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Underwater photography is my great escape from normal daily life. It totally immerses me (both figuratively and literally) in nature. I never think about my day job; I am always fully "in the moment." My best underwater photography is in the Underwater Highlights gallery. Bears, birds, etc. are in the Nature galleries.

WHAT'S NEW!
1. Watch Seattle's King 5 (NBC) TV segment about my photography!

2. A 5ft high "grinning shark" print - just like the one in the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, DC last year - is part of an exhibit of new, limited edition prints at the Clyde Hill Tully's in Bellevue.

3. NEWEST TRIP GALLERIES - Socorro - Nov. 2010, Nootka Sound, BC Canada - Oct. 2010 and Cayman Islands - May/June 2010

4. I started a new BLOG to keep those interested up to date on developments with my photography and life, and possibly make an occasional observation.

5. ALL PROFITS from my photography currently go to the Int'l Children's Surgical Foundation. In conjunction with my company, Appropriate Balance, my photography has been able to raise over $20,000 for ICSF thus far!.

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Lantern on deck, among green algaes and orange sponges.
Trio of color.  A red soft coral, green crinoid, and hard coral sit side by side on a wreck.  All three are animals, not plants, but of the three, only the crinoid is mobile, able both to crawl on little claw-like feet and "swim" by flapping its green-tipped arms.  The two corals will spend their lives in this location.
Divers getting back on the boat at the end of their dives.
Shipwreck on its side.
What YOU lookin' at?!
Batfish - aka spadefish - roughly the size of dinner plates, seemed curious about divers, and often hung around us while we rose up the masts at the end of dives.
A close-up of a dinner-plate-sized batfish, or spadefish.
Interior rooms literally falling apart.
A doorway decorated in coral.
Trio of color. A red soft coral, green crinoid, and hard coral sit side by side on a wreck. All three are animals, not plants, but of the three, only the crinoid is mobile, able both to crawl on little claw-like feet and "swim" by flapping its green-tipped arms. The two corals will spend their lives in this location.
Trio of color.  A red soft coral, green crinoid, and hard coral sit side by side on a wreck.  All three are animals, not plants, but of the three, only the crinoid is mobile, able both to crawl on little claw-like feet and "swim" by flapping its green-tipped arms.  The two corals will spend their lives in this location.
Trio of color. A red soft coral, green crinoid, and hard coral sit side by side on a wreck. All three are animals, not plants, but of the three, only the crinoid is mobile, able both to crawl on little claw-like feet and "swim" by flapping its green-tipped arms. The two corals will spend their lives in this location.
See photo in original gallery.

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