Just a little guy!
!!!!
Wait... they flipped over and whats that?
An even littler guy!

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Just a little guy!
!!!!
Wait... they flipped over and whats that?
An even littler guy!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Have you ever wished that you could lounge in a beautiful dress in a garden on your spacious estate?
From: Garden gossip. Staunton, Virginia : The Garden Club of Virginia
SB403 .G5 April 1940
Come take a walk after dinner @artworkshopintl this summer where you’ll come upon the illuminated Basilica is San Francesco. Link in profile. #📷 @ckreloff ~~~ #assisi #umbria #italy #travel #italytravel #writercommunity #creativewriting #sanfrancesco #eveningwalk #nightlighting #instatravel #traveling #instadaily #instapic #studyitalian #travelphoto #lgbttravel #gaytravel #artworkshop #writingworkshop #poetry #memoir #arthistory #travelgram #ilikeitaly #artworkshopintl (at Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi)
Not the best footage but there were so many good worms at the nightlight last night!
Some moments from nightlighting this year in the Salish Sea.
In order of appearance, this video features:
0:00 - Dendronotus iris, the giant nudibranch - first shown up close to show off its highly branched cerata, and then seen swimming. 0:22 - A harbor seal, Phoca vitulina richardii, swimming around the light while it hunts fish. 0:39 - Shrimp and fish circling the light. 1:08 - A squid jets by 1:12 - thousands of long thin larval fish school around the light 1:20 - A large cross jellyfish, Mitrocoma cellularia, pulses its bell to swim, fanning out its many fine tentacles 1:30 - many small fish swarm the pale blue light, blotting out portions of it 1:52 - a long yellow polychaete worm dances and weaves through the water column 2:04 - the crystal jellyfish, Aequorea victoria, swims with an incredible amount of Pleurobrachia bachei ctenophores and other animals in the background and then we zoom past to see more ctenophores. 2:18 - an egg yolk jelly, Phacellophora camtschatica swims by in deep blue water 2:30 - a nudibranch with long narrow cerata, Cumanotus sp., swims by swinging its body back and forth, whipping its cerata around. 2:43 - a sea gooseberry, Pleurobrachia bachei, spins through its fanned out tentacles in a gorgeous dance 2:57 - a small hydrozoan jelly with a yellow mouth and dots around its bell, Proboscidactyla flavicirrata, bounces, pulses, and then turns to the side showing off its branched radial canals 3:11 - a sea gooseberry, Pleurobrachia bachei, spins and casts rainbows with its ctenes, mouth up to the camera 3:21 - an odd gregarious jelly, Clytia gregaria, with an extra radial canal giving it a star shaped mouth, swims in the dark 3:27 - outro card "Thanks for Watching" with instagram, facebook, and bluesky icons and the handle @NonCompliantCyborg

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Some critters from Nightlighting 12/16/2023
From left to right, top to bottom:
Enteroctopus dolfeini (Giant Pacific Octopus) paralarvae
Feather Boa Cydippid (not official name, and not yet officially described species of ctenophore, CE Mills is currently working on describing it).
Nanomia bijuga
Mitrocoma cellularia
Dryodora glandiformis
Spotted this gorgeous ctenophore and it absolutely made my night. The rainbows are caused by the little rows of combs it used to swim; as they move they refract the light, causing spectacular waves of color. Also please appreciate its silly wrinkly mouth in the second picture - it conveys an emotion I can't quite name.
I don't expect this to do numbers but it is my life mission to tell more people about ctenophores so poll:
Had you seen a ctenophore before prior to seeing this post
yes
no
maybe? idk
Some critters from nightlighting on San Juan Island January 16th, 2024
Video ID: no sound. Little larval sculpin swims by a blue green light in the water. The camera goes under the surface to reveal a squid bobbing back and forth and then pans down to catch a seal as it swims down and away under the pier. The video cuts to a larvacean beating its tail to propel its little mucus house around a plastic cup. Finally a little baby giant pacific octopus bounces around with a little arthropod clinging onto its mantle.