Shooting Fish While Scuba Diving In Thailand

Scuba Diving

If you’re checking to see if it’s legal, and how you plan to punish me, please allow me to explain. I’m a PADI Master Instructor of Scuba Diving, and I spend my working days teaching scuba in Thailand. One of the most rewarding experiences for my diving students’ is shooting great photographs of aquatic marine life.

Making underwater photographs in Thailand has many advantages for divers searching for that ‘perfect shot’;

Clear blue water
Warm water averaging 28 degrees centigrade
Pristine Coral Reef formations
Established Diving Centers and Scuba Equipment Shops

 
The most popular tourist areas for scuba diving in Thailand are Pattaya, Phuket and Koh Samui. These resorts offer great fun and excitement for beginners and certified divers. Whether it’s vibrant fish life, colourful corals or sunken ship wrecks, the camera won’t stop clicking while you’re scuba diving in Thailand. I’ve captured pictures of Seahorses and giant Gorgonian Sea Fans in Phuket, Black tip reef Sharks in Koh Samui, and World War 11 ship wrecks in Pattaya.

Todays modern camera equipment has changed the way that scuba divers ‘shoot’ fish underwater. The traditional film camera is still used by many diving professionals, but digital underwater cameras have made underwater photography both accessible and affordable to the majority of scuba divers. Learning to Scuba Dive is not difficult for most people who are comfortable in the water, but snapping great photos under water takes novices some time to learn. One of the most important attributes is good buoyancy control. Apart from all the obvious advantages that neutral, relaxed buoyancy has for scuba diving, if you’re trying to compose that image of the tiny yellow blob, commonly known as a Frogfish, being able to hover almost motionless just centimetres away from your subject is what sets you apart from the norm. Also, as recreational scuba divers descend, water absorbs colour. Starting with Red, Orange and then Yellow, and as you dive deeper, you’ll lose Green and Blue. Strobe lights help to restore some of the colour that’s lost, which is how the professionals obtain fantastic vibrant colours from their images.

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The Origins of Surf Clothing: From Humble Origins to Big Fish

Jack O’Neill, a one-time fisherman and surfing aficionado living in San Francisco, wanted to expand the range of equipment on offer to the surfing fraternity, and make some money on the side of his other business enterprises.


Eventually, he across a material called neoprene, which legend has it he discovered on an airliner (although aviation experts contest this since neoprene is flammable and so wouldn’t be used inside a plane). This synthetic rubber based on polychloroprene offered superior insulation, flexibility and tensile strength to any of the previous options. His early designs using neoprene were heavily reliant on the shape given by the swimming costumes and underwear of that era, which were skin-tight and full-length. As well as the full-length wetsuit, his designs included the spring suit and the short jack, and O’Neill developed expertise in gluing and stitching techniques in a variety of designs. Today, the names of O’Neill surf suits emphasise the ungainliness of the surfing wetsuit or surf suit wearer, with names such as Psycho I and Psycho II, Epic and Mutant.


O’Neill was the first to have the name Surf Shop as a trade name, which he used when he opened a shop in Santa Cruz in 1959, a move aimed at benefitting from the warmer surfing weather and bigger waves. While in the beginning O’Neill’s markets were limited to surfing community friends and tourists, during the late 50s and 60s surfing took off like a rocket, when Hollywood discovered the ancient Hawaiian sport in the 1959 film Gidget, and magazine publishers, marketers and musicians followed suit; demand for Jack’s t-shirts snowballed. In the beginning the O’Neill operation was a pretty straightforward family business; by the seventies Jack was able to sponsor his own surf team: Team O’Neill still exists today, and women’s team member Kyla Langen recently won the Pro-Am surf contest at Huntington Beach. During the sixties, rival brands such as Australian Rip Curl and Quicksilver joined the surf clothing business, with their own teams and events, as well as many smaller, local companies.

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TODDLER DRESS : WHITE – 5/6 JUVY – Window Shopper – Scuba Diving Cat Tropical Fish

TODDLER DRESS : WHITE – 5/6 JUVY – Window Shopper – Scuba Diving Cat Tropical Fish

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WOMENS TANK TOP : PINK – LARGE – Window Shopper – Scuba Diving Cat Tropical Fish

WOMENS TANK TOP : PINK – LARGE – Window Shopper – Scuba Diving Cat Tropical Fish

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Hawaiian Reef Fish

Product Description
Hawaiian Reef Fish is the definitive guide to help identify all the colorful fish divers can find around the Hawaiian Islands. It is concise, easy to use and fun to read. Beautiful photography clearly illustrates each species of interest, and the description tells the reader exactly what it is and where to find it. This is a most valuable book for anyone interested in knowing more about Hawaii’s underwater paradise…. More >>

Hawaiian Reef Fish

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