One of the best things about diving is how much time you get
to spend on, in, or near the water, in between the times you’re under it. Let’s face it, everything’s better by the
water, including photography. Here are a
bunch of shots taken before, after, or in between dives.
This was shot after an early AM dive in
Virginia. There was almost nothing
happening underwater so I was pretty happy to come out and find such a
beautiful scene on the beach.
I took this after an evening dive at
Nahant. This little park looking back
toward Boston is about a mile from Canoe Beach.
I photographed these surf casters on the same
morning as shot # 1 above.
For me, one of the big differences between surface and
underwater photography is the requisite shape of the photo. I’m not sure why but when I take a shot
underwater, even if I crop it, I want it to maintain its original
shape and proportions. Not so with
surface shots. For reasons that I again
don’t understand, when I take a shot on the surface, I have no compunction whatsoever
about cropping it any way I want – which usually means taking something off the
top and bottom and ending up with a longer, narrower photo. I’d love to feel the freedom to do the same
with underwater shots. Maybe
someday. This one was taken at sunrise
before heading out to dive in the St. Lawrence up in Quebec.
Since it’s the dive that dictates when you get to the water,
you can’t always set things up to shoot on either side of sunrise and
sunset. Again, though, everything’s
better by the water, regardless of time of day, even shots like this late
morning one taken at Good Harbor Beach in Gloucester.
Ditto for this afternoon shot taken in fairly harsh sunlight
after a dive on the Cape.
Of course, I had to include at least one night shot. I came out of the water after an early
evening dive at Back Beach in Rockport and found the sidewalk crowded with
people waiting to see the moon rise up over Bearskin Neck. It turned out it was the super full moon –
the night when the moon is at its closest point to the Earth for that calendar
year. I went back to dive again the next
night and made sure to bring a tripod. I
grabbed this shot almost as soon as I came out of the water.