![]() |
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Wow! Fantastic post ^^
__________________
Watch Let Me In Online Free |
#2
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Now I've never done anything besides snorkel and that was in the mayan riviera but wow I never saw stuff we keep in our tanks and not nearly as much diversity. Unreal shots and I so badly wish I could see that for myself!
That pink table is MASSIVE. Wonder about the size of it's bottom...how thick the mount to the reef structure is? |
#3
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Awesome pic.'s
![]()
__________________
One more fish should be ok?, right!!! ![]() |
#4
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I love the diversity and colours of inverts, fish and corals.... I just got back from Vietnam where I went diving and saw similiar Acropora forests, clams, fungia, anemones and leathers!!
I will have to put this on one of my next destinations, How deep were the dives? I was suprised most of mine were between 3ft to 20ft quite shallow and the clarity was great.
__________________
Always looking for the next best coral... 90g starphire cube/400mhRadium20k/2 XHO/2x27w UV/2x39w T5/ 3 Trulumen led strips |
#5
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Nice pic's Scott. That must have been a sweet trip!!
|
#6
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Chris88, the SPS weren't browned out at all. I just don't have a strobe light to bring out the colours, and you're never going to see a reef like Lobsterboy's tank. My closeups with the flash you can see colour, but some of the SPS are brown, it's just that you won't see them brought into an aquarium store, just like a boring coloured fish. A lot of the corals you see are soft corals too, which are usually a brown colour. I never saw any dead coral anywhere which was amazing, especially considering there was garbage floating everywhere on the surface.
All of the dives around Bunaken were cliff dives and we would go down to about 100ft. I actually liked it when we were first decending or re-surfacing and on top of the reef as the colours were brighter and the coral usually thicker. If I had more time, I would have done a dive and just stayed on top of the reef instead of going along the cliff. The muck diving at Lembeh was always about 22m max. Really poor visibility and not a real "reef", although you would see a lot of goniopora, some elegence coral and all different anenomes and the odd brain, hammer/frogspawn or soft coral. It was mainly just for the critters. |
#7
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I've always felt that that the stuff that interests us coral geeks the most is generally in the top 20' of reef anyhow, the most colourful stuff is up there. I've never really wanted to go much deeper myself. The stuff that scares me the most is structure dives like wrecks or whatever - Yikes!
![]() ![]() Neat shot of the carpet. Love the shot of the Banggai's too. Think I've read that they stick around anemones while juvenile but I think as they get older they move on. They don't really go "in" to the anemones like an anemonefish would but they still reap the benefit of protection. My dad is from Indonesia (well, more technically "was born there and lived there for the first part of his life") and it's on my bucket list of places to visit ... although I can't realistically foresee a time in my life it will happen at this point. ![]() ![]() Fantastic shots. Thanks for sharing. Seeing the real reefs brings it all home to me. I have to admit that I have a hard time reconciling keeping an aquarium at home, when I am somewhere warm and that has reefs, that the reason I am not there more often is probably BECAUSE of that aquarium. It's an odd dichotomy: I love the reefs but because I keep a small one at home I can't go see the real ones more often. ![]()
__________________
-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |