Newfoundland

OXYGENE NEWFOUNDLAND

Welcome to Oxygene Newfoundland - Canada's National Award Winning Dive Centre and Adventure Resort. "Come Discover Our world"

Oxygene Newfoundland is an 11 year dive charter business that prides itself on sustainability, the protection of marine life and underwater historic resources, and providing our guests with some of the most unique and captivating adventures on earth. Oxygene Newfoundland is the result of a partnership between Rick and Debbie Stanley's Ocean Quest and the Oxygene family of dive centres. 

Newfoundland is a diver's paradise. It offers diverse marine life, it sees most of the icebergs heading south from the arctic every summer, and it is the location of 10,000 shipwrecks that have occurred over 500 years of marine history. All of this has helped Newfoundland be recognized as one of the best dive sites on Earth by Fodor's Adventure Travel Guide.

     

 

About us

About Us

Oxygene Newfoundland is an 11 year dive charter business that prides itself on sustainability, the protection of marine life and underwater historic resources, and providing our guests with some of the most unique and captivating adventures on earth. Oxygene Newfoundland is the result of a partnership between Rick and Debbie Stanley's Ocean Quest and the Oxygene family of dive centres.

Newfoundland is a diver's paradise. It offers diverse marine life, it sees most of the icebergs heading south from the arctic every summer, and it is the location of 10,000 shipwrecks that have occurred over 500 years of marine history. All of this has helped Newfoundland be recognized as one of the best dive sites on Earth by Fodor's Adventure Travel Guide.

As the only diving resort in Newfoundland and Labrador, Oxygene Newfoundland is your guide to the spectacular underwater world of the North Atlantic. We pride ourselves on treating every visitor as our personal guest and we understand exactly what you are looking for. Why? Because we are not only divers, we're adventurers. "Experience Your Adventure" is not just our motto. It's a personal philosophy that drives us everyday.

               
 

Accommodation

Ocean Quest Lodge

In June 2004,  the Ocean Quest Adventure Resort dream was completed with the opening of our beautiful Canada Select 4 Star Lodge.  Built totally with Newfoundland Spruce the lodge offers luxury accommodation, a meeting and social facility with state-of-the-art presentation and entertainment equipment, sauna, indoor pool and recreation areas, the lodge is a home-from-home you'll love to relax in.....

Location
The Ocean Quest lodge is located in picturesque Conception Bay South, right on the ocean. It is conveniently right next to the Oxygene Newfoundland facility.

The lodge has an ideal location just a few minutes walk from the ocean and the main street.

In this same facility there is a large common room with a 10ft LCD preojection screen, a full kitchen and bar area, a indoor heated pool and a sauna.

Accommodation
Ocean Quest lodge is a 4 star bed and breakfast consisting of 6 full rooms with full bathrooms, one of which is a honeymoon suite with an air tub. Two of these rooms are located downstairs in a suite with a private living area perfect for a family of four to stay.

Room Facilities

  • television
  • high speed internet hook up
  • phone
  • either two twin sized beds or one king sized bed

Lodge Facilities

  • surround sound HD multi media system
  • LCD projector and 10ft screen
  • free internet service
  • fireplace
  • full kitchen
  • large deck overlooking beautiful Conception Bay & Bell Island
  • propane BBQ
  • library of diving and local interest publications
  • sauna 
  • indoor pool


Dive sites

Dive sites

The mixture of the Labrador Current and Gulf Stream just off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador attracts thousands of whales, provides rich nestling grounds for millions of seabirds, and brings to life a spectacular underwater garden of flora and fauna.  Add to this pristine water, massive icebergs, and a shipwreck history dating back over 500 years and you have a world class diving destination!

The diving experience in Newfoundland and Labrador extends from May until November and with each week, new and exciting opportunities unfold. Shipwrecks are numerous and very accessible throughout the season. In May and June, massive Greenland icebergs arrive from the north and settle in to various coves and inlets. During July and August, over 35 million seabirds gather on our rocky shores and over 22 species of whales feed in our nutrient rich waters. The diving in itself is world class and combined with the natural and cultural history, the experience is exceptional!

Bell Island WWII shipwrecks
The Bell Island Shipwrecks are a 45 minute boat ride on the cruiser from the Foxtrap marina. There are four ships depths ranging from 60’ to 160’ within two square miles of each other. Each of these wrecks are fully intact and up right making them quite the site to see.

