Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Driftwood Sunset [On Tv weather network]

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3643/7328864/47/upload/1/787#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0


Click to print image

Was at Paddy's Beach last night during the sunset and stumbled upon some driftwood , thought it would make a unique frame for the sun. There is no words to describe the beauty of the Fundy ! This photo was chosen to be shown on T.v. on the weather network today , it is worth the click !!!!

Monday, July 30, 2012

John Lubbock Quote

Earth and sky, woods and fields, lakes and rivers, the mountain and the sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.
John Lubbock

Max Loving The Summer Weather

Click to print image
http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3461/7322082/14#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0


Max loves going to the beach at any time of the year , but especially in the summer !


Sunday, July 29, 2012

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Wayward bluefire jellyfish found in Bay of Fundy Rare jellyfish strays from eastern side of the Atlantic


The Bluefire jellyfish at the Huntsman Marine Centre is about 45 centimetres in diameter.The Bluefire jellyfish at the Huntsman Marine Centre is about 45 centimetres in diameter. (Huntsman Marine Centre)
New Brunswick may be home to the first bluefire jellyfish discovered in North America, experts say.
The bluefire normally lives on the eastern side of the Atlantic Ocean.
But a fisherman in Bocabec Bay spotted one near a herring weir in the Bay of Fundy this week and delivered it to the Huntsman Marine Science Centre in St. Andrews.
“It is a very deep blue-purple. That would be the centre of it,” said Genny Simard, the centre's senior interpreter.
“It does have a translucent fringe all the way around. And it's a good size. It's a good 18 inches [45 centimetres] across,” she said.
'I saw the bright blue and I knew it was quite exceptional.'—Genny Simard, Huntsman Marine Science Centre
Simard said she initially thought it was a lion's mane jellyfish, which is more common in the Bay of Fundy, until she dropped it into one of the centre's illuminated tanks.
"I saw the bright blue and I knew it was quite exceptional," she said.
No one at the centre had seen anything like it before.
“We did quite a few searches through the many guides that we have here at the aquarium and couldn't come up with anything. So we sent it out there with a picture and right away we had a few specialists that wanted more information.
“And pretty soon, we knew it was a bluefire jellyfish, which is quite rare even in its native habitat, which would be around the British Isles, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, and off the coast of Japan."

Plan to analyze DNA

Experts believe the jellyfish may have drifted to the Bay of Fundy on a rare east-west ocean current, or hitched a ride as a baby on a transatlantic ship.
"Whether it's the only one out there or if there are others out there, we don't know," said Simard.
Bluefire jellyfish are not endangered, but they are rarely found, partly because they are so difficult to spot in the water, she said.
As a result, few people have studied the bluefire and there’s very little documentation on them.
Staff at the centre aren’t sure what the bluefire eats. They put some hand-sized moon jellyfish in the tank, which is what the lion’s mane eats, but they don’t believe the bluefire has eaten any of them yet, said Simard.
It's unknown how long the jellyfish will live. Based on its size and colour, it has reached maturity, and their expected lifespan is only one season.
Two experts in the United States have asked for a piece of its DNA for analysis, said Simard.
The Huntsman has the largest collection of preserved North Atlantic species on site, so they hope to be able to trace where it came from and whether it’s part of a larger family of jellies, she said.
The bluefire's sting is painful and in very rare cases, deadly, according to the website jellyfishfacts.net.
But the bluefire in question is no threat because it has lost its tentacles, said Simard.

Ocean View of Cape Split

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3643/7300886/14/upload/1/787#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0

Click to print image


this photo I took last night and I called the photo Ocean View of Cape Split  , it is one of my favorite photos. We are so lucky to live in such a beautiful place ! It is showing on the weather network today . just click on the link above the photo is see in full view !

Ross Creek Sunset Shown on tv

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3643/7300798/26/upload/1/787#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0

Click to print image


This photo I took last night at Ross Creek along the shore of the fundy and it is showing on T.V. today !

