Plan Gods Pocket Marine Park near Port Hardy with cold-water diving, Browning Pass boating, wildlife viewing, anchorage notes, and no facilities.
God’s Pocket Marine Park protects a cluster of islands about 10 kilometres northwest of Port Hardy on Goletas Channel. BC Parks identifies Hurst, Bell, Boyle, and Crane islands, plus the Browning Pass area, as the core setting for this remote marine park.
The park is known for cold-water scuba diving, sheltered anchorages, boating, fishing, and wildlife viewing.
Why Visit God’s Pocket Marine Park
God’s Pocket Marine Park is for capable marine visitors who want island scenery and access to one of the coast’s notable diving areas. BC Parks describes Browning Pass as an outstanding cold-water scuba diving destination, with rich marine life and underwater terrain drawing divers to the park.
Above the water, boaters can plan around protected anchorages, island shorelines, fishing opportunities, and wildlife observation. The official page notes seabird colony and bald eagle habitat, making the park appealing to visitors who are content to move slowly and watch the coast.
This is not a developed campground or beach park. BC Parks lists no facilities, no designated campsites, no developed trails, and no designated swimming areas. Access is by boat or floatplane, with a nearby lodge outside the park providing a landmark for some travellers.
Things To Do
Plan around scuba diving, boating, kayaking or small-craft touring when conditions allow, wildlife and seabird viewing, anchoring, saltwater fishing for species such as salmon, halibut, and rockfish, and quiet island photography.
Planning Notes
Bring drinking water, portable stoves, marine charts, and full safety gear. Check weather, tides, and fisheries rules before travel. Treat archaeological sites with care and avoid relying on any park facilities once inside the marine park.