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  • An excursion to the Puget Sound shoreline never disappoints, especially during the extreme low tides that usually happen around the summer and winter solstice.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Extreme low tide and new discoveries
  • Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach is a monolithic rock next to the beach. Tide pools around the rock support many intertidal animals, including starfish and sea anemones. The smaller formations next to Haystack are names the "The Needles." (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Sunset at Cannon Beach
  • West Seattle beachcombers take advantage of a noon-time low tide to explore the tide pools near Duwamish Head.  (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    West Seattle beachcombers
  • At low tide near Haystack Rock, vivid sea anemones blossom. (Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times)
    Oregon coast sea anemones
  • The edge of the earth. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times)
    La Push
  • Haystack Rock in Cannon Beach is protected as an Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge and Marine Garden. (Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times)
    Haystack Rock in Cannon Beach
  • Sea life like this Pacific Blood Star is on brilliant display at low tide as tide pools form at Point of the Arches at Shi Shi Beach on the Olympic Peninsula.<br />
(Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Sea Star on the beach
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