Whaler’s Cove

(Redirected from Whaler's Cove)

Whaler's Cove is the primary divable water region with Point Lobos.

Point Lobos' restrictive diving capacity (15 buddy groups per day maximum) and no-take rules makes Whaler's cove some of the best diving available on the West Coast.

The Cove is often choked with kelp which makes for great wildlife but tough surface swimming. When kelp is densest in the summer and fall, the best time to plan a dive is when the tide is on its way out as a light current opens up a channel in the kelp that becomes far more difficult at slack tide.

Access

Loading map...
Whaler's Cove

Whaler's Cove is subject to entry restrictions and capacity limitations. For more details on entry and pricing, see Point Lobos.

Parking is available at Whaler's Cove for roughly 25 cars; boat-trailer parking is not permitted and is allowed in the Rat Hill lot only.

Amenities

Parking, bathrooms, and a water fountain are all Whaler's Cove has to offer. Food is not available.

Restrooms

One restroom with flush toilets is available in the parking lot.

Showers

No showers are available.

Diving

Entry to the water is through the boat ramp. The ramp is often extremely slick with algae and is washed rarely; use great caution while entering.

The boat launch's immediate water area is very rocky and uneven, dropping off suddenly and littered with large rocks. Ensure you have steady footing before donning fins.

Whaler's Cove provides access to the following points of interest, including the water region Bluefish Cove, which is only accessible from the Whaler's Cove entry and has its own set of points of interest.


WARNING! OpenDiveSites.org is a community-run site. While we do our best to keep information up-to-date, no content on this site should be construed as authoritative, complete, or correct. Scuba or free diving and other aquatic activities are inherently dangerous and can pose a risk of injury or death; the information on this site will not mitigate that. We hope you find our information helpful, but we must never be your sole source of navigational information, awareness of dive conditions, site hazards, or legal restrictions -- it is a repository of community-submitted content, not a divemaster.