![]() Abandoned chicken wire crab trap |
![]() Male Princess Parrotfish heads for cover |
![]() Another scorpionfish rests on the bottom |
![]() Nice split crown feather duster spruces up the coral |
![]() Extralong featherduster worms are everywhere |
![]() Nice side shot of featherduster worm |
![]() Andy perfects neutral bouyancy this trip |
![]() Self portrait of this trips main photographer |
![]() Four of kind, four times four-eye butterflyfish |
![]() Butterflyfish are so easy to photo in Curaçao |
![]() Andy sports a new mask for this trip |
![]() Donna finally gets Andy to take a shot of her |
![]() Nice two foot long trumpetfish |
![]() Donna finds a lone grouper to prove they're here |
![]() Four blue chromis skirt the bottom |
![]() Two blackbar soldierfish |
![]() Baby fish stay safe at the bottom of the barrel sponge |
![]() Solo banded butterflyfish ducks for the coral |
![]() Shy honeycomb cowfish runs from the camera |
![]() Chase it down for a side shot eventually |
![]() French angels are more photogenic in Curaçao |
![]() Long-spined Urchin hides down in the coral |
![]() Spotted moray has a cleaner shrimp in its mouth |
![]() Eels don't have fingers to handle floss |
![]() The anchor proves there is a shipwreck around here |
![]() Blue Tang knows where the shipwrecks are |
![]() Juvenile Yellowtail Damselfish |
![]() They look totally different when they're young |