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@wateringthewillows
Hibiscus Honey
Ready 2 Shred-y
available as a print or surf girl sticker 💃🏼
Daily Cephalopod #225
Is there a pink cephalod?
Yes my dear friend, and his name is Ken
This is ken's cuttlefish
The Nymphs by Alexander Mutafov (Bulgarian artist, 1879-1957)
It would make my year if you could share your most magical cuttlefish 🧙
I WOULD LOVE TO!!!!!!!
Og followers prolly know how much I love this guy
Finally starting a new D&D campaign. This one is set in what’s basically fantasy Hawai’i, so I chose to make a Cnidaran Monk based on the Man O’War (Blue Bottle) that used to plague me on morning swims.
This campaign is gearing up to be hilarious. We have a couple (Marine Biologists) playing a Lobster chick and a shrimp man, a Kia’i warlock based on a tiger shark with an intelligence score of like 1 (also played by a marine biologist, and a little dinosaur-esque bard to round it all off.
Sea Nymph ~ 1904 ~ Norman Prescott-Davies (British artist, 1862-1915)
Among the Waves by Ivan Aivazovsky
I know people on tumblr looove stories of underwater cave diving, but I haven't seen anyone talk about nitrogen narcosis aka "raptures of the deep"
basically when you want to get your advanced scuba certification (allowing you to go more than 60 feet deep) you have to undergo a very specific test: your instructor takes you down past the 60+ foot threshold, and she brings a little underwater white board with her.
she writes a very basic math problem on that board. 6 + 15. she shows it to you, and you have to solve it.
if you can solve it, you're good. that is the hardest part of the test.
because here's what happens: there is a subset of people, and we have no real idea why this happens only to them, who lose their minds at depth. they're not dying, they're not running out of oxygen, they just completely lose their sense of identity when deep in the sea.
a woman on a dive my instructor led once vanished during the course of the excursion. they were diving near this dropoff point, beyond which the depth exceeded 60 feet and he'd told them not to go down that way. the instructor made his way over to look for her and found a guy sitting at the edge of the dropoff (an underwater cliff situation) just staring down into the dark. the guy is okay, but he's at the threshold, spacing out, and mentally difficult to reach. they try to communicate, and finally the guy just points down into the dark, knowing he can't go down there, but he saw the woman go.
instructor is deep water certified and he goes down. he shines his light into the dark, down onto the seafloor which is at 90 feet below the surface. he sees the woman, her arms locked to her sides, moving like a fish, swimming furiously in circles in the pitch black.
she is hard to catch but he stops her and checks her remaining oxygen: she is almost out, on account of swimming a marathon for absolutely no reason. he is able to drag her back up, get her to a stable depth to decompress, and bring her to the surface safely.
when their masks are off and he finally asks her what happened, and why was she swimming like that, she says she fully, 100% believed she was a mermaid, had always been a mermaid, and something was hunting her in the dark 👍
The ocean is scary.
What should be mentioned here is it’s not just a subset— it’s everyone. Anyone can get narced. The training you undergo is basically to get you to the point that you can start to understand when you’re experiencing symptoms of narcosis. It’s very similar to being drunk, only, as you ascend out of the depths where you’re experiencing those symptoms it goes away almost immediately.
Getting narced is depth based when you’re breathing atmospheric air, 21% O2, which becomes toxic past certain depths. As you advance into deep diving, you start using mixes of air like Trimix and Heliox (which is primarily used in commercial deep diving) to avoid both nitrogen narcosis and oxygen toxicity.
I’ve been narced scuba diving AND deep freediving, and I’ve seen it happen and responded to these “drunk” divers many times. Training and repetition doesn’t build a tolerance to narcosis, but it does build muscle memory for when things are getting wonky— like buckling your seatbelt every time you get in the car to the point of not having to think about it anymore. You can bail yourself out without being super conscious about it.
Diving physiology is whack.
Albert Edelfelt - "The Youth and the Mermaid" (1897)
Sea Weeds ~ 1927 ~ Arthur Prince Spear (American, 1879-1959)
Claudea Fegans: An Allegory of the Sea ~ pastel, watercolour and gouache on board ~ Georges Jules Victor Clairin (French Orientalist, 1843-1919)
With Great Grandpa (Neptune) by Victor Nizovtsev