View allAll Photos Tagged DIVE
Early on in the evening for our midnight sun/iceberg cruise in Greenland. A few sightings of majestic humpback whales - none breeching for us that evening- but a few flicking their tails when they dive down to deeper water.
Following the watery theme from Saturday this is the shape made by a Grebe diving beneath the water and me not having a fast enough shutter speed to freeze the movement. However, I rather liked the blurry plop!
Heavy rain again this morning and overnight and a cold freeze coming for the week. The roads are nuts as everyone decides to behave badly in the rain- sigh!
Am listening to some of the Big Weekend of Books on Radio National this last weekend. www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/big-weekend-of-book...
Each year we have an event in Ramona CA called the "Hawk Watch." It is a preservation and educational show exhibiting Raptors that either are injured and cannot be re-introduced into the wild or have been raised in captivity and imprinted on man and cannot fend for themselves. This is one that was in a dive and I was very fortunate to capture this image. ****This image was purchased by a band for their latest “album and cover” untitled, you guessed it.. “Hawk Dive” The bands name is “Omega Tones” Quit honoring for me!****
As always I appreciate any and all comments on my work.
Hope you all are having a wonderful weekend.
Negril, Jamaica.
- Many people jump off the 27 feet cliff and swim in the beautiful clear Carribean ocean water at Rick's Cafe. Negril is located on the west end of Jamaica.
- Beaucoup de gens sautent de cette falaise de 8 mètres pour se baigner dans la belle eau claire de la Mer des Caraïbes au Rick's Cafe. Negril est situé à l'extrémité ouest de la Jamaïque.
- Muchas personas saltar desde el acantilado de 8 metros y nadar en el hermoso claro agua del mar Caribe en el Rick's Cafe. Negril está situado en el extremo oeste de Jamaica.
Osprey diving for lunch in the Atlantic Ocean at Crescent Beach, Florida. Another severe crop of a really long shot.
Vrahati, Greece
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I caught this Osprey hovering just before it initiated the dive but despite my anticipation, I misjudged its incredible speed as it accelerated toward the water and so missed the moment of contact. Small consolation, it missed the fish. Sometimes, that's the way it goes on Horsepen Bayou.
Pelican diving on fish at low tide in the harbor at Moss Landing. I was driving along when I saw lots of pelicans diving, so I whipped my Jeep off the road and started shooting.
On our last night in Longboat Key, Florida, we just grabbed our cameras and walked down the beach. We had so much fun taking pictures of these Brown Pelicans fishing.
Australian Pied Cormorants (Phalacrocorax varius)
about to go for a dive.
Olympus Stylus 1
Sincere thanks for your views, faves and comments.
- Credits -
Outfit: THIRST - Swim Set @ The Men's Dept
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Social - Twitter
“The voice was at once the night and the dawn and the stars and the earth, and every inch of my body calmed at the primal dominance in it.”
― Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury
Location: Sunny’s Photo Studio
Pose: Look at me!
LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sunny%20Photo%20Studio/99/...
I know I've already shared a bunch of Pelican pics, but this one turned out well, so I thought I'd share it too.
DST starts at 02:00 tomorrow (which instantly becomes 03:00).
Magical ;-)
A day out photographing Kingfishers. Weather was nice but light variable.
Another dive from one of the 2 male Kingfishers that were visiting this spot.
Images best viewed in "lights out" L key
Here are Darlene and I helmet diving a few miles off the coast of Somerset, Bermuda. The hog fish (Lachnolaimus maximus) is Charles. Hog fish are sequential hermaphrodites, meaning they change gender during their life.
Tenuous Link: helmets
The Diving Bell, designed by Bindon Blood Stoney (1828 to 1907) , lovingly restored & recently refurbished, stands proudly illuminating Sir John Rogersons Quay, a remarkable feet of engineering during the Victorian era & used extensively in Dublin Port excavating the seabed.
Its only right that it now stands tall on Sir John Rogerson's Quay, which was constructed under the supervision of Bindon Blood Stoney, along with O'Connell Bridge.