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The World Oceans Day 2020

Innovation for a sustainable Ocean: Topic of the year
If you’re a diver, snorkeler or just love being at the beach we invite you to comment on your experiences
and share your thoughts on this emotive issue for your chance to win one of the three fabulous prizes on offer.

See the thoughts of Thomas Van Puymbroeck below, one of our ambitious underwater photography visionaries, who is very passionate about this subject.


Conservation versus consumption… that’s the question

Worldwide our oceans and their inhabitants are currently under enormous pressure. Human population is growing and so is our need for food.
Historically only 100 years ago there were plenty of fish in our oceans, but now it’s getting critical for some species. For example: each year 100 million sharks are hunted and killed, mostly for their fins. If we want a sustainable ocean full of fish, we need those sharks because everything is linked together in the food chain of life. If you skim from the top of the food pyramid - the sharks - everything below will simply collapse.
But there is hope: more and more people are starting to realize the benefits of a healthy ocean: numerous approved sanctuaries are growing to preserve nature’s delicate equilibrium.


Thomas Van Puymbroeck • PEN E-PL1 • M.ZUIKO Digital ED 12-50mm F3.5-5.6 • PT-EP01 

If you protect a certain area of the ocean through a sanctuary it allows the fish to thrive, breed and explore the wider ocean, often returning to the safety of the sanctuary to breed again. Only after allowing a couple of generations to breed uninterrupted should we be allowed to fish again, otherwise we run the risk of overfishing with the very real danger of whole species becoming extinc.


This is what is happening now in certain sanctuaries with the shark population. Having protected a section of reef the whole eco system is getting a second chance, with smaller fish returning and attracting even smaller macro life. Once this begins it can expand to other reefs and underwater life will start to thrive again. This all stems from the observation of sharks at the top of the food chain.


Thomas Van Puymbroeck • OM-D E-M1 Mark II • M.Zuiko Digital ED 8mm F1.8 Fisheye PRO • PT-EP14

With the ecological systems all being interlinked, by protecting the oceans we humans benefit alongside the sub marine life. Former fishermen change professions to become wildlife protectors defending the seas against poachers and ensuring divers and tourists understand the rules of the ocean and gain maximum enjoyment from the waters they explore.

Thomas Van Puymbroeck • OM-D E-M1 Mark II • M.Zuiko Digital ED 8mm F1.8 Fisheye PRO • PT-EP14


Now that the success of these sanctuaries is growing, divers and underwater photographers are willing to pay large fees for access to visit the ever increasingly beautiful wildlife. It is therefore vitally important that we ensure the funds continue to be used to regenerate the great conservation work being undertaken. This way everybody wins, from the local communities to the amazing underwater world that we enjoy as divers or just from admiring the fabulous photography we can appreciate here.

By supporting the conservation work in the sanctuaries this way I am sure that our ocean eco system will thrive and we can sustain the fishing industry too.


Author and Photographer: Thomas Van Puymbroeck

What is your experience with the Ocean?

To mark this very special day, we invite you to participate in this year’s raffle
celebrating our glorious oceans.

  • First prize is the Olympus Tough TG-6 Snorkeling Photography Kit.
  • Second prize is our great Tough Adventure Pack.
  • Third prize is the super practical TankH2O drink bottle.

What to do:
If you are not signed up yet as a MyOlympus user, quickly click here, register and refresh your browser or click here after signing up. If you are already a MyOlympus user, log in here.

Take a moment to think about your own experiences with the ocean.

Share with us your most memorable moment using your Olympus Tough (or any other Olympus cameras) on the beach, from a boat or underwater and simply give this article a like and comment under this blogpost before June 22, 2020 --> raffle is closed !

