during my first visit and scope a few weeks ago--so perhaps my sinus wasn't as clear today.

What really surprised me--and not in a good way-- is that the white-floored, shallow 1ft deep area surrounding the deeper spring hole does not have a solid floor as I previously thought. I took one step out with 100 lbs of steel back plate and twin set and sunk past my knee into black silty muck. And then the smell really hit.

After the disappointing shock wore off I realized I'd have to change tactics. I fully inflated my wing and dry suit and After a minute of wrestling my leg free from the black muck I decided I'd try floating out on my back. After kicking up a lot of that silt I realize that the tanks were dragging too much and switched to my belly, And finally made it into the deep area... And that's when I realized I didn't have either of my lights on my person(I always forget something critical. Last time it was the fins 🤦‍♂️). Alligator crawled my way back toward the shore, flopped myself through the muck, trying not to get both arms stuck in the mud as I transition to solid shore line, grab the lights and then did it all again.

Back in the deep area, this time with all my gear, I had now stirred up a considerable amount of mucky silt. I gradually descended to 20 ft while swimming the perimeter of the circular drop off. It went deeper according to a water quality study it goes to at least 33 ft.

No real issues underwater other than realizing that when I am diving solo(now for the second time) I have no courage whatsoever. This really surprises me, because I usually pride myself on my ability to multi-day hike, camp, and dry cave alone without issue. Anyway, after less than 10 nerve-racking minutes of staring at the dark hole that went deeper than I was willing to go alone I decided that I don't really care what's down there after all. I surfaced and gathered up my stinky gear in my roll cart and started trudging the good mile back to the parking area.

Still attempting to clean the smell off of gear and am hopeful there will be no lasting damage.

Now that I'm back safe in my cozy Hobbit hole my previous cowardice is nowhere to be seen and I find myself wondering what really is down there at the bottom of that stink hole.

Another question is what is all that muck doing there. I generally think of freshwater springs as flushing themselves clean of fine silt to expose solid rock along calcite deposits, which is what the white-floored shallow area at first appeared to me to be.

All other water channels in the area are frozen solid but the spring pool itself remains 55° year-round and both times I've gone out there there's been a plethora of birds(Canada geese, mute swans, various ducks, etc) enjoying a swim in that relatively warmer water.

My leading theory is that the muck is thousands of years of bird droppings that can't fully decompose in the cold, deoxygenated spring water.

Maybe somebody with a underwater drone can take it down there and check it out. I don't want to have to go through this again. I did take some video. Will post a link when I get it uploaded.
The muck is most likely Sulphur and decayed organic material. So get some white vinegar by the 55gal drum and start spraying it. Replace anything rubber. If you start seeing it turn color or change texture on you. Last, leave the f@cking doubles at home for recon dives.

Get the reg serviced and if you're diving yoke, change the o rings. Then it's should be OK. There's a guy around this forum that does the Detroit River. Maybe he'll reach out.
 
If anyone is interested in the video from this misadventure, I finally uploaded it. sry for poor video quality. original video appears to be out of focus. The clarity was better than it appears.

 
Haven’t dove that, but did dive Monroe quarry a little while back, it was cold, good vis though.
Was considering diving Crystal waters state game area, not sure if there’s anything in it though. Monroe has some stuff and buildings.
 
Haven’t dove that, but did dive Monroe quarry a little while back, it was cold, good vis though.
Was considering diving Crystal waters state game area, not sure if there’s anything in it though. Monroe has some stuff and buildings.
I dove the Monroe quarry only once last August with a guy that had permission, but haven't been able to get ahold of him again. I think he prefers to solo dive.

I'd love to dive Monroe again, and deep. I know Diver's Incorporated in Ann Arbor has permission and will take their super special members there once in awhile, but I don't have the time or money to get into their gold club. I had been instead training out of AquaHut in Toledo.

Can you tell me how you have access to Monroe? (via private message if necessary)

I was also considering the crystal water state game area, was checking it out on satellite and in person. Whole damn thing is surrounded by Phragmites. As I recall they had drivable access blocked, so approach would be a pain. I don't recall clarity looking amazing. I'm also informed that it was a shallower sand pit and so I wouldn't expect more than about 30-40ft of depth, possibly less.

There's also a little known 40 ft deep abandoned quarry behind Heck Park in Monroe. Purportedly owned by Ace hardware that doesn't seem to care about people going back there. There were some interesting odds and ends down there and a bunch of goose crap. Salmonella might be a concern there when it gets warmer.
 
I'd love to dive Monroe again, and deep.
I think the deepest I got was 65'. I know one of the lot holders (he used to active here on SB). Maybe he'll let you enter his lot. The quarry used to be really clear until they pushed the whole dirt wall into it. There's another private quarry that's about 40ft deep and crystal clear out near Dansville.
 
I dove the Monroe quarry only once last August with a guy that had permission, but haven't been able to get ahold of him again. I think he prefers to solo dive.

I'd love to dive Monroe again, and deep. I know Diver's Incorporated in Ann Arbor has permission and will take their super special members there once in awhile, but I don't have the time or money to get into their gold club. I had been instead training out of AquaHut in Toledo.

Can you tell me how you have access to Monroe? (via private message if necessary)

I was also considering the crystal water state game area, was checking it out on satellite and in person. Whole damn thing is surrounded by Phragmites. As I recall they had drivable access blocked, so approach would be a pain. I don't recall clarity looking amazing. I'm also informed that it was a shallower sand pit and so I wouldn't expect more than about 30-40ft of depth, possibly less.

There's also a little known 40 ft deep abandoned quarry behind Heck Park in Monroe. Purportedly owned by Ace hardware that doesn't seem to care about people going back there. There were some interesting odds and ends down there and a bunch of goose crap. Salmonella might be a concern there when it gets warmer.
Had permission, PS teams practice out there and knowing someone on there helped too,
Water was clear when we dove it, we jumped in at the boat launch
 

Back
Top Bottom