The West Wind Drift feeds both the California and
Alaska Currents, providing a pathway for exchange between the subarctic
and subtropical gyres. Its bifurcation at the eastern boundary is known
qualitatively but not particularly quantitatively. The relative
proportions of waters returning poleward and those continuing
equatorward is a matter of speculation due to a relatively sparse
observational base incapable of resolving the space-time structure of
the eastern boundary current formation. Seasonal and interannual
changes in stratification in a broad region off the Pacific Northwest
coast are recognized, but their causes and links to flow variation are
largely unknown. Seagliders will operate year-round, occupying repeated
hydrographic sections across the northern reaches of the California
Current system. These measurements will characterize the seasonal
evolution of the eastern boundary current system off the Washington
coast.