All Users' Comments
Michele Turnaturi bella Fabio 19/10/2015 02:11:44 | |
Michele Turnaturi love it 19/10/2015 02:09:40 | |
Zaflee Thanks Fabio Strazzi.. 19/10/2015 00:51:39 | |
Marcus Caruana Thanks Tony. Malta is surrounded with wrecks. 18/10/2015 22:15:53 | |
Fabio Strazzi so nice 18/10/2015 21:59:14 | |
Fabio Strazzi Amazing 18/10/2015 21:44:54 | |
Fabio Strazzi very nice 18/10/2015 21:41:42 | |
Fabio Strazzi wow, amazing 18/10/2015 21:41:10 | |
Fabio Strazzi Very nice 18/10/2015 21:39:55 | |
Kelvin Tan H.Y Thk u very much mauro👍 18/10/2015 17:47:43 | |
Steven Miller very cool! I love the colors! 18/10/2015 15:48:20 | |
Steven Miller super composition here Mauro 18/10/2015 15:45:42 | |
Steven Miller super composition here Mauro 18/10/2015 15:45:28 | |
Aaron 'Bertie' Gekoski Hi Tony. I am not condoning the touching of marine animals for recreational scuba in any way. However for scientific purposes it is sometimes necessary - he is not "riding it" he is catching it in a manner that causes the animal the least amount of stress. How could this be misinterpreted by divers? The fact that he doesn't have a mask on, let alone scuba gear, and is wearing gloves illustrates that this is no ordinary situation and should tempt the viewer read the caption. Anyway, this is how Dr. Pilcher catches turtles and he's incredibly successful at it: as a journalist I am there to document, objectively, what is happening. Would I reply negatively to photos of you removing hooks from a shark’s mouth…which is, like this, for the good of the animal? Like I said in my previous response, I think photography - particularly conservation photography - should evoke a response and educate, which this has done, so that’s great. I would, of course, welcome others thoughts on this matter. 18/10/2015 04:24:11 | |
Aaron 'Bertie' Gekoski Hi Tony. I am not condoning the touching of marine animals for recreational scuba in any way. However for scientific purposes it is sometimes necessary - he is not "riding it" he is catching it in a manner that causes the animal the least amount of stress. How could this be misinterpreted by divers? The fact that he doesn't have a mask on, let alone scuba gear, and is wearing gloves illustrates that this is no ordinary situation and should tempt the viewer read the caption. Anyway, this is how Dr. Pilcher catches turtles and he's incredibly successful at it: as a journalist I am there to document, objectively, what is happening. Would I reply negatively to photos of you removing hooks from a shark’s mouth…which is, like this, for the good of the animal? Like I said in my previous response, I think photography - particularly conservation photography - should evoke a response and educate, which this has done, so that’s great. I would, of course, welcome others thoughts on this matter. 18/10/2015 04:24:10 |
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