I’ve posted some photos recently from the shark and cenote dives. Now here are some photos from our reef dive.
Reef Dives
I’ve posted some photos recently from the shark and cenote dives. Now here are some photos from our reef dive.
I’ve posted some photos recently from the shark and cenote dives. Now here are some photos from our reef dive.
I captured a ton of photos when Jay and I visited Detroit last year. And I’ve probably processed about 20% of them so far. Heck, I am still processing photos from my 2013 San Francisco trip. Each HDR photo takes me between 20 minutes to 1 hour to process. So I can’t zip through my photos and I also get bored processing to many from the same trip in a row. Therefore, I hop back and forth between trips. These factors create two situations:
1. It takes me a while to finish processing each trip.
2. Since I hop all over when I am processing photos, I also post pictures from my trips out of order.
Some people might think I’m not efficient. I like to think my method helps keep my processing fresh (I don’t get bored and stale) and I don’t post to many photos in a row from the same area/topic.
So all that was to help explain why tonight I randomly posted a picture of a fish graffiti scene that I took in Detroit.
I have two unusual pictures for you today from my recent
vacation. I love to scuba dive and try to do it every chance I get, but I don’t post many underwater
photos. During the trip, I got a
chance to dive in St. Kitts and St. Lucia. Both locations were great, but I preferred the diving in St.
Lucia. That being said, I captured
two unique photos from my St. Kitts dives. I got photos of two different types of Scorpionfish.
I don’t know the specific name of this type of Scorpionfish. They are extremely hard to find because they sit on the bottom or in coral for hours without moving. They hide very well waiting for fish to swim by for them to eat. I actually didn’t see this one, the dive guide pointed it out to me. They are extremely dangerous if you touch them due to the poison they have on them. They are not aggressive so you can get close to look at them, but you don’t want to touch them.
The second one is a Lionfish, which is also from the Scorpionfish family. Unfortunately, this type of fish isn’t supposed to be in the Caribbean, but it’s becoming a very common thing. These fish have been released into the Caribbean from individuals who had them in their fish tanks. The Lionfish has no natural enemy in this area and they kill a massive amount of other fish. They are spreading like crazy and hurt the normal caribbean fish to the point they are going to threaten the natural order of things.
Lionfish - part of the Scorpionfish family
Here are two link to a few past diving photos in my blog:
I also posted a few Great White Shark pictures in the past in my Picture Gallery