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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

  • Das Beste was wir, und ich meine uns alle auf diesen Planten tun können, ist unsere Kinder zu sensibilisieren wie wichtig es ist auf diesen Planten aufzupassen. Ob Land oder Meer, und ja Beindruckende Bilder helfe wohl weiter, um unseren Kinder das wunderbare dieser Erde zu zeigen. Aber nicht jeder muss auch dort hin und tut dadurch auch gutes.
  • I was on the Atlantic Ocean out with a little dinghy together with a small research team to learn more about dolphin behavior. I was snorkeling when suddenly a huge group of grind whales showed up, several families. Especially two of these huge grind whales, maybe a couple, clearly invited me to swim with them which I then did. I just followed them, swimming as fast a I could, while I saw them just below me sliding with great majesty through the water in stillness. The most amazing experience was, that while I was swimming just above them, they held me in a field of tremendous love and I felt completely safe and at home in this vast ocean with them. It was as if I belonged to them and their family. After some time I naturally got tired and out of breath so I stopped swimming and rested and to my utmost surprise they also rested with me just under my body, holding me in their energetic field in which I felt completely peaceful. I waited until I had a calm breath and then kept on swimming with them. This we repeated twice more until I really could not swim anymore and got quite cold in the fresh water. I thanked these whales with all the love from my heart for that experience and they went on while I swam back to the dinghy which had followed me in a great distance in order not to interfere. I was so touched by that love and stillness which I had felt by this encounter that I sat down at night and wrote about these great beings called whales so that more people could see who they really are and let them live in peace. They so deserve our friendship and deep respect!
  • plongée de nuit en Mer Rouge avec de très grosses carangues qui chassaient dans le faisceau de nos torches
  • En mi ultimo viaje a maldivas solo pude fotografiar mantas raja con el movil, una pena no disponer de una TG6 para bucear.
  • Silently, huge, awsome impressive: the encounter with a black pelagic manta cruising or better hoovering over a coral block, I just kept on filming just to document s glimpse of this majestic moment... „the picture is copied waterproof to my heart“
  • I'm a tour guide, I travel a lot for my work and the most impressive encounter underwater was during a tour in Djibouti swimming with a beautiful, amazing whale shark. So enormous, peaceful, beautiful. I'm in love with this amazing creature
  • il y a quelques années, j'ai fait de superbes photos sous-marines à la Réunion avec un ancien modèle Olympus. J'aimerais beaucoup en gagner un nouveau pour mes prochaines vacances. Merci pour ce concours.
  • I was in Ko Surin (Thailand) with my wife for about ten years ago, the reef was one of the most Beautiful sights Ive ever experienced! Would be nice to go back there and capture it with the tg-6!
  • la mia giornata più bella sottoacqua fu quando apri gli occhi senza maschera e boccaglio e vidi tutte le meraviglie senza filtri
  • The most intimidating was seeing some small sharks while diving around the great barrier reef, respect is what I feel mostly when experiencing nature on that level.
  • My most impressive encounter was with lophius piscatorius in Liguria, I took great photos and film with a tg trakker
  • J'adore la couleur que peut la couleur de l'eau que ce soit vu de dessus ou au plus profond. C'est apaisant et cela mène à de très belles rencontres comme le montrent si bien les photos que je vois ici.
  • "Sea", 3 letters a whole world.
  • Diving in Finnish lakes has given me several almost mystical underwater experiences ever. All sorts of fish, otters and ringed seals etc. No particular experience is better than the other. Underwater world is unbelievable where ever I dive...:)
  • Diving with friends in the Red Sea, when two big eagle rays appeared out of the blue followed by a hammerhead shark. A dive we all still remember well!

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