Julia Cumes Photography

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  • A Galapagos sea lion mother snuggles with her pup on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    Animal_Affection_Julia_Cumes-005.jpg
  • Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-037.jpg
  • The supermoon sets over Chatham's Lighthouse Beach on Cape Cod.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle013.JPG
  • The supermoon sets over Chatham's Lighthouse Beach on Cape Cod.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-033.jpg
  • Seagulls fly above a beach.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle012.JPG
  • A man dances on the beach at lowtide in Eastham, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle010.JPG
  • A man dances on the beach at lowtide in Eastham, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-030.jpg
  • Seagulls fly above a beach.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-032.jpg
  • Larry Belliveau pulls the weir boat into position to drive a weir pole into the sea bed. The poles are driven into the sea bed using a hydraulic pump.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-023.jpg
  • Larry Belliveau pulls the weir boat into position to drive a weir pole into the sea bed. The poles are driven into the sea bed using a hydraulic pump.
    JuliaCumesOutdoorLifestyle-045.jpg
  • Rain, wind and rainbows are so common in paniolo country that most cowboys seem not to notice them.  Here, at Kahua Ranch in North Kohala, Hawaii, 3000 ft above sea level, cowboys don their yellow slicks and get on with their work.  Despite the warm sea level temperatures, the weather is often brutal up country where some of the best ranchland is.  Winds can blow at 60 miles an hour or more and temperatures can drop into the low 40's.
    Hawaiian_Cowboys05.jpg
  • Larry Belliveau pulls the weir boat into position to drive a weir pole into the sea bed. The poles are driven into the sea bed using a hydraulic pump.
    weirfishing03.jpg
  • One of multiple private desalinization plants sets up its temporary structure in Monwabisi on Cape Town's False Bay.  The plant, which was erected in a matter of months in reaction to the water crisis and is expected to produce seven million liters of drinkable water per day when it is complete, pulls water out of the ocean 1km out to sea near a popular pool and beach area.
    JC_20180524_CapeTownWaterCrisis010.jpg
  • A group of cowboys. some wearing yellow rain slickers, head out to herd mother cows and their calves to the Kahua Ranch coral to brand, innoculate and castrate them on a rainy morning in North Kohala, Hawaii.  Despite the warm sea level temperatures in Hawaii, the weather is often brutal up country at 3,000 feet and higher where some of the best ranchland is.  Winds can blow at 60 miles an hour or more and temperatures can drop into the low 40's.
    Hawaiian_Cowboys48.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.  In the distance one can see the Celebrity Xpedition ship, one of the cruise ships that bring visitors to the Galapagos Islands.
    WildlifeNature-072.jpg
  • The hands of Alice Mendes,105, and her great-grandniece, Sophie Friend,12, lie intertwined on Alice's lap. The two have always had a powerful connection and have been pen pals for the past few years. Alice, who despite her age, remains the adored family matriarch, immigrated to the United States as an infant from Cape Verde in 1910. “Things were really different back then. No gas stoves, no street lights or traffic lights. I remember my mother getting up early in the morning to start the coal stove so that the house would be warm when we woke up,” she explains. Alice spent much of her life working as a nanny and housekeeper and married the love of her life, Jimmy Mendes, a professional boxer and fisherman who ended up dying at sea in a storm.
    A_Long_Life.jpg
  • Kurt Martin maneuvers himself in a small boat to check the formation of one of his weir traps just off of Harwich, MA. The eight-shaped  formation of the weir trap allows fish to swim into the trap.  When the fish panic, they swim further out to sea which leads them into the upper loop of the eight, trapping them only further.
