I haven't been to Yarrow Point in years so I gave it a visit on July 5, 2015. The sky was a dark, yellow/brown haze from all the forest fires on the mainland. This cut down on the light underwater. Visibility was about 20' from the surface all the way down to my maximum depth of 80'. A small seal followed me for most of the dive. It stayed about 10' away and it was difficult to take pictures of it in the darkness. I saw lots of brown rockfish, but none of the vermilions I saw here years ago. I think today this place had the most nudibranchs I've ever seen in one dive. Everywhere I looked I could see several species, usually grouped together.
Eel grass in the shallows
alabaster nudibranch on kelp
alabaster nudibranch
seal
seal
seal
nudibranch and eggs
nudibranchs
50' deep
opalescent nudibranchs
seal
rockfish
longfin sculpin
longfin sculpin
nudibranch
rocky reef
plumose anemone and rockfish
nudibranch
nudibranch and eggs
brittle stars
50' deep
seal 60' deep
nudibranch
nudibranchs
nudibranch
nudibranchs
nudibranch
rockfish
rockfish
rockfish
nudibranch on barnacles
nudibranch
nudibranch
copper rockfish and burrowing cucumbers
juvenile yellow tail rockfish 80' deep
white burrowing cucumbers
nudibranchs
crab
2 different nudibranchs
burrowing cucumbers
burrowing cucumbers
burrowing cucumbers
nudibranch on orange tunicates
nudibranchs
nudibranch
jelly
nudibranchs
sea star
seal
seal
quillback rockfish
shrimp
shrimp on nudibranch
looking at nudibranchs
midshipman
midshipman
midshipman
seal
clown nudibranch
nudibranch
seal
seal
school of small perch
pipefish
pipefish
jellyfish
Proudly built with SiteSpinner free website maker
Proudly built with SiteSpinner free website maker