Category: Macro

  • Melibe leonina nudibranchs are weird and awesome

    Melibe leonina nudibranchs are weird and awesome

    Nudibranchs never cease to amaze me. Just when I think I’ve had enough nudibranchs for, like, ever, a new one I’ve never seen before comes along and voilà, instant nudibranch love affair all over again. I’d seen the Melibe leonina nudibranch in photos but never in the flesh (in the slime?). Then we went for a shore…

  • The Sea of Cortez is Riddled with Nudibranchs

    The Sea of Cortez is Riddled with Nudibranchs

    Being the kiss of death that I am when it comes to dive trips and good conditions, I shouldn’t have been surprised when we arrived in the Sea of Cortez to find cold, green, murky, Socal-esque water. For months prior to the trip, I entertained fantasies of seeing whale sharks, hammerhead sharks, orcas, manta rays,…

  • New-dibranch: Acanthodoris rhodoceras

    New-dibranch: Acanthodoris rhodoceras

    I love finding new critters I’ve never seen before. Sunday, Mat spotted this adorable tiny nudibranch in about 100 feet of water. We were diving off the Pacific Star near Blue Cavern on Catalina Island. It was a brave little thing, too; when I crash-landed into the sand next to it (oops), it retracted its little…

  • A Sojourn with the Shawls

    A Sojourn with the Shawls

    So I was having some issues with my strobe connection, which made my lighting situation pretty much suck, especially when it was called upon to light anything farther than 0.000000001 cm away. Incidentally, there aren’t a whole hell of a lot of sea creatures who tolerate that kind of proximity to us noisy bubble-blowers. So…

  • Curaçao: Stunning Slugs, Snails, and Worms, or… the Pretty Yucky Stuff

    Curaçao: Stunning Slugs, Snails, and Worms, or… the Pretty Yucky Stuff

    Christmas Tree Worm Go anywhere stateside after Thanksgiving (hell, after Halloween), and Christmas stuff is everywhere. We arrived in Curaçao Thanksgiving Day, and I don’t recall seeing anything glaringly festive. That’s OK. The only Christmas tree I needed in the Caribbean was of the worm variety. Possibly the prettiest worm ever: the Christmas Tree Worm.…

  • When the visibility gets tough, the tough find nudibranchs

    When the visibility gets tough, the tough find nudibranchs

    San Diego Nudibranchs A swell that has been plaguing the San Diego coastline with rough surf (seemingly forever…) finally subsided late last week, just in time for our scheduled Easter Sunday boat dive. Visibility was severely compromised, though, as a result of the extended period of rough ocean conditions. The water was green and murky……

  • Nudibranchs: The Sea Lemon

    Nudibranchs: The Sea Lemon

    Anisodoris nobilis, or the noble dorid nudibranch, is also known as the sea lemon. This name is not only attributable to its yellow color, but apparently also to a citrusy smell it can give off when it is handled. Unlike many tinier nudibranchs, the sea lemon can reach up to around five inches in length.…

  • Nudibranchs: Dendronotus albus

    Nudibranchs: Dendronotus albus

    Here’s yet another nudibranch that lives in the southern California waters, Dendronotus albus. As usual, this one is very tiny–only about an inch long.

  • Raindrops

    Raindrops

    I appreciate the irony in the fact that while people back in Vermont are skiing in 70-degree sunshine, snow levels here in Southern California have dropped to 2000′. Here at the beach, though, we’re only getting rain.

  • Eyes

    Eyes

    This week’s project 52 theme: eyes. So I took a selfie.