These photos are from Sept. 5, 2010. Visibility was still about 15 feet. The giant kelp is still there. I also had a look at a shallow wall (about 10 feet deep) out to the left from the beach. Giant green anemones were common here, including one that was the biggest I've ever seen.
giant kelp
looking up through giant kelp
moon jellies and giant kelp
moon jellies and giant kelp
giant kelp
giant kelp
fish-eating anemones
fish-eating anemones
fish-eating anemone and staghorn bryozoan
fish-eating anemone
fish-eating anemone
fish-eating anemones
barnacles near surface
barnacles and mussels
ochre stars
green anemones
green anemones
moon jelly
staghorn bryozoan
brooding anemone?
brooding anemone?
in "tunnel"
hydrocoral in "tunnel"
anemone and hydrocoral in "tunnel"
looking up in "tunnel"
looking up in "tunnel"
looking up in "tunnel"
in "tunnel"
looking out of "tunnel"
anemone and giant barnacles in "tunnel"
anemone near entrance of "tunnel"
in "tunnel"
anemone, etc. in "tunnel"
in "tunnel"
top of "tunnel"
top of "tunnel"
fish-eating anemones
giant kelp
anemone at entrance to "tunnel"
looking up through giant kelp
crab trap caught in crack
moon jellies, bull kelp and plankton
green anemone
fish-eating anemones
green anemone
eelgrass in sandy bay
sunflower star on left-hand wall
zoanthids
jellyfish
spots on rose anemone
opalescent nudibranch
giant green anemone
giant green anemone
fish-eating anemones
small white anemones
small white anemones
small white anemones under foot bridge
small white anemones
sun shining through crack
green anemone
nudibranch
green anemone
green anemone
moon jellies and surfgrass
mussels near surface
anemone and stalked kelp
anemones
green anemone and coraline algae
pebbles near beach