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12/16/2008, 08:13 PM | #51 |
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wow great pic's please post more. Wish I lived there
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12/16/2008, 08:15 PM | #52 | |
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Quote:
Here's a local to you that caught some real young ones... http://www.masa.asn.au/phpBB2/viewto...t=rubrocinctus
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Chris |
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12/17/2008, 01:56 AM | #53 |
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Location: Darwin, Australia
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Yeah I now the guy.
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12/17/2008, 01:32 PM | #54 |
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Location: All Over, but now in San Diego
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Some nice pictures you got there.
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12/17/2008, 02:38 PM | #55 |
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Location: Darwin, Australia
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Next year when the tides are good again. I'll go to our other collection place and take some more.
Completely different with large pools of large acro table. Very cool. It is only really accessable during certain tides as you have to cross a channel to get to it. |
01/11/2009, 02:39 AM | #56 |
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Location: Darwin, Australia
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Went out again today.
Have a look closely at the rock that was totally covered with anemones. There are four on top that were closed up due to being out of the water. Last edited by Lewy; 10/06/2017 at 02:57 PM. |
01/11/2009, 04:30 AM | #57 |
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: PA
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Awesome Pix! That would be cool to experience something like that. And those crabs are makin' me hungry : )
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01/11/2009, 09:29 AM | #58 |
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would love to have all that in my back yard
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01/11/2009, 10:01 AM | #59 |
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This makes me want to move closer to a real reef
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- Henry Current Tank Info: 50 Gallon Rimless |
01/11/2009, 12:43 PM | #60 |
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I wish the tide pools here were that amazing . Truly beautiful pictures.
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01/11/2009, 01:34 PM | #61 |
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Location: western mass
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wow thats amazing im soo jealous. i just had to clean snow off my car where im from! i would love to live there! im excited for more pics
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looving it Current Tank Info: 35 gal shallow cube reef, 15 gal sump, black clown pair, led light |
01/11/2009, 06:13 PM | #62 |
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awesome pics, i live in aus too. even though you are allowed to collect some stuff from the wild i personally wouldnt take anything from that reef. every thing there is part of an eco system and all fits into a hierarchy where everything depends on each other for the ecosystem to survive. taking out things is just going to damage the ecosystem, and we underestimate our impact on reefs so much its not funny. better to buy things at a shop, its not going back if it lands in a shop, whether tank bred or not.
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01/12/2009, 09:29 AM | #63 |
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Awsem !
Lewy : Thanx a lot for sharing your real life experience. I wish i had such places around. But with such pollution around my area i dont think any life would survive in the waters.
Keep us updated Regards |
01/20/2009, 09:20 AM | #64 |
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Simply amazing pictures and great thread. I love it. It sure makes me want to move too!
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Howard DeBord " When the Boogeyman goes to sleep every night, he checks his closet for Chuck Norris. " Current Tank Info: None atm |
01/21/2009, 05:19 AM | #65 |
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Location: Darwin, Australia
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Glad to share my little part of the world.
When the tides are right we are going out to another place at night. Heaps of fun. A teaser.... Last edited by Lewy; 10/06/2017 at 02:57 PM. |
01/21/2009, 02:09 PM | #66 |
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Location: Southern NH, USA
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More anemones please! I would love to see some giganteas and how they are situated in the substrate. Any magnificas or mertains around?
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01/21/2009, 04:51 PM | #67 |
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Man I wish there were local places like these in the states. I really love walking around tidepools and such, but obviously never able to see corals/anemones that we're so used to having in our private tanks. It must be really exciting to see clownfishes and anemones in their natural habitat up close and personal like that....and to be able to pick a juv clown up with the palms of your hands...amazing.
Yes more pics please. No more teasers. |
01/21/2009, 04:53 PM | #68 |
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One question....are these places accessible if you're on vacation in Australia?
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Go Bears! Current Tank Info: 270 gallon starphire |
01/31/2009, 08:27 AM | #69 | |
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Location: Collecting out on a reef somewhere
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Quote:
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01/31/2009, 01:29 PM | #70 |
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What was that red and white thing in the teaser pic?
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Marcy |
01/31/2009, 01:35 PM | #71 |
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By the way, love the pics...it is so interesting to see a tide pool up close. The only ocean I have had the opportunity to see up close is the texas coast and all I can say about that is dead jelly fish on what I guess you could call a beach.
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02/03/2009, 08:44 PM | #72 |
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Location: Biloxi,MS
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wow very nice, i wish i lived there, good pictures man. this is natures at its best.
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02/03/2009, 10:53 PM | #73 |
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You found a scribbled in a tide pool?
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02/03/2009, 11:35 PM | #74 |
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Location: Darwin, Australia
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Yes we did. They get trapped when the tides go out.
You can also catch them using a small hook and prawn as bait off a local wharf as well. |
02/04/2009, 10:02 AM | #75 |
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Location: Texas
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Incredible!
It's so .... educational to see pics of the critters in their actual environments. I had no idea that nems would experience that environment. THANKS!
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•Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage - to move in the opposite direction. --Albert Einstein Current Tank Info: 100g and 75g displays, both with 2 x 250w Iwasaki 14k DE, 100g sump, 55g growout, 55g refugium, 20g benthic |
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