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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

  • Ohne Meer gibt es kein Leben - Lebenselixier
  • Snolker en Costa tropical Granada.
  • Ich liebe das Meer/Wasser und möchte erlebtes gerne mit Freunden teilen.
  • Estoy deseando poder coger mi cámara Olympus subacuática para poder hacer fotos en el mar!
  • A friend and I snorkeled for the first time in two months and we witnessed a Pyjama Shark 'laying' her egg. We spotted her close to another egg parcel and I saw more strings protruding and we hanged around. She was searching for another suitable kelp bush and when the strings attached she turned in a few rough circle movements and the egg was fastened. The right time and place, how amazing is nature!
  • Waiting removal of travel quarantines so i can go snorkeling with my TG-5. Or TG-6 if i got luck
  • Snorkeling at the Coral Beach of Fitzroy Island (in the northeast of Australia, close to Green Island) I gazed in wonder at a lot of quite young giant clams, an enormous variety of corals and sponges, and even a moray, a lionfish,...
  • Once I was on Bali for holidays. When I was diving, a dangerous watersnake appeared. I feared for my life! Despite I saw, it was so unbelievable beautiful. If I had a waterresisent cam that time , I would have had the possibility to fix it for my memories. It was great. I still don't have such a cam and so I'm still hoping to get one.
  • My biggest passion in underwaterphotography is shooting macro. My first camera was a Sealife but the pictures were not satisfying at all. The next step was a TG-2 and I loved it! Finally I was able to shoot these macro pictures that I saw on social media without to have to carry a huge camera. Last year I bought a TG-6 and the macro is even more detailed. And I can honestly say that many friends of mine with a huge camera are sometimes a bit jealous on my small camera because it is often much more easy to approach these small creatures with my small Though camera.
  • No mater diving the Thrislegorm in Egypte or snokling with my 4 year old daugter between green turtles in Caboverde, the TG-tough never disappoints! Some of my best memories are now stored digitally, haha!
  • Diving at a cleaner-station with 12-15 big Mantas and watching them floating for almost 90 minutes was an unforgettable experience. I filmed them with my E-M10ii. Now my 16 year-old daughter has started diving and the TG-6 would be a lovely present for her.
  • Mi mejor experiencia En snorkel fue en Méjico: corales mariposa ondeando al son de las olas. Una maravilla!
  • Je n'ai que le Tough 8 mais, sous le cape de La Héve Le Havre 76600 France, bien de belles choses sous La Manche et dans les rochers. Ce n'est jamais aussi beau que toutes ces photos que Olympus nous envoie mais quel lieu fantastique que nos falaises de la Côte d'Albatre
  • Zanzibar gave me the feeling of paradise. Shooting pictures before and after a snorkling-trip created the feeling that I missed the possibility of making pictures while snorkling.
  • The first and only acquaintance with the ocean in my life happened in 2019. On the north coast of the Kola Peninsula there is a semi-abandoned fishing village of Teriberka. The breath of the northern ocean is felt there even in summer. The waves of the Barents Sea are continuously and anxiously beating on a rocky shore. Locals explained that meter waves are the most calm state of the Barents Sea. Steel ice water has shaves the stones of these shores for years. This is a unique and harsh place. You can feel all the power of nature on the northern shore of the Kola Peninsula. my.olympus-consumer.com/.../265611

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