Newport Beach Pier and Train Dive

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Sam Miller III

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Scuba Legend
Rest in Peace
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Location
CALIFORNIA: Where recreational diving began!
# of dives
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NEWPORT BEACH PIER-TRAIN
A post from several years ago--but just still valid - And the idea season to dive the train is approaching
Be aware of the dangers--Check in with the life guard before diving
1) Dory fleet
2) Pole fishermen
3) Entanglements - fishing line
4) Long shore drift
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Last spring I was contacted by some one on this board regarding the train that was sunk off Newport pier many years ago, unfortunately I can't recall the name of the gentleman. Since I have never seen the train featured in any articles and with apologies to Sir Robert Service "a promise made is a debt unpaid," I will submit the following for all:

The Newport pier, therefore "the train" is a seasonable diving area, and the spring and summer months are certinly NOT the season for diving that area, . This is based on the following; the prevailing summer swell is from the south -right into the pier, there is excessive traffic during the summer, the Dory fleet, the surfers and certainly the elbow to elbow fisherman on the pier, with hooks baited for young juicy divers.

Now, during the fall and winter monthsand especially during the santanas is an ideal safest season to dive the pier. Please be aware there is generally a alongshore drift so it is advisable to enter the water on the left side of the pier, directly in exit path of the Dorys, swim on the surface until fishermen are encounter, submerge under the pier and swim out under the pier to avoid fishermen.

If the Lifeguard station is manned it is always adviseable to check in and advise them of your dive plan. They are all surfers/divers and very knowledgeable of the conditions and may advise to abort the dive.

Swim almost to the end of the pier and the remains should be visible under the pier on the left side directly under the cleaning station. Sadly a portion of the train was removed some years ago by a newly minted PADI instructor teaching salvage and he took the parts home ! (?. ) However there should be enough remaining to recognize it as a train a to create the event as a diving adventure.

If the conditions are ideal the truly adventurous may want to proceed out beyond the end of the pier to depth of about 80 plus feet into the Newport canyon where the remnants of the box car wheels rest..Yes, Newport has a canyon-but mostly mud.

Reverse the procedure on the return to shore.

In the event the dive visibility is less than ideal the pilings and the bottom are a treasure trove. Every inch is covered with debris and or marine life, including the ever present fish hooks and mono fishing line, however the lines are on occasion attached to a discarded fishing pole. On numerous occasions legal lobsters have been taken in the pilings..So there is some thing for every one..the adventure diver, the junk collector, the photographer and the hunter.

Additional information maybe found in "Diving West," 1972, (first California dive guide)OC section, Merker and Miller, "Great piers of California," Jean Femling, 1984, and an article by Dave Haldane (not related to THE Haldanes!) in either the OC Register or the LA Times of many many moons ago.

The Newport Pier and the train are indeed one of the best keep secrets of OC diving, however, it is not with out hazards and needs a certain amount of prepration, skill and the ideal time to dive, but it does afford an unique underwater adventure. Where else in the world can you dive on a train?

Be careful when you dive it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

sdm
 
Yes. I have very limited knowledge of trains or train history, I have been informed It was steam powered . It was a small narrow gauge engine used to shuttle products from the pier to shore

If my memory is correct the train and train cars went into the drink as a result of the 1913 massive storm that totally destroyed the Newport Per which at that time was known as Mc Fadden's landing.

On numerous occasions I have dove into the canyon probably to a depth of 100 feet - all mud and for some strange reason always limited visibility. I never had any encounter with sharks on those dives but I sensed their presence. I suspect they were there since so much trash including chum is tossed accidently or on purpose over the end the a pier creating a feeding station for marine life including sharks

It is an " interesting" SoCal dive. One that very few have made or have the skills to dive

Sam Miller,III
 
Santa Ana are blowing !

Great time to dive the Newport pier and the Newport train -- one of the very few submerged trains in the world
If interested work the pilings for fishing jigs etc.. bring a good cutting instrument and a container ,
Experience has proven a 1/2 or 1 gallon plastic milk container with the top cut at an angle to receive and protect the diver from the fish hooks is a great cheep homemade receptacle.

Always when diving at the pier check with the life guards

SDM
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/teric/

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