Scuba anyone?
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@goosehd I've updated the post 2 & 3 are fish. 1 is a Nudibranch which means naked lung. The family is massive and it is a delight to find new ones (to us)….
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30 years ago…I had just started dating Laura, lived in Ottawa Canada and had friends who just returned from Baltimore, Maryland. They had brought back some blue crabs for a big feast and invited me. I phoned Laura to invite her to come along and asked her "have you ever had crabs"....still laugh about that one today.
...note: probably not a good question to ask someone who you've just started dating....
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Ha….
About 25 years ago when I was in corporate life, I went to some sort of business seminar. I sat down next to some random guy. As I settled down, he leant over a whispered in my ear, "Got rid of those crabs yet Giies?".......
Turns out he was my roommate for my first year at Uni, we had not kept in touch, but he sure did remember my travails....
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None of them mine of course
Harlequin Shrimp (about 1cm carapace)….
Mantis Shrimp, my favourite reef-thug. One of them hit my pointer stick yesterday and I felt the jolt, and the things are no more than 3" long….
Factoid (stolen from the web).....A mantis punch arrives with the acceleration of a . 22-caliber bullet, 50 times faster than a human eye can blink. Underwater, the low pressure bubble left in the wake of the punch collapses upon itself in a burst of light and heat, reaching an estimated 8,500 degrees Fahrenheit.
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I know that you didn’t take them but as someone who has ,at times,attempted underwater photography, I know how difficult it is. For starters the fish aren’t exactly posing, and your operating under water in a current. Add that to maintaining neutral buoyancy etc. And the list goes on.
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Badass shots! Mantis “shrimps” also have hyper spectral vision and independent eyes in addition to the cavitation bubble claw. Amazing creatures.
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independent eyes
I love watching them from above when they are in their burrows. Their eyes moving completely out of sync fascinates me…..