Chimney Cove
Chimney Cove is a small cove just 15 minute boat ride from the Foxtrap marina. This is just beside the infamous Kelly’s Island which holds many pirate and ghost stories. This dive site is full of marine life such as lobsters, eel pouts and wolf fish. The depth here ranges from 25’ to 45’.

The Bell
The Bell is another attractive site. It is about a 50 minute boat ride from the Foxtrap marina. This site is full of walls and swim throughs along with an abundance of marine life. The depth ranges from 30’ to 60’. Very good site for every level of diver.

The Conception Bay Whaling Wrecks
The Conception Bay Whalers have been an excellent shore dive since 1964. It is believed that these Whale Catchers were abandoned at the close of the whaling industry in Newfoundland. Just one mile off shore in Conception Harbour there rests the remains of two more Whale Catchers, the SS SPOSA and the SS SOIKA. They range in length from 110’ to 130 feet with a beam of approximately 30 feet.  Visibility in the winter and early spring ranges from 100’ down to 30’.  There is a harpoon gun mounted on one of the ships.  A propeller is still on the SS Southern Foam.  Fantastic photo/video opportunities await you.

Whale Bones, South Dildo
Around 1 hr from St. John’s in the south of Trinity Bay, South Dildo is a former whaling station and the skeletons of many of these large animals lie scattered on the seabed close to the shore.  Accessed from the wharf or the adjacent beach, the site depth reaches approximately 20m and is easily navigated.  Alternatively, a boat can be used to reach some of the areas farther away.  Whale skulls, ribs, jawbones and vertebrae, some of them huge, can be found all over the site and although deteriorating and often covered in weed, they are easily recognizable. 

 

Getting here

Getting here

Newfoundland and Labrador is where the North American day dawns first. Where the New World begins. Remember, this is a big place. So when you start planning your vacation, use a distance calculator to help you plan your travel time accordingly.

There are two parts to the province, Newfoundland, an island, and Labrador, a mainland which borders the province of Quebec. It is more than three times the total area of the Maritime Provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island) and would rank fourth in size behind Alaska, Texas, and California if it were one of the United States. It is almost one-and-three-quarters times the size of Great Britain.

Approximately 29,000 kilometers of coastline wrap around our communities, trails, forests, parks, and historic sites. Remember we are large, so you can’t wake up in St. John’s and have breakfast in Gros Morne National Park.

If you’d like some help with bookings and arrangements, let our operators take care of the details by clicking Book your holiday.

Adventure Resort Global Position

Lat. 47 31 10        Long. 52 58 24


Staff

Staff

Rick Stanley
Owner
Rick has been diving since 1992 first as a hobby and to get away from his busy home reno business and get the weight of houses off his shoulders. At first he discovered scallops and mussels and indulged himself in them along with the wonderful marine life most unique because of the collide of the gulf stream and Labrador current, but Rick's curiosity for the Bell Island shipwrecks got the better of him... he got 'wowed' after his first dive on them.

As getting to know the wrecks and the history around them he wanted to tell all of his dive buddies about them. After seeing their entusiasm Rick wanted the wrecks on the world stage and thats when Ocean Quest was formed in 1997. With a boat and little experience he started complying with CCG and TC regulations and form there a vigorous SCUBA training schedule for basic diver to instructor. Now Rick is a specialty instructor, TDI Advanced Nitrox, Inspiration and evolution and Full cave diver and more than 200 on the Bell Island wrecks alone. But without the protection and preservation there is no sustainability so with some help Ocean Net was formed and as a founding member he took the oath...'To Instill an Ocean Conservation Ethic' and the Bell Island wrecks fell within his conservation area that he is taking stewardship of.

Besides that fabuluos underwater inventory, the wrecks and marine life around Newfoundland, he has all around him a competent staff, and a dive resort that he is very proud of. Infrastructure and equipment are all world class...and a loving family that has helped and stood by him along the way...lets just say...'I'm living my dream!

 

Debbie Stanley
Accountant / Assistant Instructor

Debbie has been diving since 1994 and she started because her husband was having all the fun and she wanted in. Since then she went through the PADI, SDI, TDI and Evolution training programs and is now certified as an Assistant instructor, Advanced Nitrox, Rebreather and full cave diver. She keeps everyone in line, making sure everything runs smoothly and that everyone is at the top of their game. Debbie is a mother of two girls.

