These photos are from March 18, 2012. Despite a few days of gale-force winds, visibility was a bright 20-30'. It was a good- current day so I swam out along the sewer pipe boulder reef. I've mentioned before that this can be a very nice dive when conditions are right.
natural reef near the point
kelp greenling and fish-eating anemone on the boulder pile near shore
fish-eating anemone
large sand bags
large sand bags 40 feet deep
end of an old pipe covered with sandbags 50 feet deep
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
well camouflaged octopus on the sandbags
octopus
octopus arms
brooding anemone
scallop and sponge
hermit crab in a sponge-covered shell
black rockfish over the boulders
black rockfish over the boulders
black rockfish over the boulders
lingcod guarding eggs
lingcod guarding eggs
lingcod guarding eggs
swimming scallop
staghorn bryozoan, brittle stars and hermit crab
anemone
fish-eating anemone
lingcod and school of black rockfish
lingcod and school of black rockfish
boulders out from the base of the main boulder reef
brooding anemones
lots of copper rockfish
lingcod and copper rockfish
lingcod and copper rockfish
copper rockfish
copper rockfish
crab
nudibranch
lingcod
nudibranch eating a sponge
black rockfish
boulder reef
boulder reef 50 feet deep
hermit crab
back at the end of the older pipe
end of the older pipe
fish-eating anemone on the boulders near shore
fish-eating anemone near shore
fish-eating anemone near shore
fish-eating anemone near shore
exiting at the boat ramp

-I have to warn you that my underwater navigation skills are pretty devastating and this map is probably way off.
My attempt at a map of Clover Point:
a sidescan image of the boulder-covered sewer pipe at Clover Point