Lobster water 

107 creative works found

  • Lobsters in a tank about to be cooked and eaten.

  • Title: ROCK HOPSTER / Camera: Nikon D80 / Capture Date: 04/27/2007 / Dimensions: 2592×3588 / Exposure: 1/8 sec at f/5.6 / Focal Length: 200mm / ISO: 800 / Filter: None / Flash: None / Tripod: None / Uploaded Date: 04/27/2007 / Comments: © 2007 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • This photo was taken in Maine, USA. The boat is used for lobster fishing.

  • This image is of the St. John’s harbour and what is know as the “Battery” in the background. This trawler prepares to leave the safety of it’s mooring to head into the frigid North Atlantic to fill its nets and pots. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / /

  • This old dory sits here reminiscing of days gone by… when the fishery was thriving. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / / /

  • This shot was taken in West Pennant, Nova Scotia. West Pennant is a tiny fishing village about 40 minutes from downtown Halifax. These traps look something like the ones my Father and I used to fish with.

  • Deserted, forgotten, past it’s usefulness … but with a strange beauty all it’s own. / Found abandoned on a beach at Stromness.

  • If you have a moment I am rather curious about something. I couldn’t decide between two images so I’m uploading both and calling them Peggy’s Cove, NS (1) and Peggy’s Cove, NS (2). Can you tell me which you enjoy the best? Thanks!! Darlene Here’s the other one / /

  • I was hoping if you have a second you could help me with a bit of curiosity. I couldn’t decide between this shot and the other which is close and has the same name with the exception of being (1) instead of (2). I uploaded both and decided to get opinions if you don’t mind. Thanks! Darlene Here’s the other one / /

  • This is another image from the Peggy’s Cove collection. I’m hoping (probably in vain) that this perspective hasn’t been shot all that often as i don’t like repeating someone else’s work. I don’t recall seeing this small village portrayed this way but that could just be that I missed it. I really love how this shot turned out and I hope you do too!

  • I took this shot in one of the many outport communities along Newfoundland’s Avalon Penninsula. There were so many of these crabpots stacked along side many different sheds. / / / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography /

  • This is replacing a previous version I had uploaded. I applied a ND filter to it to make the fog thicker and sharpened it up a bit more.

  • I went for a drive this afternoon in search of more bergs and I came across this coastal scene. I love photographing anything with a lobster pot in it. The iceberg on the horizon added a very cool element to the shot I thought. / / From the Northern tip of Labrador down to the eastern coast of Newfoundland, the sea that pounds and caresses these shores is nicknamed Iceberg Alley. Bergs born 10,000 years ago on the Greenland icecap dance along the coast and far out to sea, propelled unpredictably by wind and tide, tumbling, twirling, and breaking into fantastic shapes before melting in the warm waters of the gulf stream. / / An iceberg’s journey down Iceberg Alley begins once it breaks off from the edges of Greenland’s glaciers. Dropping into the ocean, it is gripped by the Labrador Current and carried through the dark ocean along the coasts of Newfoundland and Labrador. In the past, during certain times of the year, the alley has been thick with the largest and most beautiful icebergs found anywhere in the world. They glide majestically along, alone or in groups, obscuring the horizon with their tall, jagged silhouettes. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / / More in this series / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography

  • I was returning from a day of Cod fishing off the Northeast Coast of Newfoundland when I passed by these Lobster Pots. They were stacked along the road, next to a small wharf in a very, very tiny fishing village. I thought the vibrant colors of the pots contrasted nicely with the gloomy, overcast day and the grey rocks.

  • Lobster Traps. ©DApixara. Framed matted print: Card: /

  • A non-lighthouse shot at Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia. One of the most photographed places in North America.

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Reflections of Soluna Strahan, on the West Coast of Tasmania, has always been a working fishing port. Today, the town’s lobster boats and long-liners still tie up at the wharf to unload their catch, not far from Lady Jane Franklin II, the magnificent Gordon River Cruise boat. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/160sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • Fishing shacks located in Plymouth,Ma which are located on the pier. You can go fishing, sightseeing, or buy bait! Commerical fishing boats as well as other crafts are housed in this harbor! Historic Plymouth has the Mayflower ship docked as well as Plymouth Rock for tourists to envision days gone by! Taken with a Canon XTI.

  • A lovely area of Cape Cod at a quaint harbor and waterway which leads to the open ocean. Great place to sit and grab a lobster roll and watch the boats pass by. Taken with a Canon XTI. / f/8 / 1/320 sec / ISO-100 / focal Length- 24mm

  • Lobster pots in Whitby docks. Combination of two exposures to create this HDR image and merged in photoshop. www.sbland.co.uk

  • Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia, Canada. An orange dory sits in the cove beckoning tourists to photograph this world-famous postcard scene, nicely framed by the lobster traps in the foreground. This shot was voted in the top 10 of The Best Waterscape Challenge, in the group Style! Class! Elegance! Excellence!

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