These photos are from Jan. 22, 2013. Visibility was about 50-60'. I went down to the boulders with the crimson anemones outside the bay and then followed the boulders down to about 120', where they seemed to end in a plain of sand. You can't tell in the photos, but many of the boulders and sandy areas here were completely covered with a carpet of brittle stars. I followed the boulder slope East for a bit and saw a few juvenile yelloweye rockfish. I would have liked to follow this boulder slope farther, but the depth and my single tank wouldn't let me so I went up to the wall. I also would have liked to see what was farther around the corner on this wall, but again, I didn't have the air. From what I've seen during the few dives I've done here, I like the crimson anemone area the best, but I'll have to explore farther around the corner next time.
the shallow bay at low tide
brittle stars
boulders
crimson anemones
feather stars and crimson anemones
crimson anemones
feather stars and crimson anemones
crimson anemone
crimson anemones
feather stars and crimson anemones
painted greenling
feather stars and crimson anemones
heart crab under a crimson anemone
crimson anemones
crimson anemones
crimson anemones
crimson anemones and feather stars
crimson anemones and feather stars
crimson anemones and feather stars
crimson anemones and feather stars
crimson anemones
juvenile Puget Sound king crab
boulders 100 feet deep
feather stars
boot sponge with feather stars
boot sponges
boot sponges
boot sponges and silt stirred up by a lingcod
copper rockfish
brittle stars
school of herring
the wall
nipple sponge
hermit crab
lingcod at the top of the wall
lingcod near the bay
at the entrance to the bay
kelp greenling
alabaster nudibranch
sargassum seaweed in the bay
nudibranch and snails in the bay
in the bay