Category: Nature
While we’re on the subject of ducks… Here are a few shots of a pair of Harlequin Ducks I managed to photograph at Keystone Jetty on Whidbey Island. I had seen a post that someone else saw them there and figured I would try getting…
More from the archives… These shots of Green-winged Teals are from a visit to Arcata Marshes during my trip through California.
Recently I’ve seen a few of these White-and-Orange Tipped Nudibranchs (Janolus fusca). In the past the few times I have seen these guys, they’ve been smaller and scrunched up so it was hard to even tell where their rhinophores are, but these couple I’ve been…
I haven’t been able to get an ID on these worms, but I’ve been seeing them fairly regularly on a number of my dives in the Puget Sound and Hood Canal. Some of them are rather long, ranging up to 6-10 inches (it is hard…
Since I shared more Stubby Squids, let’s look at some more Pacific Red Octos (Octopus rubescens), including a quick video taken by Randy Williams from Washington Scuba Alliance after our trash cleanup dive (I’m the one holding the octo). It was a good thing I…
Some more Stubby Squid (Rossia pacifica) shots showing off the color range of these little bobtail squids… They tend to be the reddish color most of the time but will show that white color when scared – the iridescence when they show the lighter color…
I don’t see these as often as I would like, but the Northern Opalescent Nudibranchs (Hermissenda crassicornis) are quite pretty…
Dipping into the archives a bit to share some remaining photos from my Madagascar collection. I wouldn’t mind visiting there again some day, such a unique place.
Just a couple photos from the Pacific Northwest diving that I converted to black and white… I should probably do some like this more often…
On our drive down to Monterey, Ashley mentioned that she and Jake had done a dive on the Smith River outside of Crescent City, CA as a spot called the Slant River Bridge. We thought about trying to stop and hit the dive on the…
I’ve seen a few of these Red Scale Worms on a couple different nudibranchs recently. From what I can find, it looks like they are a commensal worm, which is somewhere between a symbiotic relationship and a parasite… a commensal organism benefits from its host…
I have only seen a few of these in my diving in the Pacific Northwest, and until recently the ones I have seen have been is really difficult spots to try and get a decent photo… which is a shame, becuase these little guys are…