If you go to Willis Point and keep driving around the corner, you arrive here. At the end of the road, there's a trail leading to the water near the entrance to Tod Inlet. This area is part of Gowland Tod Park. The trail seems to be almost as long as the trail to Mackenzie Bight. The chart shows a fairly steep drop to over 100 feet deep. I showed up in mid-November, 2005. Since I've never heard of anyone diving here from shore, I wanted to have a look. Todd Inlet goes crazy with sail and powerboats anchoring here in the summer. I figured such a busy area would probably have some interesting stuff on the bottom. From the small pebble beach at the end of the trail, I swam straight out and down before turning left. The first thing I noticed was that the chart was deceiving. Usually steep areas mean rocky bottoms, but here the slope was made up of gravel, silt and small rocks. There were a few orange plumose anemones, sea stars, red rock crabs, and lots of shrimp: - All the usual non-rocky Saanich Inlet life. Other than that, the bottom was scattered with all kinds of expected junk like marine engines, stoves, sheets of corrugated metal, bottles, and tires. There were also some weird things: A plastic bag full of underwear, a dead seal being eaten by crabs, lots of coffee/tea pots, and even an I.D. card from Alberta (I picked it up and will probably mail it back to them and tell them where I found it). Once past the shallows, visibility was around 20 feet.  At 120 feet deep, the slope seemed to flatten out and the bottom was covered with slimy, fuzzy white "mould" for as far as I could see. As I swam farther to the left, there was a steep rocky reef area around 100 feet deep. There wasn't much growing on it, but there were lots of quillback and copper rockfish. I also saw a Pacific cod, which I've never seen before. It was silver-coloured and around 1 1/2 feet long. This reef ended when I swam up to around 70 feet deep. A dogfish shark swam a circle around me before jetting away. About 50 feet deep, there was an upside-down fiberglass or aluminum boat with a shiny-looking outboard motor still attached. As I swam back up to the shallows, a little rock greenling chased me for a bit, trying to attack my fins. Overall, it wasn't that bad of a dive, but with Willis Point nearby, I'm not surprised that nobody comes here. In the summer, because of all the overnight boating activity, the coliform count apparently goes nuts.
DOGFISH SHARK
DOGFISH SHARK
DOGFISH SHARK
PLUMOSE ANEMONE AND SEASTAR
SIGN AT TRAIL
SUNKEN TREE AND CONTAINER
UPSIDE-DOWN BOAT
OUTBOARD MOTOR
UNDER BOAT
ROCKFISH ON REEF
ENGINE
ENGINE
FIREPLACE
DEAD SEAL
COFFEE CUP
SUNFLOWER STAR ON REEF
JUNK
METAL TANK
STOVE
METAL SHEETS
FOLDING CHAIR