    JuliaCumesOutdoorLifestyle-044.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    WildlifeNature-071.jpg
  • A Galapagos sea lion mother snuggles with her pup on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    WildlifeNature-066.jpg
  • Marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Espanola Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    WildlifeNature-065.jpg
  • A baby sea lion snuggles up to its mother on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions09.jpg
  • Two sea lions share a nose to nose moment on Fernandina Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions01.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a a piece of driftwood on Fernandina Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    marine_iguanas04.jpg
  • Marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Espanola Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    iguanas05.jpg
  • Two marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    iguanas04.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    iguana03.jpg
  • A blow hole spews sea water through a hole in the lava rock at Punta Suarez on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    blow_hole.jpg
  • Kurt Martin maneuvers himself in a small boat to check the formation of one of his weir traps just off of Harwich, MA. The eight-shaped  formation of the weir trap allows fish to swim into the trap.  When the fish panic, they swim further out to sea which leads them into the upper loop of the eight, trapping them only further.
    weirfishing02.jpg
  • Kurt Martin maneuvers himself in a small boat to check the formation of one of his weir traps just off of Harwich, MA. The eight-shaped  formation of the weir trap allows fish to swim into the trap.  When the fish panic, they swim further out to sea which leads them into the upper loop of the eight, trapping them only further.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-022.jpg
  • One of multiple private desalinization plants sets up its temporary structure in Strandfontein on Cape Town's False Bay.  The plant, which was erected in a matter of months in reaction to the water crisis and is expected to produce seven million liters of drinkable water per day when it is complete, pulls water out of the ocean 1km out to sea near a popular pool and beach area.
    JC_20180524_CapeTownWaterCrisis011.jpg
  • The hands of Alice Mendes,105, and her great-grandniece, Sophie Friend,12, lie intertwined on Alice's lap. The two have always had a powerful connection and have been pen pals for the past few years. Alice, who despite her age, remains the adored family matriarch, immigrated to the United States as an infant from Cape Verde in 1910. “Things were really different back then. No gas stoves, no street lights or traffic lights. I remember my mother getting up early in the morning to start the coal stove so that the house would be warm when we woke up,” she explains. Alice spent much of her life working as a nanny and housekeeper and married the love of her life, Jimmy Mendes, a professional boxer and fisherman who ended up dying at sea in a storm.
    A_Long_Life-2.jpg
  • A sea lion jumps out of the water off of Florian Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions12.jpg
  • A sea lion mother and her calf are photographed on Florian Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions11.jpg
  • A sea lion swims off of Fernandina Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions10.jpg
  • A baby sea lion lis photographed on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions08.jpg
  • A sea lion lifts its nose high in the air on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions07.jpg
  • A sea lion rests on a rock on South Plaza Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions06.jpg
  • Three sea lions rest on the beach on Fernandina Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions05.jpg
  • A Galapagos sea lion barks, perhaps summoning her pup, on Isabela Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions03.jpg
  • A sea lion and some pelicans wait for scraps in Puerto Ayora on Santa Cruz Island in the Galapagos Islands.
    sealion_fishmarket.jpg
  • A Galapagos sea lion mother snuggles with her pup on Espanola Island in the Galapagos.
    sealions02.jpg
  • A sally lightfoot crab crawls over marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, on Fernandina Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    sally_lightfoot_crab1.jpg
  • Marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    marine_iguanas02.jpg
  • Marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Espanola Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    marine_iguanas03.jpg
  • Marine iguanas, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounge on a rock on Fernandina Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    marine_iguanas01.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a rock on Isabela Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.  In the distance one can see the Celebrity Xpedition ship, one of the cruise ships that bring visitors to the Galapagos Islands.
    iguana_ship.jpg
  • Wayne Tachera, a cowboy for Kahua Ranch, lets the ranch's herd of horses out of the coral after spraying them with a fly repellent.  In the distance, one can see the ocean. The ranch is located at 3,000 feet above sea level where some of the best grazing lands are.
    Hawaiian_Cowboys14.jpg
  • A marine iguana, found only on the Galapagos Islands, lounges on a a piece of driftwood on Fernandina Island. The marine iguana is the only modern lizard that lives and forages in the sea and its primary food source is marine algae. Because they have to rid their bodies of excess salt, one can often see marine iguanas making a sort of sneezing sound and expelling water and salt from their noses.
    WildlifeNature-075.jpg
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