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Yes, it is a beautiful place to visit and is good the revisit the summer days right now There would be much more to show but I'll end with few species that were and still are valuable for the NW First Nations people - the salal, Gaultheria shallon and the manzanitas. Plus a sea-flower Gaultheria shallon - an evergreen shrub, 1,5 m to 3 m tall, can form very dense thickets; Salal berries were a staple food for First Nations and important for trade purposes.
Thanks for the extra info Robert; I will wait for you to illustrate the differences with images
Trond - seeing how they look and some with green colour you cannot blame them. Interesting creatures, I don't know if it applies for all species but Anthopleuras have a symbiotic relation with few algae, so there is a bit of a 'plant' to them after all Robert - base camp was using a bathmate in Victoria at not that much time to go around. From that location I understand a trip tp Olympic Mts. is more feasible (maybe in July). Cascades sound very appealing, but I think they would require a separate trip coming directly from Ontario - so much to explore!