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Leatherback sea turtle spotted in the Bay of Fundy


A leatherback sea turtle was spotted in the Bay of Fundy over the weekend. A leatherback sea turtle was spotted in the Bay of Fundy over the weekend. (Courtesy of Durlan Ingersoll)
A rare  leatherback sea turtle was spotted by a group of bird watchers in the Bay of Fundy during the weekend.
The turtle is endangered worldwide and doesn't enter the Bay of Fundy very often because the water is too cold.
Don McAlpine, the head curator at the New Brunswick Museum, said leatherback sea turtles are more frequently seen in the Northumberland Strait than they are in the Bay of Fundy.
“The few records that we do have in the Bay of Fundy — and when I say that's probably maybe eight or 10 at the most, perhaps less than that — are all clustered around the mouth of the bay. And the turtles don't seem to come any further into the bay than around Grand Manan,” McAlpine said.
McApline said the turtle was likely travelling alone.
Leatherbacks are the largest of all sea turtles. The turtles are often seen off the coasts of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Canadian Sea Turtle Network Initiative says the waters off of eastern Canada support the highest concentration of leatherback sea turtles in the north Atlantic Ocean.
Leatherback turtles are considered to be critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of N

Leatherbacks are considered critically endangered


Posted: Jul 10, 2012 10:00 AM AT 


Last Updated: Jul 10, 2012 3:16 PM AT



Monday, July 23, 2012

Sunday, July 22, 2012

A Summer's Sunset [ shown on the weather network ]

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3643/7282872/14/upload/1/787#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/your_weather/details/3643/7282846/18/upload/1/787#utmxid=EAAAACD_N29-7CmDyYe4sM7ENrk;utmxpreview=0


These are the photos of the sunset last night over the Bay of Fundy . What a wonderful , peaceful experience to witness such natural beauty . I sumitted these photos to the weather network and they are showing them on T.V today ! Just click on the links to expand the photo !!!!

Shark Sighting In Annapolis Valley Same Week As Shark Spotted At Lawrencetown Beach


Shark Fin Spotted Just Off Margaretsville Wharf

Nova Scotia SharksJust a day after swimmers and surfers were ordered out of the water at Lawrencetown Beach due to a shark in the water (link), mackerel fisherman at Margaretsville were treated to a surprise on Thursday afternoon as a shark, which observers say measured between 8 and 10 feet, was spotted very close to the wharf and remained for an hour or so. While it wasn’t definitive, the shark was most likely a porbeagle shark. Porbeagles generally reach 8-9 feet, and are known as the mackerel shark. This would explain why the shark was in the waters here, as mackerel are running at the moment in the Bay of Fundy, and being caught straight from the wharf in Margaretsville.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Rare bluefire jellyfish found in Bay of Fundy | Atlantic

Rare bluefire jellyfish found in Bay of Fundy | Atla

Rare bluefire jellyfish found in Bay of Fundy

A rare bluefire jellyfish was pulled out of the Bay of Fundy this week.
A rare bluefire jellyfish was pulled out of the Bay of Fundy this week.
CTV Atlantic
Published Friday, Jul. 20, 2012 6:13PM ADT 
Jellyfish are a common sight along Maritime coastlines. Stroll along almost any beach, and you’re bound to see one with a red or purple hue.
But a rare bluefire jellyfish was recently found in the Bay of Fundy and some experts say it’s the first of its kind found in the Maritimes.
The Huntsman Marine Science Centre in St. Andrews, N.B. showcases some of the most interesting life forms on the planet, but the bluefire jellyfish is catching everyone’s attention.
“It’s common in the UK, Ireland, and certainly parts of the North Sea,” says aquarium manager Jim Cornall. “And even though it’s more common there, it’s still not a very common jelly, even in those waters.”
Cornall isn’t certain how the bluefire made its way west across the Atlantic Ocean. He says there are some east-west currents, but it’s most likely that it hopped a ride on a boat bound for North America.
“The early indications would be that it is an occasional visitor…this may still be the first time that it has been in the Gulf of Maine and the Bay of Fundy,” he says.
The blue hue in the creature occurs naturally, unlike the aquarium’s blue lobster, which gets its colour from a genetic variant.
Still, its appearance creates an opportunity for the scientific community, although studying the rare find will have to happen quickly because jellyfish, regardless of their colour, don’t live long.
“This size is the maximum size that they would reach, which also indicates that it’s very close to the end of its life cycle,” says Cornall. “And the other indicator is that as they grow old, they get much more blue, and this is pretty much as blue as they get.”
Maxine Westhead, a marine biologist from the Bedford Institute of Oceanography, visited the aquarium at St. Andrews today. She says she considers herself fortunate to have been able to see the rare jellyfish.
“It’s like being able to see a half blue and half brown lobster,” she says. “It’s just something unique, and yeah…I’m glad I’ve seen it.”
The bluefire jellyfish will remain at the aquarium for the rest of its short life.
With files from CTV Atlantic's Andy Campbell

Read more: http://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/rare-bluefire-jellyfish-found-in-bay-of-fundy-1.887220#ixzz21DwDgcbSntic