Hawthorne Reef is a great place to find rockfish, sponges and nudibranchs. We spotted fifteen distinct species of nudibranchs in less than forty minutes on the reef. Several species of rockfish seemed more interested in us than we were of them. Each time I looked up from taking a nudi photo a vermilion, olive, copper, gopher, kelp, blue or honeycomb rockfish would be inches from my face. All of them together wouldn't match the size of a lingcod I found hiding in a crack.
Visibility from the surface to fifty feet was less than five feet in green water. Below the thermocline we enjoyed fifteen feet plus in 51° water.
Cypraea spadicea
Cadlina luteomarginata
Aegires albopunctatus
Hermissenda crassicornis
Doriopsilla albopunctata
Flabellina trilineata
Flabellina iodinea
Diaulula sandiegensis
Peltodoris nobilis
Triopha catalinae
Cadlina flavomaculata
Ategema alba
Others spotted but not photographed included Tritonia festiva, Mexichromis porterae, Cadlina limbaughorum and Acanthodoris hudsoni.
Visibility from the surface to fifty feet was less than five feet in green water. Below the thermocline we enjoyed fifteen feet plus in 51° water.
Cypraea spadicea
Cadlina luteomarginata
Aegires albopunctatus
Hermissenda crassicornis
Doriopsilla albopunctata
Flabellina trilineata
Flabellina iodinea
Diaulula sandiegensis
Peltodoris nobilis
Triopha catalinae
Cadlina flavomaculata
Ategema alba
Others spotted but not photographed included Tritonia festiva, Mexichromis porterae, Cadlina limbaughorum and Acanthodoris hudsoni.