BOOT 2008

Travels

Finally I found some time to go through the few photos I took at the show.

Some details to start with :

During 9 days 279.000 visitors from 65 countries came to the show this year.
1.699 professionals from 57 countries exposed their latest stuff from luxury yachts to pink coloured fins. This all took place in 17 halls covering 220.000 square meters.

Now you might understand why my feet were hurting at the end of the day!

One of our first stop was at the Indonesian stand where we meet our friends, Jochen and Jeannette from the Selayar dive resort.

selayar

from left to right in the front: Chris, Vicky and me. In the back Jochen, Cathy, Olivier and Jeannette.

We had great fun and almost booked another trip to Selayar!

I had then a VERY important meeting with Klaus, the owner of digital-dive.de. He’s the closest ike dealer to Luxembourg and very helpful . About 10 different people from Luxembourg visited his stand during the day, all saying : I’m one of Mona’s friend.

digital-dive

I for myself held my order in my hands…the 8″dome port for the 7-14mm lens. At that moment I knew I had a major luggage problem.
Crying or Very sad
But Klaus knew where to send us

luggage

Upon Kristin’s request I looked for their stand and we had a great chat with Marcus. Exmouth is definitely on my never ending list…

exmouth


Here’s a aerial view of one part of the diving hall

view

Next year takes place the 40th BOOT from January 17 to 25.

Lembeh, again and differently…

Travels

After only six months I was standing again in Bitung, looking at Lembeh just across the Strait. I was amused by the faces of my friends. We just came from Selayar, a white sandy beach with only one resort. Just perfect! Here they stood in the smelling fish market, wondering if it was a wise decision to trust me. We crossed the Strait and, guess what ? We got soaked right in the middle as rainy downpours are usual in a Lembeh afternoon…

It is a strange feeling to get back to a place such as Lembeh. Six months ago, it took me by surprise. My camera overheated at every dive. I was overwhelmed by all these new critters . Sometimes I couldn’t even figure out what I was looking at. My camera was my logbook. My 100+ photos per dive helped me identifying a great number of critters. I was eager to getting everything on memory card. In the end I still had more than 800 pictures from a week’s stay left. But I realised , that I haven’t thought about how taking out the best of the shot. I just pressed the button…

This time I had something different in mind. But what is a different shot? I watched the critters for a while. Turned around. Figured out different perspectives. Sometimes it worked, many times it didn’t.

clown with eggs
Clownfish protecting its eggs on a green tea can

nudi couple

eye contactI tried to find special perspectives on the common Lembeh critters, nudis are wonderful subjects to try this out. All slow-moving subjects are great to experiment. I tried nevertheless to limit myself to five shots per critter in order to prevent them from becoming completely blind!

Wherever possible I was looking for interaction with the critters as with the cowfish on the left. This little fellow was looking around for food as I was watching him almost motionless (…and breathless). I don’t know why but for a second he looked up at me and then continued on his way.
I was amused to see so many critter couples underwater this time. As always we had one mandarinfish dive. These small fish are wonderful and nearly impossible to photograph . Slowly appearing in the dusk, moving around. Larger males turning around the smaller females or chasing other males from their territory. And then at one moment the firework starts. Males and females join in a two second long mating pose above the corals and then vanish quickly under the rubble. I only kept 2 photos out of 30+…
mandarinWhen I went through my photos after the evening meals, my friends were surprised by the number of photos I deleted right away.
This is until now the most difficult thing to do for me. How selecting which shoot goes to the trash and which one is a keeper?
A life long learning process…
At some moments I nearly fell back into the “papparazzi” modus. As I said I came more or less prepared to Lembeh, but this was without dealing with my “Holy Grails”. I think everybody has a wish list (especially just before Christmas :-), a special critter never encountered before. Most of the time a rare species .
I had the chance to come across a purple Rhinopias. WOW! An overwhelmimg feeling . I really needed a couple of minutes to realise what I was looking at. In these moments my first move was to shoot. But then I stopped, watched what we called later Salvador Dali and took 5 shoots.
The Ambon scorpionfish took me by surprise as well. Well camouflaged it was almost impossible to spot..
I took some pictures with my old compact E-900 to play around with the wide angle wet lens. Unusual in Lembeh, but what a fantastic experience
wide angle

But be reassured I took plenty of “classic” Lembeh subjects. But I’m more than ever in search of the Holy Grail. The picture which makes the difference. A life long search. At least I hope so.
octopus in shell

 

I won’t close this post without at least one photo of the kings of Lembeh : the frogfish!

froggie

Goodbye “Little Red Ship”

Travels

It took me by surprise. The BBC ticker ran on my computer with a heading saying : Tourist ship sinking off Argentina. As I have a strong emotional connection to this part of the world since I’ve been there I checked it out immediately. The Explorer, “the Little Red Ship” was MY boat. I spent two weeks aboard in December 2004/Jabuary2005. I couldn’t really believe it until the first images of a sinking ship were on the net.

explorerI still remember the noise of the ice scatching the boat, the strong winds, the waves. Going through the Drake passage the natural elements remind you at every moment that you have to accept them, live with them. Fighting them is nearly impossible.

I never felt as close to Nature, except underwater.

 

I wrote already about that experince earlier. You are surrounded by strange birds, penguins, unable to fly, taking a close, curious look at you, not frightened at all. In the water they become fast and elegant swimmers.

In the skies large flying birds, such as albatrosses , storm petrels and skuas play in the wind.

icebergEntering the Antartic convergence we came across huge tabular icebergs,deep blue, larger than our boat. The unfortunate sinking of the Explorer reminds us all that after all “Terra Australis Incognita” remains one of the most hostile and unpredictable places on earth. Nowadays more and more ships cruise the Antartic peninsula. Are we aware of being in a environnement never dominated by men? We’ll soon going for a holiday on the moon , so what could happen on earth? We get so much used to control every movement in our life, but a trip down South is not a sunny Sunday afternoon walk.

Another question rises in my mind : how much damage will be done by the sunken Explorer? Leaking problems of the tanks? Hopefully not. A sad ending!

More photos here