Spectacular colourful reef fish and coral aquarium
- At July 24, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In Animals
5
These gorgeous corals and tropical fish are in the home aquarium of Mike, a member of the Marine Aquarium Society of Victoria (aka MASOV). The monthly meeting was held at his place this Tuesday, so I had a lot of fun taking many photos of his beautiful tank.
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Thanks to Mike for hosting the event, and for creating such a beautiful aquarium for me to photograph.
Kitchen aquarium and snail snatching – P365 Nov11
- At November 15, 2007
- By Neil Creek
- In 3D, Animals, Nature, People, Places
0
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Today, the Marine Aquarium Society of Victoria (MASOV) had its monthly meeting at a new member’s place. What was special about Craig’s tank was its location – the kitchen.
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Never before have we seen a tank in a kitchen, let alone one so spectacular. In addition, Craig uses a number if interesting and radically different techniques and ideas for building and filtering his tank. I won’t go into details here, but I’ll say that it was an eye-opening experience for the members, and had everyone thinking about how Craigs techniques might be adapted to their own tanks, and if it would be something worth trying.
Here’s a few pics from Craig’s tank:
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After the meeting, Craig took a few of us down to his local aquarium shop where he gets his sand and snails – the beach! The number of snails here was staggering, so we didn’t feel too guilty taking a few to live in our tank. It was a beautiful day, and I enjoyed taking photos of the rock pools, and some 3D photos of the area.
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Please read this post to learn how to see 3D images.
Below is the full gallery of the best photos from the day. Please have a look through them all. Some of the 3D photos in particular are very cool.
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Mike’s Marine Aquarium – P365 Sep09
- At September 12, 2007
- By Neil Creek
- In Nature
0
Nomi and I are members of the Marine Aquarium Society of Victoria (MASOV), and today we had our monthly meeting. This time it was at one of the other members, Mike’s, place. He has a beautiful six foot aquarium, and these photos were taken of it.
The theme for the meeting was “How to frag corals”. “Fragging” is essentially the same process as taking cuttings from plants. Most corals can be broken up and will grow back from the parts. It’s a great way to share corals between aquarists, helps limit the amount of collecting of specimins from reefs, and helps teach a great deal about the care and nurture of corals. Plus it is a cheap and easy way to get a wide variety of beautiful corals for your tank.
Member Glen demonstrated the methods for fragging a variety of different corals, some of which are seen here.
Time lapse coral and clown fish – P365 Jul31
- At August 01, 2007
- By Neil Creek
- In Animals
0
For this time lapse, I learned my lesson from last time, and chose a more interesting subject. Here we have a short time lapse of our two little clown fish frolicking in the head of a xenia coral. This was one frame every five seconds this time, and it really makes them look like they’re zipping all over the place!
Some lessons learned this time:
- Don’t do time lapse in vertical orientation. Video sites will shrink the video to fit a horizontal orientation, making the video look small and ugly.
- While the clown fish are cute, they move around too fast to be good time lapse subjects.
- When shooting by AC light, don’t set the shutter speed to be too fast. The power cycle of AC makes lights fade in and out many times a second. Too fast for the eye to see, but slow enough that a camera on 1/200th sec may not expose enough light, resulting in flickering in the final time lapse.
I hope you like this one!
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