Map the general area
Use these as general orientation links, not as permission to park, cross private land, or ignore posted signs.
General area
The Oyster River Potholes are associated with the Oyster River area on the east side of Vancouver Island. For planning purposes, think of the area as sitting between Campbell River to the north and the Comox Valley communities to the south. This helps visitors understand the regional context without relying on one social-media pin or an old comment thread.
Nearby communities
Visitors often plan from Campbell River, Courtenay, Comox, Black Creek, Saratoga Beach, Miracle Beach, or other east Vancouver Island stops. Those nearby names are useful when you are building a day trip, checking road timing, or choosing backup stops if the river area is too busy or conditions are not right.
The site should keep linking visitors toward backup ideas, because that makes the guide more helpful and reduces pressure on one small river access area.
Location names can be confusing
People use the name Oyster River Potholes in slightly different ways. Some are talking about lower swimming-hole style access. Others are talking about upper potholes, forested river areas, or rougher approaches. To keep the guide useful, the site separates location, access, parking, swimming, and upper-vs-lower guidance into different pages.
Planning notes before you go
A good visit starts before you leave home. Check weather, avoid high-water or stormy conditions, bring footwear that can handle uneven ground, and make sure everyone in the group understands that this is a natural river setting, not a managed swimming facility.
This page answers the most basic visitor question first, then points to the more specific guides for parking, access, swimming, safety, and nearby alternatives.
Search carefully before you drive
Oyster River is a real community and river area, not a single signed attraction with one obvious entrance. Before leaving, compare your map, the general route, current access information, and any posted signs you encounter. Do not assume that every pin, social media caption, or old blog comment points to a public place to park or walk.
This page uses the names people commonly use when planning a trip, including Oyster River Potholes, Oyster River swimming holes, Black Creek river spots, Campbell River day trips, and Comox Valley swimming spots. The goal is not to expose private access or send visitors into confusing areas. The goal is to help people understand the broad location, plan respectfully, and choose a safer backup if the river is not the right fit.