Nina Dobrev shows off bikini body in video on Instagram

Nina Dobrev might enjoy wearing azure, but that doesn’t mean that she’s feeling blue at all.

On Sunday, the Degrassi actress posted a boomerang video on Instagram that showed off her killer bikini body while she danced and wore a blue two-piece swimsuit at the beach.

The Vampire Diaries star cheerfully swayed her body in the post and shared: ‘Namaste in the cold. This beach doesn’t believe in winter.’

Blue winter: Nina Dobrev, 29, flaunted her bikini body in an Instagram video shared Sunday

The Flatliners actress matched the water and sky by wearing a bright blue two-piece bathing suit as she danced on the beach-side rocks.

Dobrev waved her arms up and down and moved her hips while smiling wide for the camera.

The Canadian actress wore large sunglasses as the wind blew in her hair.

Keeping cool in the cold: Despite it being winter, Dobrev shared that ‘This beach doesn’t believe in winter’

From the looks of it, blue seems to be Dobrev’s favourite color, as she recently posted a different video where she also wore blue in the water. 

The Bulgarian-born star swam alongside sharks in a bid to stop the barbaric trade of their fins.

The former Vampire Diaries star fearlessly tailed the predators — some almost as big as her — in a PSA for Oceana. 

Brave: Dobrev swam alongside SHARKS in a bid to stop the barbaric trade of their fins

Brave: Dobrev swam alongside SHARKS in a bid to stop the barbaric trade of their fins

‘I used to be scared… but then I learned the facts,’ she said in the video, waist-deep in the shark infested waters.

‘Sharks keep the ocean healthy. And they aren’t really interested in us.’

She added: ‘It’s our interest in their fins that’s scary.’

Fearless: The former Vampire Diaries star  fearlessly tailed the predators — some almost as big as her — in a PSA for Oceana

Fearless: The former Vampire Diaries star fearlessly tailed the predators — some almost as big as her — in a PSA for Oceana

Not bothered: 'Sharks keep the ocean healthy. And they aren't really interested in us.'

Not bothered: ‘Sharks keep the ocean healthy. And they aren’t really interested in us.’

Real horror story: She adds: 'It's our interest in their fins that's scary.'

Real horror story: She adds: ‘It’s our interest in their fins that’s scary.’

The film cut to a harrowing shot of a harbour completely carpeted in severed shark fins, and another covered in shark tails that have been hacked off.

‘Millions of sharks end up in the global fin trade every year,’ Nina reported. ‘And many grow slowly, which means they face a high risk of extinction.

She plead: ‘Please help, and join me and Oceana in the campaign to stop the trade of shark fins and help save sharks.’  

Barbaric: The film cuts to a harrowing shot of a harbour completely carpeted in severed shark fins

Barbaric: The film cuts to a harrowing shot of a harbour completely carpeted in severed shark fins

For soup: Another is covered in shark tails that have been hacked off

For soup: Another is covered in shark tails that have been hacked off

Loophole: While shark finning is illegal in U.S. waters, shark fins – including imports from countries that allow finning – continue to be bought and sold throughout the US, Oceana reports

Loophole: While shark finning is illegal in U.S. waters, shark fins – including imports from countries that allow finning – continue to be bought and sold throughout the US, Oceana reports

While shark finning is illegal in U.S. waters, shark fins – including imports from countries that allow finning – continue to be bought and sold throughout the US, Oceana reports.

Oceana claims that the demand for shark fins is one of the greatest threats facing shark populations around the world.

Shark hunters have been known to fin the sharks alive, throwing them back in the water with no means of swimming, hunting or surviving at all.

Appeal: She says, 'Please help, and join me and Oceana in the campaign to stop the trade of shark fins and help save sharks.'

Appeal: She says, ‘Please help, and join me and Oceana in the campaign to stop the trade of shark fins and help save sharks.’



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