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The World Oceans Day 2019

Gender and Ocean – how are these two connected? Not at all – you might think. Quite much, however, is the answer. Gender and Ocean is this year’s topic for the World Oceans Day. Celebrate this day with us, find out more about why the world’s oceans are so impressive and
take part in a fantastic raffle.

Each year on the 8th of June, people all over the world celebrate the ocean and try their best to change its story. In doing so, they celebrate each and every life on this wonderful planet. Because no matter where you are and no matter how far you might be situated from any coastline, you are somehow connected to the ocean.

Why?

The oceans are the lifeblood of our planet and the source of all life. Not only do they hold over 95% of the planet’s water, they produce more than half of the oxygen in our atmosphere, are said to be important for 50% of the breaths we take and absorb a lot of carbon. But there’s more to it.

 Ann Karin Matberg • OM-D E-M1 • M.Zuiko Digital ED 8mm F1.8 Fisheye 
• PT-EP11 • PPO-EP02 • 2 x UFL-3

In many ways, the ocean acts as a regulator of our climate. By soaking up the heat and transporting water of different temperatures all over the planet, it regulates the weather, the temperatures as well as rains and droughts in many places and it makes most parts habitable by keeping the balance. And speaking about habitation – the ocean does not only help to make our planet such a great home to us, it is also a home to the greatest abundance of life including some of the smallest and some of the biggest creatures there are. From critter to whales – there is a variety of life in the oceans that is hard to imagine from ashore and that we can only do our best to partly capture with our lenses.

Gender and Ocean - The oceans also provide us with food. That goes hand in hand with the fact that they create many jobs – not only for fishermen. From tourism and transport to water sports businesses: many industries and jobs are highly connected to and dependent on the ocean – and its condition. And it goes without saying that a (commercial) world – and our supermarkets – are quite hard to imagine without ocean freight.

Marcin Dobas – Exciting encounter with steller sea lions

Marcin Dobas • OM-D E-M1 Mark II • M.Zuiko Digital ED 8mm F1.8 PRO
• PT-EP-14 • PPO-EP02 • UFL-3

For many divers, underwater encounters with marine mammals are an unforgettable experience. Whenever I meet a dolphin, a seal or an eared seal (Otariidae), I am sure that I have just met an incredibly intelligent creature which enjoys our encounter as much as I do.
The goal of my last photographic diving expedition was the coat of Kamchatka coast. To some of you, this idea may seem absurd. Everyone who starts diving dreams about the warm waters of the South Seas, the sun, the coral reefs and orange clownfish playing in the water.
The water around the peninsula of Kamchatka, however, is cold, the visibility is not good and the biodiversity is limited. So – why go there? […]

Read the whole story


Juan José Sáez Méndez - The great white shark

 Juan José Saéz • OM-D E-M1 Mark II • M.Zuiko Digital ED 12-40mm F2.8 PRO
• PT-EP14 • PPO-E04 • 2 x UFL-3

On my second trip to Guadeloupe I wanted to capture the behaviour of the great white shark in my pictures. With the help of my results as well as the information provided by the scientists who work with these animals, I wanted to explain or rather express the importance that these special animals have in the ecosystem and show what is being done to protect them. 

The great white shark is an alpha predator that is at the top of the food chain and that, in theory, should not be at risk because it has barely any natural predators. Unfortunately, the great white shark is still on the red list of the worldwide endangered species due to direct or accidental catches in fishing nets, the constant pollution of the seas and the warming or narrowing of their natural habitat. This makes us humans their main predator. […]

Read the whole story

Karin Brussard  - Dolphins – my experience after waiting for 20 years!

 Karin Brussard • OM-D E-M1 MarkII • M.Zuiko Digital ED 12mm F2.0
• PT-EP14 • PPO-E02

In the 20 years that I’ve been diving, I’ve taken a lot of photos; from seahorses measuring a mere centimetre to swimming elephants. But I’ve never encountered a dolphin. Until now.For this mission, we chose to search in a large area in the Bahamas which is home to around twenty dolphins. Everyone on the boat was on the lookout. As the hours passed, my hopes began to fade once again. There wasn’t a single dolphin fin to be seen across the wide expanse of water. My attention wandered after just two seconds, I gave up and went to do something else. […]

Read the whole story

What’s your story? 

