Tag: underwater

  • The California Kelp Forest

    The California Kelp Forest

    My diving career so far has been rich with travel. I have dove all over the tropical blue waters of the Caribbean and the untouched oceans of Fiji. I’ve seen the exotic Antarctic sea creatures that migrate north to the temperate waters of Sydney, Australia, swam with the seals in the Isles of Shoals off…

  • Nudibranchs: The Sea Lemon

    Nudibranchs: The Sea Lemon

    Anisodoris nobilis, or the noble dorid nudibranch, is also known as the sea lemon. This name is not only attributable to its yellow color, but apparently also to a citrusy smell it can give off when it is handled. Unlike many tinier nudibranchs, the sea lemon can reach up to around five inches in length.…

  • Nudibranchs: Dendronotus albus

    Nudibranchs: Dendronotus albus

    Here’s yet another nudibranch that lives in the southern California waters, Dendronotus albus. As usual, this one is very tiny–only about an inch long.

  • Nudibranchs: Hermissenda crassicornis

    Nudibranchs: Hermissenda crassicornis

    Another cool nudibranch in southern California is the opalescent sea slug: Hermissenda crassicornis. I think the small one might be a Flabellina pricei but I’m not 100% certain.

  • Nice to Meet You

    Nice to Meet You

    Spotted underwater at the La Jolla Shores: a graceful crab and a sand dollar getting to know one another.

  • Nudibranchs: Spanish Shawl Nudibranch

    Nudibranchs: Spanish Shawl Nudibranch

    After more than a month out of the water, and two months out of the cold California water, I finally got to go diving again! We spent the weekend on the Horizon dive boat diving San Clemente Island and the kelp beds of Point Loma, San Diego. I saw lots of sea lions and a…

  • San Diego, California: The Running of the Squid

    San Diego, California: The Running of the Squid

    2011’s market squid run was one of the most incredible phenomena I have ever experienced while diving. Every year, tens of thousands of these foot-long squid congregate to mate, lay eggs, and die. The water was thick with San Diego squid–visibility was limited not by particulate in the water column, but by the density of…

  • California Diving: Sharks and Rays

    California Diving: Sharks and Rays

    We’re headed back to San Diego in just a few short, hectic days. There are friends to see and things to pack, and of course there is cleaning to do… and whereas I miss our Killington friends dearly when we are away, I can’t wait to get back in the water. Going through old photos…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: David Tucker Wreck and the Hollywood Bowl

      Our last dive day in Nassau brought sunny, tropical weather once again. However, the ocean had not yet recovered from the storm, and strong currents, coupled with compromised visibility, made diving a little bit difficult. The David Tucker was donated by the Royal Bahamas Defense Force to become an artificial reef. It sits in…

  • Diving Nassau, Bahamas: The BBC Wreck

    Diving Nassau, Bahamas: The BBC Wreck

    Bahamas BBC Wreck In September of 2007, the BBC, with assistance from Stuart Cove’s, purchased and scuttled an old tugboat to study the colonization of artificial reefs for their series “Life.” A contest was held to name the boat, and the winners (a couple from Arizona) won a chance to dive on the newly-sunk wreck,…

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