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A fever of mobula rays. Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
Balloonfish: Tell me more about my eyes. Taken at BHB 2012.
A silky shark shot with a slow shutter. Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
A Cayman cleaner goby takes a very brief siesta to have his picture taken. Grand Cayman
Blacktip reef sharks patrolling the shallows of a reef in French Polynesia.
A southern stingray exploring the moon. Grand Cayman
Bull shark cameo at Tiger Beach in the Bahamas.
A grey reef shark turning towards potential prey. Fakarava, French Polynesia
A school of small barracuda makes way for a passing grey reef shark. Rangiroa, French Polynesia
A whale shark feeding on bonito eggs near the surface. Isla Mujeres, Mexico
Blue and white, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
A fairy basslet posing for the camera in Grand Cayman.
A giant manta ray and diver in La Paz, Mexico.
My first Mako! Near Bahía Magdalena, Mexico
Ray in Grass: A shallow depth of field allowed me to focus on the eyes through a small gap in the seagrass.  Cozumel 2017
A pack of grey reef shark hunting at night. Fakarava, French Polynesia
Permit Portrait: I took this photo a few minutes after the Blenny, with the same 105mm lens! I pushed my strobes as far forward as they would go and shot from about 6 feet or so away. This photo is uncropped and only possible in very clear water. Cozumel 2017.
Blenny Mouth: Blennies are always fun to shoot. With patients you can usually catch them doing something really cute. Spineyhead Blenny, Cozumel 2017.
Smooth Trunkfish: Juvenile.  Cozumel 2017.
Angel in Motion: The trick with capturing motion-blur is balancing a slow shutter speed with just enough ambient light to expose the movement. The flash freezes the image at the end when the shutter closes (rear curtain sync). Cozumel 2017

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UPCOMING EVENTS

  • PURA VIDA - Sharkapalooza
    Sat May 29 2022
  • FORCE-E - Shark Dive Meetup
    Sun May 29 2022, 08:30am EDT
  • PURA VIDA - Whale Shark Trip
    Fri Jul 1 2022 - Tue Jul 5 2022
  • REEF PHOTO - BHB Photo Workshop
    Thu Jul 14 2022 - Sun Jul 17 2022

ABOUT SFUPS

The South Florida Underwater Photography Society (SFUPS) is a non-profit social organization dedicated to the promotion of excellence in underwater photography through its membership. Society members have been meeting since 1980 appealing to the interests of hundreds of photographers, raising the awareness of ocean conservation initiatives, and sharing with our local community images of the sea life and reef scenes South Florida waters have to offer.
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