This week’s photo is a classic view of an ocean. The lack of any defining feature on the ruffled surface makes the ocean seem endless. How about writing something watery this week?
I love this photo since I am in love with all bodies of water this is pure inspirational devotional for moi. I am now a beginner photographer so this is the time for me to enjoy others photos in magazines and online, etc.
It IS a wonderful photo. I want to sink into the blue, go down, down, down into it. What would the utter calm & weightlessness be like?
I like the variation of the color, too. Darkness, then shimmers of light in the distance.
Oceanographers say that the only creatures really thriving in our changing oceans (it’s turning acidic from pollution & climate change) are ‘the jellies.” Yup. Every type of jellyfish is madly reproducing. The scientists speak of the future “gelatinous oceans.” Eeeewww. Gross.
The ‘Portugese Man o’ War’ is a colony of FOUR distinct creatures! No lie. One forms the ‘float,’ another forms the tendrils that catch food, the third, a bunch of polyps, transfer the food to a fourth creature that acts as a stomach for the colony. Once the food is digested, all four colonies of creatures get energy from it.
Strange but true. I wonder if any of my friends would be interested in a collaboration like this?
I love this photo since I am in love with all bodies of water this is pure inspirational devotional for moi. I am now a beginner photographer so this is the time for me to enjoy others photos in magazines and online, etc.
It IS a wonderful photo. I want to sink into the blue, go down, down, down into it. What would the utter calm & weightlessness be like?
I like the variation of the color, too. Darkness, then shimmers of light in the distance.
Oceanographers say that the only creatures really thriving in our changing oceans (it’s turning acidic from pollution & climate change) are ‘the jellies.” Yup. Every type of jellyfish is madly reproducing. The scientists speak of the future “gelatinous oceans.” Eeeewww. Gross.
The ‘Portugese Man o’ War’ is a colony of FOUR distinct creatures! No lie. One forms the ‘float,’ another forms the tendrils that catch food, the third, a bunch of polyps, transfer the food to a fourth creature that acts as a stomach for the colony. Once the food is digested, all four colonies of creatures get energy from it.
Strange but true. I wonder if any of my friends would be interested in a collaboration like this?