Please view our Terms & Conditions

Comments

  • Had great fun using my TG-5 in the Zodiac boats on my trip to Antarctica to get pictures of icebergs and penguins.
  • Mi experiencia mas espectacular fue en el caribe en los bancos de corales, me alucinó la cantidad de vida que había.
  • The most beautifull Sealife i ever saw, while snorceling was in egypt. We had a little rief on our hotel grounds and even if it wasn´t big, we had a great time to explore it, day by day. I hope to go there again and make some amacing photos.
  • Sailing and snorkeling in the west indies was a highlight for me! Wish I have had my Olympus Tough then;-) (back in 92) Now I have overwater memories stored on my NAS and the underwater memories in my mind and heart.
  • Preciosas fotos submarinas. Hay q proteger los océanos!!!
  • Maravillosas fotos de unos océanos q hay q mantener limpios
  • Sehr gerne würde ich derartige Wassererlebnisse haben. Bisher war ich nur schnorcheln, aber auch das ist traumhaft. Vielen Dank für die wundervollen Bilder.
  • Seeing a sea horse on my very first dive-trip ever, allthough sadly I couldn't bring my Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark II down with me. But I could take some wonderfull scenic pictures later that day during sunset on the beach.
  • It was an early morning in Cape Town, South Africa. I was eager to get out of bed and I was soon heading towards the beach. This was a perfect morning for the kayak-adventure, no wind, no clouds, and the sun started to rise over the ocean. I double checked that I brought my Olympus Tough, it was with me… We left the beach and paddling further out. After just a few minutes we could spot a couple of dolphins, and this was only the beginning… When I did not think the morning could get any better, we saw a large group, around 30-40 dolphins, swimming and jumping in our direction but bit further out in the ocean. I headed for them and paddled as fast as I could, and suddenly I was right in the middle of the group and were “swimming” together with them! It was an incredible experience and I will never forget this moment! Lucky me I recorded a video and took a few photos of my adventure with my Olympus Tough so I can re-live the moment whenever I want and share the experience with my friends and family. This is one of my fantastic experiences with the ocean, and I wish we together can help to keep it clean and healthy so future generations can do the same. Kind regards, Martin Eriksson IG: @martinerikssonphoto
  • I am just starting my Olympus journey, so I don't have any photos to share yet. And although I haven't had many experiences with the ocean either, one that I will remember forever was feeling my baby kicking in my belly when I made her feel the waves of the ocean in Australia last year. I hope I can go back with her soon!
  • I have never had the opportunity to try under water photography mostly through not having the kit. I think even being able to photo in rock pools around the UK coast would be fun.
  • My best experience with my TG-5 was in the Red Sea, in August 2019. It was a usually nightshift. (OK - its a joke - ofcourse it was a nice night dive :-) So: I had my Olympus Tough 5 and the underwater hard case with it. (And a video lamp) The deep was not big, because of the night dive (it can not be bigger than 14 meter below), so everything was comfortable and calm, when suddenly a big black flash came from somwhere out of my sight... I was a standing in vertical bouyancy position, so try to turn around with my strong but not so long light. There was a really big, black fish, but it (he/she ?) does not care of me, just try to pursued the Eel. Huhh.. This scene was so "alive", strange and unbelivebale to happend to me. These things are like something you saw on the NGeo channel, and you know its really happend (once, somewhere) but you know you can not see them. Never. But now. Under my feet... They are came out of the TV. :-) So i try to make moving pictures because of the dramatic moments, and after many-many seconds goes by when i realized it would be better to take a photo. You can see it in my gallery. The link is below: my.olympus-consumer.com/.../265206 (Thanks for the Olympus TG5 the video footage that i made there was perfect.) I am very-very glad to be an eyewitness and a part of the Big Mother Nature... The Giant Trevally hunt with an Eel. It was an unbeliveable experience for me.
  • On my return to underwater after the "dry" COVID-19 period, I had the chance to be welcomed by a friendly triggerfish school, properly registered with my Tough TG-6 camera.
  • J'ai souvenir d'une plongée sous la glace...
  • Swimming with my children and photographing whilst studying Green Turtles- Ascension island.

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