To celebrate this very special day with you, we have prepared a raffle for you.
As first prize you can win a brand new TG-6 with its Underwater Case.
Second prize is the cool Tough Adventure Pack and the
Third prize is a practical H2O drink bottle


What to do:

  1. If you are not signed up yet as a MyOlympus user, quickly click here, register and refresh your browser or click here after having signed up. In case you are already signed up, log in here and you will get back to this page.
  2. Like this blogpost and think about your most impressive animal encounter/underwater experience so far.
  3. Write a short comment under this blogpost in which you describe this experience
    until June 22th, 2019. --> raffle is closed !


Please view our Terms & Conditions

Thank you very much for your participation.
Your Olympus Underwater Photography World

Comments

  • Mi pasión por el mar viene desde muy pequeño. Siempre me ha gustado ver los fondos marinos primero en apnea y posteriormente empecé el buceo con botellas. Estar rodeado de fauna, poder nadar entre ella sin que huyan es toda una experiencia.
  • While snorkeling in the Bahamas many years ago, I glanced to my side and had a heart stopping moment when I saw a huge barracuda hovering next to me. Of course, he (or she) was only checking out what strange creature was in their territory!
  • I've had a fantastic underwater experience in Sharm-el-sheikh, Egypt, back in 2010. It was the first time I saw the reef: lots and lots of coloured fishes, just under the sea surface, I couldn't believe it, it was just like being in some kind of marine heaven. I had only a compact photocamera at the time: I rushed in the hotel shop and bought a little sealed plastic bag for cameras that changed my holiday. I still have all the pictures and footage I took underwater, which I look at from time to time, to remember the good times I had there.
  • I would not know how to choose the most memorable underwater experience, I think that anyone I share with friends
  • Tengo varias buenas experiencias, aunque ninguna sea un encuentro con algún gran mamífero a algún pez de gran tamaño, mis experiencias son con gafas, tubo y aletas pero sin bombona, y una de las cosas que más me sorprendió fue en Calpe (Alicante) cuando un día tranquilo de buzo apareció justo por debajo de mi a menos de metro y medio de profundidad un cormoran buceando y buscando algo que llevarse al pico.
  • My most impressive encounter underwater was in amorgos on the beach gramvoussa I made underwater photography with my Olympus C-5050. The magic of submarine nature will be unforgettable
  • My most impressive encounter was snorkeling with dolphins in Egypt
  • I think my most impressive encounter was swimming along side a big turtle poking around for food in Thailand.
  • I only dived once. It was in Porto Santo Island as a baptism of diving. I remember to be fascinated with the richness of the sea life near Ilhéu do Farol. I was so excited that I was trying to touch everything I saw. I was advised not to show my thumbs to the Dog Fish. Imagine why in Porto Santo the Dog Fish is called like that? He stands in front of you expecting for your care and attention, and at the first opportunity, he bites. But that was not my problem, because I was previously told not to touch this fish. My problem was with a sea urchin. I tried to touch it and that was an experience that I do not want to repeat. So, if you like nature, underwater nature and the different forms of life that nature produces, don't try to touch them or take their beauty home with you, unless you do it with film and/or photography camera.
  • There is a very different and extraordinary world underwater, and we should not die without seeing it!
  • When I was at 17 and did some of my first dive, I met a shark. Black Sea Shark - about 1.5 meters long, is not dangerous. But when you see this creature for the first time in the water, it is quite impressive.
  • Mein Name ist Walter. Ich tauche schon seit 1991 und fotografiere unterwasser seit 2004. Beim jetzigen Urlaub in Ägypten hatte ich eine für mich einzigartige Begegnung in der Makadi Bay beim Tauchen. Ich sah und fotografierte zum ersten mal im roten Meer unweit einer Seegraswiese, 2 Seegrasgeisterfische mit meiner OM-D E-M1 Mark II. Auch machte ich ein kurzes Unterwasservideo in dem man sieht wie einzigartig sich diese Fische bewegen.
  • Mi experiencia fue con unos 7 u 8 años. Buceando en la Costa Brava ví lo que parecía una serpiente y salí a toda velocidad a la orilla. Pensé que era raro una serpiente en aquella zona y sin moverse, me armé de valor y volví a por ella a investigar, resultó ser un trozo de cuerda gruesa y descolorida.
  • my best day was swimming with jellyfish and not getting stung, but getting a great shot with my Olympus camer
  • Well, my most "impressive" underwater animal encouter was that of a small hippocampus, during a scuba dive

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