Tag: underwater

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Shark Diving

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Shark Diving

    My favorite dive from our entire trip was the Caribbean reef shark feed. It was the perfect Valentine’s Day gift from my husband! We dove with Stuart Cove’s, a dive operator known both for Bahamas shark diving and the underwater production of many major Hollywood films, such as Flipper, Jaws: The Revenge, Into the Blue,…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: More Tropical Fish (and other critters)

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: More Tropical Fish (and other critters)

      Barracuda hunt primarily by sight, and are therefore sometimes attracted to shiny objects, as they might resemble the scales of prey fish.  I’ve sometimes had barracuda follow my camera around, presumably because they were interested in the flashes of light from my strobes. This was not one such fish. It wanted nothing to do…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Tropical Fish

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Tropical Fish

      Just a few of the tropical fish we saw in the Bahamas…   Gray Angelfish:   Trumpetfish:   Pufferfish:     Parrotfish:   Please check out my entire Nassau underwater photo gallery here.

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Sea Turtle

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Sea Turtle

      If I had to characterize the diving in the Bahamas with one word, it would be… “big.” It seems like everything underwater there is big. Unlike, say, Curacao, where the vast majority of sea life is tiny and to be found within the crevices of the coral reef, the marine life of the Bahamas…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Grouper

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Grouper

    I like groupers for three reasons. 1. They’re pretty scary-looking. 2. They’re easy to photograph. Groupers are relatively territorial and sedentary, and a fish that stays in one place is a fish that’s more likely to star in a “keeper” photo. The infamous fleeing “fish butt” photo is no fun at all.     3.…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Southern Stingray

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Southern Stingray

      On our descent into the Sea Viking/Mike’s Reef site in New Providence, Mat spotted this huge southern stingray, about 3-4′ across. I got right in its face with my fisheye lens.   Feeling the need for a sense of scale, I motioned for him to come over into the frame…   … but apparently…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Wrecks of the Steel Forest

      The Steel Forest is a set of three wrecks that were scuttled between 1997 and 2002. They orient to form a triangle on the sandy bottom in 40-120′ of water, right on the edge of the Tongue of the Ocean, a 6000′-deep ocean trench.     The “fake hand on/under a wreck” thing seems…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Wrecks of the Willaurie and Anthony Bell

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Wrecks of the Willaurie and Anthony Bell

    Anthony Bell Wreck The Anthony Bell is an old 90′ Bahamian tugboat. She was scuttled by Stuart Cove’s to create an artificial reef. Prior to sinking, Anthony Bell was meticulously stripped to make the wreck safer for divers.   Rusting metal still poses a hazard, however, as do some of the inhabitants of the artificial reef, such…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Twin Sisters Wrecks

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: Twin Sisters Wrecks

    One of the first dive sites on our Nassau trip was called Twin Sisters. These two smallish oil tankers were donated by Shell and sunk in 2000 to create an artificial reef. They sit in about 80′ of water.   We were the first off the dive boat, so we decided to get into the…

  • Diving the California Oil Rigs, Part 3

    Diving the California Oil Rigs, Part 3

    (See Diving the California Oil Rigs, Part 1 and Diving the California Oil Rigs, Part 2) Above is a male sheephead, a common game fish in California, and below are a pair of females. Fun fact: all sheephead are born female, and eventually change to males later in life.   Here’s a Lingcod:   A scorpionfish:…

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