View allAll Photos Tagged snapper

a close up view of the "hood ornament" turtle head.

At Supreme Lobster and Seafood in Villa Park.

Chicagoist "Around Town", November 12, 2014. chicagoist.com/2014/11/12/around_town_yummy.php#photo-2

Felt a bit dehydrated...stopped for some refreshment.

snapper i cooked fresh from victoria market melbourne.

Everybody likes to surf the most popular surf breaks. It can get a little crowded!

The trackbed of the Lynton & Barnstaple Railway looking towards Barnstaple from the site of Snapper Halt. 22nd September 2022.

 

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This huge shoal of Blue Striped Snappers is always here in the current at Kuda Rah Thila......a spectacular site. Picture smoothed out with a little help from Topaz Labs.

 

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To view the rest of my Photography Collection click on Link below:

www.flickr.com/photos/nevillewootton/sets

 

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Photography & Equipment sponsored by my web business:

www.inlinefilters.co.uk

 

We are UK's leading Filter Specialists, selling online to the Plant, Agricultural, Commercial Vehicle and Marine Industries.

 

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PLEASE NOTE: I take Photographs purely as a hobby these days so am happy to share them with anyone who enjoys them or has a use for them. If you do use them an accreditation would be nice and if you benefit from them financially a donation to www.bluepeacemaldives.org would be really nice.

 

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Bluestripe snapper (Lutjanus kasmira). Also known as the bluestripe sea perch. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluestripe_snapper. Photograph taken whilst snorkelling on the housereef of the island of Vilamendhoo, The Maldives.

Helpers (snappers according to the PRR) are shoving hard on the rear of an eastbound mixed freight at Cassandra, PA on September 4, 2016.

Mamiya Super 23, Fuji Neopan 400

Grey Snapper, Lutjanus griseus, 102 mm TL. Chesapeake Bay, mouth of Rhode River, Anne Arundel County, MD - 10/18/18. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.

General Cargo Ship HAV SNAPPER passing Schacht-Audorf / Kiel Canal eastbound with destination Muuga | Photo: 28.09.2015 | © Hans-Wilhelm Delfs, Kiel

IMO 9001813 | MMSI 311014800 | Flag: Bahamas/Nassau | Call-Sign: C6XN4 | Class.: DNV-GL |

GT 1961 | NT 964 | dwt 2767 | Grain 4006 m³ | TEU 158 |

Loa 88,16 m | Lpp 84,72 m | Beam 12,50 m | Draught 4,607 m | Depth 6,50 m |

Engine : Deutz MWM Motoren-Werke, Mannheim AG; Model SBV 6 M 628 – 1387 BHP - 1020 kW – 10,5 kn

Shipbuilder: hull: Gdanska Stocznia 'Remontawa' S.A., Danzig, Polen -

outfitting: B.V. Scheepswerf Damen, Gorinchem, Netherland

– Yard No. 8244 – keel laid 17.08.1990 - launch date 10.01.1991 - delivery 01.06.1991 |

Owner: Hav Bulk AS, Raadal/Norway – Manager: Hav Ship Management NorRus AS, Kaliningrad/Russia |

Historical data:

HAV SNAPPER (2009-xxxx)

ex WALZBERG (2002-2009)

ex GROOTHUSEN (1996-2002)

ex SAAR LONDON (1991-1996)

ex REX (1991-1991)

 

The Beloit Snappers are a Single A minor league baseball (MILB) team playing out of Beloit, Wisconsin. The Snappers are affiliated with Major League ball club the Oakland Athletics. The Beloit Snappers are in the western division of the Midwest League. The Snappers have produced many major league ballplayers through their system including Tony Gwynn Jr., Matt Garza, Jeoff Jenkins and many more. The Snappers organization is planning on building a new ballpark off of Interstate 90. The Snappers have been playing in Beloit for 35 years.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beloit_Snappers

Official Site.. www.milb.com/index.jsp?sid=t554

Mobile snapper at Piccadilly Circus 4th Feb 2012 just as the snow started to arrive.

