Octopus Hole

Washington, USA West
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Difficulty
beginner
Viz (last reported 7383h ago)
Max Depth
35.1 ft

Snorkeling and Scuba Diving at Octopus Hole

Like the close-by Sund Rock area, Octopus Hole is very popular with Scuba divers who enjoy diving the wall to view various underwater creatures, including but not limited to Lingcod, North Pacific Giant Octopus, Wolf Eel, and nudibranch. The most popular wall to dive in this area is about 200 yards long and starts at roughly 40 fsw, going down to roughly 50-60' fsw, depending upon the tide. Many divers use a large tree that has partially fallen out towards the water to help find the beginning of this wall. Once they have done the surface swim out to this tree, they can then drop down to the wall. Another, smaller wall is accessible, at roughly 90 fsw. This wall is nearly straight out from where most divers climb down from highway 101. Because Octopus Hole is a conservation area, no hunting or gathering of any kind is permitted. The area also has very limited parking. Essentially, parking areas are nothing more than small turnouts on the highway. There is no formal trail or pathway. Getting gear down and back from the water requires good balance as you walk down on large irregular rocks to the water. Sometimes two trips is better, remove weights or camera gear on one trip. In spite of this, the Octopus Hole is quite popular. Access is always free of charge. This area is not current sensitive. Source: Wikipedia.org Octopus Hole is a designated conservation area on Washington's Hood Canal. It is located right off Highway 101 just over three miles from Hoodsport.
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Toby
Toby
Jun 23, 2008, 12:00 AM
scuba
Follow heading 145 to 50' then follow depth South to rock wall (~100 yards). Six or more large Octos 4'-6', and some large fish, and crab. Also, some kelp at 20' @ the entry point. Great dive, very relaxing. Slowly drift down to the wall, and drift back if you time it right. No current to speak of, and visibility typical for the canal. I will be going here again soon!
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