These are from Sept. 30, 2012. Visibility was about 20-30'. My wide-angle camera housing's dome port fogged up pretty bad, but it's surprisingly hard to tell in these shrunken-down photos.
anchored in the small bay
in the tunnel
soft corals and tunicates
Puget Sound king crab in the tunnel
Puget Sound king crab in the tunnel
soft coral
in the tunnel without a strobe
anemones in the tunnel
near the end of the tunnel
near the end of the tunnel
near the exit
sculpin
looking back in the tunnel
in the tunnel
in the tunnel
closed-up soft coral
just outside the tunnel
anemones 70 feet deep
nudibranch
trumpet sponge
anemones and yellow sponge
hydrocoral
kelp greenling and trumpet sponge
nudibranch
quillback and black rockfish
plumose anemones
crimson anemone
shrimp and crimson anemone
small yellow sponges
black rockfish
nudibranch
vermilion rockfish and trumpet sponge
trumpet sponge
black rockfish
longfin sculpin
hydrocoral and brittle stars
black rockfish
black rockfish
black rockfish
black rockfish
looking up in the shallows
herring in the shallows
hydrocoral and cup coral
the entrance to the tunnel
entrance to the tunnel
entering the tunnel
kelp greenling in the tunnel
sponge in the tunnel
in the tunnel
soft coral and tunicates
in the tunnel
tunnel
tunnel
tunnel
worm? Hydroid?
barnacle and zoanthid
tunnel
tunnel
eelgrass in the shallow channel
eelgrass in the channel
smoke marker
herring near the boat