Where it is
Get the general Oyster River orientation before you plan parking, access, or swimming.
Start with locationClear water, smooth rock bowls, forest shade, and a few important things to know before you go. This guide helps you plan a safe, respectful visit to the Oyster River Potholes near the Campbell River and Comox Valley side of Vancouver Island.
Temporary visual treatment. Replace this with real Oyster River photos once you have them.
Think of this as a river spot first and a swimming spot second.
I was born and raised on Vancouver Island and frequent the Oyster River Potholes often each year, so this guide is written with the same practical local mindset as a favourite beach or trail guide: enjoy the place, but do not treat it carelessly.
The Oyster River Potholes are beautiful, but they are not the same as a lifeguarded public pool or a full-service beach. Water levels can change, rocks can be slippery, and some access areas are close to residential roads, private land, or rougher terrain.
The best visit is simple: go during calm conditions, wear good footwear, pack out everything you bring in, avoid blocking roads or gates, and turn around if the river feels too fast, too cold, or too uncertain.
These links are meant for simple orientation. Confirm current access, parking, and signs before you commit to a stop.
Start with the practical questions first: how to get there, when to go, what the swimming is like, and how to visit without creating problems for the river or nearby residents.
Get the general Oyster River orientation before you plan parking, access, or swimming.
Start with locationUnderstand the general location, parking reality, access notes, and why signs and private property matter.
Read the access guideLearn what makes the potholes appealing, what conditions to watch for, and why river swimming needs extra caution.
Read the swimming guideReview slippery rocks, cold water, changing levels, footwear, family considerations, and safer decision-making around the river.
Read safety tipsSee how the commonly discussed lower and upper potholes differ, including access, scenery, and caution.
Compare the areasSummer can be inviting for swimming, while shoulder seasons may be better for photos and quieter forest walks.
Choose your timingA small packing list makes a big difference: sturdy shoes, water, sun protection, layers, and a bag for garbage.
See the packing listCompare camping, cabins, hotels, and town bases before you build a bigger Vancouver Island trip around the area.
Compare stay optionsThe potholes are known for clear water and rounded rock bowls. That is the beauty of the spot, but it is also why the site needs to be safety-first.
The water and rock shapes can look calm in photos, especially on sunny summer days. In real life, the experience depends on recent rain, current, water temperature, footing, and how busy the area is when you arrive.
This site should help visitors make better choices without encouraging trespassing, risky shortcuts, or careless use of a natural area.
Each page answers a specific visitor question and links naturally to the next part of the plan.
Plan around close supervision, dog control, cold water, and whether the potholes fit the least experienced person in your group.
Pair the potholes with beaches, parks, Campbell River, the Comox Valley, or Bear Creek Nature Park so you always have a backup.
Use the built-in photo checklist to replace temporary visuals with real river, access, and nearby-area images.
Keep the site helpful without turning a sensitive river area into a careless traffic, garbage, or trespassing problem.
The potholes can connect naturally with nearby beaches, trails, parks, and Campbell River or Comox Valley stops.
Good nearby coastal stops for a quieter walk, picnic, or beach-focused day.
Plan beach backupsA nearby nature-park page gives the site stronger official park context and a quieter option when the river is not right.
Explore Bear CreekUseful food, fuel, town, trail, and route context for people planning from either direction.
See local stopsMiracle Beach, Saratoga Beach, and coastal backups make the day easier if the river is not right.
Compare nearby beachesA Campbell River waterfall and forest-trail add-on for a more established park experience.
Plan the Elk Falls add-onCamping, cabins, hotels, and town-base advice for visitors turning the area into a weekend.
Find a nearby baseLearn why the site is written as a local, safety-first guide instead of a careless shortcut list.
Read the site note