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Popular motor-sailing charter yacht 'Blue Eyes" crossed the Corinth Canal in Greece. The passage took place in June, 2017 while "Blue Eyes" was sailing from her home base in Marmaris, Turkey to Croatia to spend summer season in the Adriatic. "Blue Eyes" is available for charter in the Adriatic, Mediterranean, and Aegean seas by Contact Yachts company.
Maud Fontenoy : #Navigatrice audacieuse, Maud Fontenoy a traversé l’ #Atlantique et le #Pacifique à la #rame, en solitaire. En 2007, elle réalise un tour du monde à la #voile contre vents et courants dominants, un parcours éprouvant par les mers du Sud, réalisé sans assistance. Une aventure humaine et #maritime hors normes.
Ahoy captain! Let's get ready to rumble and sail across Caribbean waters, and live the best adventure in Cozumel island! The best cruise excursion is here, and this is what you'll have full access to: Sailing on board a 65 ft catamaran Snorkeling in gorgeous reef (gear and certified guides included) Private beach Beers, margaritas, sodas and purified water (all you can drink) Water toys Kayaks, paddle boards and snorkeling gear Lounge chairs and hammocks The Fury Catamarans sail, snorkel & beach party tour is an exciting and thrilling adventure, that you haev to book TODAY! Simply remember to click on your cruise line, and purchase the tour directly with them https://bit.ly/2lMmj0K
The yellow stingray (Urobatis jamaicensis) is a species of stingray in the family Urotrygonidae, found in the tropical western Atlantic Ocean from North Carolina to Trinidad. This bottom-dwelling species inhabits sandy, muddy, or seagrass bottoms in shallow inshore waters, commonly near coral reefs. Reaching no more than 36 cm (14 in) across, the yellow stingray has a round pectoral fin disc and a short tail with a well-developed caudal fin. It has a highly variable but distinctive dorsal color pattern consisting of either light-on-dark or dark-on-light reticulations forming spots and blotches, and can rapidly change the tonality of this coloration to improve its camouflage. Relatively sedentary during the day, the yellow stingray feeds on small invertebrates and bony fishes. When hunting it may undulate its disc to uncover buried prey, or lift the front of its disc to form a "cave" attractive to shelter-seeking organisms. This species is aplacental viviparous, meaning that the developing embryos are sustained initially by yolk and later by histotroph ("uterine milk"). Females bear two litters of up to seven young per year in seagrass, following a gestation period of 5–6 months. Though innocuous towards humans, the yellow stingray can inflict a painful injury with its venomous tail spine. This species is taken as bycatch by commercial fisheries and collected for the aquarium trade; it may also be negatively affected by habitat degradation. Nevertheless, it remains common and widespread, which has led the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to list it under Least Concern.