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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 5:26 am
by Jan K
Flatfish on the run.
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 09, 2013 8:46 am
by Jan K
Found a moon jelly with six moons... Not unheard of, but first for me :)
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 09, 2013 10:22 am
by Tom Nic
Wow!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 09, 2013 11:12 am
by Desert Diver
Thanks Jan,
I didn't even know why they were "Moon" jellyfish. I appreciate very much what you have taught me. Some of it even sinks in.

Brian

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 09, 2013 9:45 pm
by Jan K
Thanks Tom. Brian, I also learn as I research the subject.
Today, I had to reach out to Whidbey Audubon Society to help ID a Whidbey critter for me :)
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2013 5:49 am
by Tom Nic
Marvelous pictures! What a treat!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2013 10:04 am
by dwashbur
Now I wanna know what anaerobic respiration is, and how I can do it so I can stay under longer, too!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 14, 2013 10:28 am
by Jan K
I observed an interesting hunting strategies by Kelp Greenling.
It was using me as the tool to scare the buried Pacific Sand Lance out of the sand, swimming
along side and then dashing after them, sometimes succeeding in catching the fleeing fish and
always returning back to me. It did it for at least twenty minutes. When I settled and did not move,
it would swim away and by swimming on its side, stirring up the sand with its tail, getting out the
Sand Lance this way. Too bad the visibility wasn't that good, I had a wide angle fish eye lens and
lots of silt in the water column.
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 14, 2013 11:44 am
by LCF
Jan, if there were a Nobel Prize for the person who has amazed, delighted and educated me most in my diving career in the PNW, you would get it . . .

I am simply awed at the last sets of photographs. I have tried and tried to get pictures of the baitfish; I can never get close enough to them to get anything that can actually be recognized. And the couple of times I've been lucky enough to see a fishing bird (cormorants, in my case) I haven't had a camera.

I hope you continue to contribute to this thread forever. It's the most fun diving-related thing on the internet.

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 14, 2013 4:10 pm
by Tom Nic
Awesome!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 14, 2013 5:34 pm
by Jan K
Thank you Lynne, Tom. I am glad that you still enjoy my posts, I keep wondering when
the time will come and I have to say to myself: " Give it up, it all has been done before".
And then I go diving and find myself looking at something I never did before and let
the camera shutter loose again :)
All those dives at Keystone and only one time enveloped in genuine bait ball.
Of course, I went back next two days, the fish were there, but no bait ball formed.
It is indeed the last resort the bait fish defense ... Of course it was at the end of my dive
when the strobe batteries took forever to reboot.
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 14, 2013 6:51 pm
by Nwbrewer
That is an awesome shot!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Thu Aug 15, 2013 7:49 am
by dwashbur
Who cares if you post something that's been done before? Keep them coming!

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Thu Aug 15, 2013 11:08 am
by Paladin4Christ
This is my favorite thread to look at in all the interwebs!!!

The only complaint I have is...I don't see all cool things you see but we are diving in the same places. :angry:

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sat Aug 17, 2013 11:06 am
by Jan K
Slow day on the shores of Whidbey. A piece of dead isopod :eek:
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Mon Aug 19, 2013 2:36 pm
by Jan K
Another hunting encounter. This time the Lingcod did not get its fish.
The flounder kept its cool and stayed buried in the sand and the Ling
was unable to grab it. :neener:
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Tue Aug 20, 2013 8:55 am
by Jan K
I had old macro wet lens laying around, so I jerry-rigged it so it sort of fits on my present
camera housing, so now I venture into the world of tiny critters :)
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Tue Aug 20, 2013 10:43 am
by LCF
LOVE the phoronid picture!

Doesn't it seem a profligate use of energy, to grow such an involved shell for one year of life?

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Wed Aug 21, 2013 9:19 pm
by Jan K
Thank you Lynne.
I sure enjoy my new toy - the wet macro lens. Now the camera sees even more
of my eyes cannot. The joy of point and shoot :)
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 23, 2013 9:36 pm
by Jan K
And added another critter to my list.
A very tiny jellyfish which doesn't like to swim very much.
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Fri Aug 23, 2013 11:59 pm
by renoun
Wow, that is really making the most of your macro lens. How well could you see it without the camera?

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sat Aug 24, 2013 8:34 am
by LCF
Fascinating! It's hard to imagine what a jelly that tiny is doing with information gained from focusing light on a retina, without a brain to build images. The world is indeed an amazing place.

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sun Aug 25, 2013 6:54 am
by Jan K
renoun wrote:Wow, that is really making the most of your macro lens. How well could you see it without the camera?
Once you know what you are looking for, it gets much easier, although the Cladonema are very small,
especially for my aging eyes. Sea stars on other hand, much easier to see :rofl:
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Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Sun Aug 25, 2013 9:34 am
by Paladin4Christ
All I can say is "WOW".

That new lens of yours is amazing.

Re: Whidbey Island Critters

Posted: Mon Aug 26, 2013 9:33 pm
by Jan K
This one is probably not on anybody's "Want to find" list. Not too exciting as far
as critters go. But it is part of our underwater world nevertheless...
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