 

I don't know what this chap was trying to capture on his mobile phone photographic device, but I believe that my 30s exposure caputured the more interesting image.

We found this snapping turtle crawling through a grassy ditch towards Palmer Boulevard, away from the Celery Fields wetlands. It may have been a female seeking a nest site. It had a rather placid disposition, but then again, we were not harassing it or approaching too closely. A few minutes later we realized that a county employee on a tractor was mowing the grass between the sidewalk and road pavement. Presumably he saw the turtle and mowed around it because after we completed the 3-4-mile loop and were walking back to our car, the turtle was no where to be seen. We had seen a large dead turtle on the banks of drainage canal, but we'd like to think this individual survived for another day (but I can't help but think of the turtle-and-highway scene in "Grapes of Wrath.")

Sarasota, FL (10 February, 2021)

Whitehaven Snappers raised £350 for the Great North Air Ambulance with their charity calendar featuring Snappers' photos of West Cumbria. Snapper Alan Cleaver is pictured with Jan Hawkins of the GNAA and Andrew Tang of Fotomax, Whitehaven. Andrew printed and sold the calendars.

Catalina Festival - Rathmines NSW

A small snapping turtle was hanging about at the boardwalk where people throw food to the fishes. This is territory of a big snapping turtle who wasn't visible when the small one turned up. The small turtle was about 10 inches across it's shell, the big one about 18 inches across.

 

The small turtle was happily chasing after a piece of bread when he ventured too close the the big turtle. The big turtle attacked him, grabbing him with his front legs and biting him at what appeared to be the base of his neck on his underside.

 

In the picture above (the best I could get through the murky waters) the bright spot to the left is the little turtle's mouth, tongue out in apparent agony. The small turtle is on his side/upside down at the bottom of the image, with the big turtle's leg over the top of him. The big turtle's face is buried in the small turtle's belly/neck.

 

They stayed like this for about a minute, then the big turtle let go, the small one took off and there was a chase.

 

Don't know if the little one made it or not. Hope so.

The yellowtail snapper, Ocyurus chrysurus, is an abundant species of snapper found along the North American coast of the Atlantic Ocean. Although they have been found as far north as Massachusetts, their normal range is along Florida down through the West Indies and Brazil.

 

In certain reefs, most notably in the Florida Keys, this beautifully colored fish is commonly spotted among divers and snorkelers. The yellow tailed snapper is also a popular and abundant game fish that makes excellent table fare. Yellowtail feed on shrimp, crabs, worms and smaller fish. They spawn in groups off the edge of reefs from spring to fall, but heavily in midsummer.

 

Yellowtail snapper are typically caught in 30-120 feet of water on and around reefs and other structure. The most common method of catching yellowtail snapper is with hook and line; and the use of frozen chum to attract the fish. The chum used to attract yellowtail is typically a five pound block of leftover fish parts that is ground and then frozen in to blocks. The chum is placed in to a mesh bag or metal basket that is then placed in to the water, and as the chum slowly melts, small pieces of fish will drift out and down towards the bottom, where the yellowtail typically feed. The chum attracts the fish, and keeps them near the boat for extended periods of time as well.

 

Light tackle is the generally accepted means of catching yellowtail snapper. Typically, the fish are relatively wary of higher-test or thicker line, and larger hooks. Most fish caught by anglers range from eight inches to thirteen or fourteen inches, although catches to sixteen inches are not uncommon. Catches larger than seventeen inches are uncommon, and catches over twenty inches are generally considered rare. Yellowtail snapper can be caught on a variety of bait, including both live and frozen shrimp, squid, and a variety of live and frozen minnows or smaller baitfish. Yellowtail snapper can be caught on artificial baits and lures, but live or frozen bait is generally preferred. Yellowtail tend to be wary fish, and the appearance of larger fish, such as dolphins or sharks can scare off schools of yellowtail snapper until the offender leaves the area.