John Olivero
Facilities Coordinator Divemaster

John has been with Oxygene Newfoundlandsince 2006. John’s background in Scuba, sales, customer service, and management made him the perfect choice to keep the Oxygene Newfoundland ship headed in the right direction. John was certified basic open water diver in 2004 from Westchester Dive Center in Port Chester, NY, USA, where he also received his advanced certification, and rescue diver. In that time John discovered the many joys of Scuba diving in the New York area as well as through out the Caribbean, boasting his favorite destinations as as well as Turks and Caicos. Upon returning home to Newfoundlandin 2005 John has received his divemaster certification as well as solo diver cert. and become an integral part of the local dive community. John’s other talents include, playing the guitar, video/sound production, and constant learning.

Bill Flaherty
MV Ocean Quest Captain

William (Bill) M. Flaherty a retired naval officer currently employed as the captain of the MV Ocean Quest located in Foxtrap, Conception Bay, Newfoundland, Canada. Bill brings with him a wealth of diving experience after over twenty years as an active diver. A professional Master Scuba Diver Trainer with PADI he has logged in excess of a thousand dives throughout the United States and Canada. An amateur marine archeologist who has studied under Matthew Duncanson II, Chief Archeologist with the Mel Fisher Athocha Group, located in Key West, Florida. He has also conducted field work with the Rhode Island Archeological Marine Project under Dr. Abass. Self trained as an underwater videographer and digital photographer he is constantly in pursuit of that perfect shot. During the last ten years Bill has been consumed with diving and researching the Bell Island Wrecks.

 

Ian Carter
Instructor

He is a TDI/SDI Instructor who has been with Oxygene Newfoundland since 2005. Ian is a huge fan of the Bell Island wrecks and visits them as often as he can. He also enjoys the many really cool shore based dive sites in the area. Among the specialties he teaches are nitrox, navigation, deep, night, wreck, boat and drysuit. Whether you are an old pro or just recently certified Ian is happy to show you some of his favorite dive sites.

 

Roger Pope
Trainig Coordinator
Padi Divemaster
ACUC / SDI instructor

Roger has come to Oxygene Newfoundland this year bringing with him a varied array of experiences from his past employment within the diving industry. Although new to the scuba diving business, Roger has immersed himself completely into the industry over the last 3 years and has shown a great progression of skills. He has recently began his technical service licensing and boating certification. With over 15 years in the hospitality industry, Roger is looking forwards to meeting new clientele with Oxygene Newfoundland.

 

Eric Tippett
Divemaster

Eric Tippett is a SDI Dive Master who has been with Oxygene Newfoundland since 2005. He is very passionate about the sport. Eric enjoys scuba diving the Bell Island Wrecks and all of Newfoundland's great shore based diving sites. It would be his pleasure to guide you in your Newfoundland Underwater Adventure.

 

Earl Blundon
Instructor

Bio coming soon

 

 

 

Jason Best
Technician

Bio coming soon

 

 

 

Holly Stanley
Divemaster / Crew

Holly has been working with Oxygene Newfoundland now for 10 years. She started diving with her bubblemaker when she was eight years old. Since then she has become an advanced diver, rescue diver and finally she has just received her divemaster certification. Holly is attending Marine Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundlandworking on the Nautical Science program. She has pretty well been raised on the ocean making it her dream to have a career there as well. Holly works together on the MV Ocean Quest with Bill to make it a fun experience for everyone, whether they’re going out for a BBQ or going to explore the BellIslandwrecks it’s always a safe and fun time.

 

Darren Taylor
Divemaster

Darren is a SDI assistant instructor and CPROX, and an SSI dive control specialist, Rescue diver and Nitrox diver. Darren has been a paramedic since 1997 and has wanted to dive since he was a kid. Sunday mornings he would put on his uncles scuba gear and watch an outdoor wildlife show and pretend he was underwater with the wild looking creatures. From there it developped into a longing to want to get in the water wherever he was. There were times when he was a kid that he would just jump out of the boat just to get wet and pretend he was a diver.  

 

Dave Lane
Divemaster

Bio coming soon

 

 

 

Sean Fitzpatrick
PADI Instructor

Bio coming soon

 

 

 

Albert Stanley
Bus Driver/ Chef

Bio coming soon