Free dig alerts · Washington & Oregon

Razor clam digs, the moment they're approved.

Finals drop a few days out — split across Fish & Wildlife and the Health Department. Miss the post, miss the dig. We watch every official source so you don't have to.

  • Alerts only when a beach is open and toxin-safe
  • The exact low-tide dig window, every time
  • No app, no ads, no spam — just the heads-up
How it works

Three steps. Then you just go dig.

1

Tell us your beaches

Pick the ones you actually dig — Long Beach, Copalis, the Clatsop beaches, wherever you go. WA and OR both covered.

2

We watch the official sources

WDFW and ODFW dig approvals, plus the health departments' marine-toxin tests, checked constantly so nothing slips past.

3

You get the alert

The moment your beach is open and safe — with the low-tide window, so you know exactly when to be on the sand.

Three things have to line up. We track all three.

A beach can be open but closed for toxins. Or safe but on the wrong tide. ClamClock only tells you to go when everything's right.

The season's open

WDFW confirms tentative digs only days ahead, pending toxin tests; Oregon's Clatsop beaches run year-round outside the summer closure. We catch the change the moment it posts.

It's safe to eat

The health departments test for domoic acid and PSP. A beach can be open but unsafe — and cooking doesn't remove the toxin. We read both before we ever say "go."

The tide's right

Razor clamming runs on low — often minus — tides. We pair every dig with its exact low-tide window from NOAA so you time it right.

Why we built this

The razor clam resource we wished existed.

Most razor clam info online is buried in pop-ups and stale data. We're building the opposite: clean, current, genuinely useful guides — and an alert that does the watching for you, so a missed dig never comes down to refreshing a government page at exactly the right minute.

Don't miss the next dig

Free alerts for the Washington and Oregon coast. Sign up once, dig all season.