I set the temp at 48f. The grunts are hopping around looking for food. I'm working on filling up my air tanks and getting our again...BTW the strawberries I refer to are proliferative or brooding anemones, I was where I took you before Steve, but just more to the west of the point. I lucked out, no significant current. I punctured a wrist seal somehow and got wet, but made a second dive anyway, my right arm and upper body was soaked all the way to my waist! Proof that argon gas works, I did cut the second dive a little short when I began to get slightly chilled, but nothing serious. A have a backup drysuit now with a new neck seal and inflate valve(viking sport) that I'll pick up from the shop today($200 repair bill...EEEK!) I still have to check on the moorage inside DP but it looks like a go! Yes I want some true Corynactus strawberries, but none closeby, I'll have to go out more around San Juan or Orcas I think. I've found some huge, beautiful coralline colored umbrella crabs there. Also I want some juvenile Puget Sound kings, I've found only 1 here though, 10 years ago. Strange I found no octos, but the vis was really bad yesterday due to previous high tidal volumes. BTW I'm putting together a website for all this stuff...but it'll be awhile yet. The grunt sculpins are happy this morning, my woman has fallen in love hehe("you never said they were so cute!!!") As far as feeding goes, they need live food and I find what they'll instantly feed on are the small hermits found during low tide. collect a few handfull then break them out of their shells. Grunts love them! I'll also be collecting as many amphipods as possible, another good foodsource. Anyhow, I'll make another report this evening...