I've caught dozens of mahi-mahi, a tropical game fish more familiar to Hawaiians, been surrounded by frolicking whales and porpoises and studied green turtles and rare giant leatherback turtles as they sunned themselves.
22.
Their four-part harmonies and spirited tunes conjured up images of 20th Century Sirens, sent not to entice sailors to doom but to delight a handful of folks who dined above or sunned on the surrounding rocks.
23.
Behind an abandoned house at the golf course's edge, a turtle sunned itself on a floating palm frond in the swimming pool's green, rancid water, a few feet from a bobbing Styrofoam cup.
24.
While the commissioner of the U . S . National Basketball Association skied in Colorado and his deputy sunned in Florida, NBA players and agents stewed on the telephone Tuesday as the lockout approached its half-year anniversary.
25.
Then, for 1 2 weeks, the pods are alternately sunned and sweated : during the day, they are laid out in the sun, and each night, wrapped in cloth and packed in airtight boxes to sweat.
26.
On our side, Botswanan territory, a herd of elephants, with babies in tow, cavorted in the water and mud, alongside puku antelopes and baboons, while hippos snorted in the shallows and crocodiles sunned themselves on the bank.
27.
Under balmy Mediterranean skies, they frolicked in the sea, sunned themselves on the deck of his father's yacht, tried out a JetSki, and cruised from St . Tropez on the French Riviera to the exclusive Italian resort of Portofino.
28.
He suggested that when eastern friends arrived, residents " have them send their clothing to be sunned and pressed, and that they pay particular attention to the cleansing of the noses and throats, as it is quite possible that they might be carriers ."
29.
ARIZ-WEST-NILE ( Phoenix )-- Behind an abandoned mansion at the golf course's edge, a turtle sunned itself on a floating palm frond in the swimming pool's green, rancid water, a few feet from a bobbing Styrofoam cup.
30.
At West Harbor Beach in Bayville, N . Y ., Sergio Spano, a 21-year-old student at Long Island University, closed his economics textbook, placed it on a picnic table and sunned himself while nearby his two nephews played barefoot in shallow waves.