 

Most anglers pursue yellowtail snapper during the warmer months, but they can be caught throughout the year. Yellowtail must be 12" in overall length to be harvested in most areas, and bag limits apply in most regions. Yellowtail snapper is highly prized for its light, flaky meat and is considered by some to be one of, if not the best of the snapper family.

 

New York Aquarium Coney Island NY

Surf rolling in at Dawn- Snapper Rocks

mmm..very nice ! Is there any bread ?. No sir. Oh dear, is this all there is. Can you believe I had to order chips to fill up on. A bit of an insult to this culinary work of art, but a drunk guy's gotta eat.

Snapper Rocks at Tweed Heads - local Bundjalung Aboriginal man celebrates his proud indigenous heritage by blessing the surf by playing his didgeridoo while overlooking the crashing waves that sweep over the rocky coastline.

Personally I thought the view of York Minster was better but there you go.

it was raining up at scone today so i gave myself the day off and so while i was up that early in the morning i thought i'd take my camera for a drive to snapper point..

there wasn't much colour in the sky but the rock formations around this place always look good through the lens and the colour of the water looks unreal, i actually desaturated the water in this image..

Coolangatta Queensland

For our 2 year anniversary, we went to Bizzarro!

 

www.bizzarroitaliancafe.com

 

This red snapper came with a creamy polenta and a salad of fennel, grapefruit, red onion and some green leaf...couldn't place it.

A denizen of the deep, taking in near darkness

The yellowtail snapper, Ocyurus chrysurus, is an abundant species of snapper found along the North American coast of the Atlantic Ocean. Although they have been found as far north as Massachusetts, their normal range is along Florida down through the West Indies and Brazil.

 

In certain reefs, most notably in the Florida Keys, this beautifully colored fish is commonly spotted among divers and snorkelers. The yellow tailed snapper is also a popular and abundant game fish that makes excellent table fare. Yellowtail feed on shrimp, crabs, worms and smaller fish. They spawn in groups off the edge of reefs from spring to fall, but heavily in midsummer.

 

Yellowtail snapper are typically caught in 30-120 feet of water on and around reefs and other structure. The most common method of catching yellowtail snapper is with hook and line; and the use of frozen chum to attract the fish. The chum used to attract yellowtail is typically a five pound block of leftover fish parts that is ground and then frozen in to blocks. The chum is placed in to a mesh bag or metal basket that is then placed in to the water, and as the chum slowly melts, small pieces of fish will drift out and down towards the bottom, where the yellowtail typically feed. The chum attracts the fish, and keeps them near the boat for extended periods of time as well.

 

Light tackle is the generally accepted means of catching yellowtail snapper. Typically, the fish are relatively wary of higher-test or thicker line, and larger hooks. Most fish caught by anglers range from eight inches to thirteen or fourteen inches, although catches to sixteen inches are not uncommon. Catches larger than seventeen inches are uncommon, and catches over twenty inches are generally considered rare. Yellowtail snapper can be caught on a variety of bait, including both live and frozen shrimp, squid, and a variety of live and frozen minnows or smaller baitfish. Yellowtail snapper can be caught on artificial baits and lures, but live or frozen bait is generally preferred. Yellowtail tend to be wary fish, and the appearance of larger fish, such as dolphins or sharks can scare off schools of yellowtail snapper until the offender leaves the area.

 

Most anglers pursue yellowtail snapper during the warmer months, but they can be caught throughout the year. Yellowtail must be 12" in overall length to be harvested in most areas, and bag limits apply in most regions. Yellowtail snapper is highly prized for its light, flaky meat and is considered by some to be one of, if not the best of the snapper family.

 

New York Aquarium Coney Island NY

Single exposure; snapper in the foreground and manta in back. Kona Coast, Hawaii Island, Hawaii

Lane snapper from "the creek" Trinidad

 

Photo Comp 2011 - 195. Photo by Tess McCormick for Our People - Out East.

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