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#1045387 - 18/12/2011 20:14 Re: sharks [Re: EmeraldLecky]
Winnyhair Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 21/02/2011
Loc: Hampton, Victoria, Australia
Originally Posted By: EmeraldLecky
As someone who has spearfished all my life (at least since I could swim properly) I have a very good respect for sharks. I have been bitten once or twice, mostly curiosity from the sharks themselves. An 8ft Tiger gave me a little more than a love bite around 14 years ago on the GBR and I still have one of its teeth (that I removed from my right calf muscle) on a necklace at home. However, saltwater is in my blood and even though the odd person does meet their maker through shark attack it wont stop the majority of the population who were brought up in and around the ocean.

Statistically you have more chance of being run over by a bus than killed by shark attack.

SBT, next time I'm in Townsville waters I'll be sure to pop up beside the boat and say G'day, LOL.


With all due respect, statistically...based on the facts here...this is not quite correct...EL...if you have been bitten once or twice, how many times have you been run over by a bus?

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#1050610 - 30/12/2011 17:45 Re: sharks [Re: Winnyhair]
pogonantha Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 30/01/2011
Loc: el arish
I took a couple of Wwoofers out fishing and snorkelling a few weeks back...we found a nice 15m drop off/wall and I was cruising along in the deep water when I saw a reef shark lazily cruise by 10m below ..I followed along until he seemed to become a bit agitated and changed direction by zipping up above the wall and heading along the reef flat in a bout 3m of water..after kicking along trying to keep up with him I saw that he was headed straight towards the female wwoofer..he went in quite fast and then just 3m from her veered off and returned to the deeper water once more ...the male wwoofer jumped back in the boat soon after as the shark attacked and killed a fish close to him..he panicked and bolted..lol ..
Later on the female wwoofer mentioned that she was menstruating and had just pee'd in the water not long prior to the shark investigating her...

Hmmm...There might be something in that for the ladies to take on board...


Edited by pogonantha (30/12/2011 17:52)

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#1050613 - 30/12/2011 17:51 Re: sharks [Re: Winnyhair]
pogonantha Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 30/01/2011
Loc: el arish
Originally Posted By: Winnyhair
Originally Posted By: EmeraldLecky
As someone who has spearfished all my life (at least since I could swim properly) I have a very good respect for sharks. I have been bitten once or twice, mostly curiosity from the sharks themselves. An 8ft Tiger gave me a little more than a love bite around 14 years ago on the GBR and I still have one of its teeth (that I removed from my right calf muscle) on a necklace at home. However, saltwater is in my blood and even though the odd person does meet their maker through shark attack it wont stop the majority of the population who were brought up in and around the ocean.

Statistically you have more chance of being run over by a bus than killed by shark attack.

SBT, next time I'm in Townsville waters I'll be sure to pop up beside the boat and say G'day, LOL.


With all due respect, statistically...based on the facts here...this is not quite correct...EL...if you have been bitten once or twice, how many times have you been run over by a bus?


He said you would have more chance of being KILLED by a shark than being run over by a bus..he has only had a couple of nips...anyone that has speared or fished the GBR or elsewhere will have been hasseled by sharks to some degree...mostly however they are just after your catch..I still dont trust the big Tigers and Hammers though...

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#1051371 - 2/01/2012 19:26 Re: sharks [Re: pogonantha]
Popeye Offline
Weatherzone Addict

Registered: 30/12/2006
Loc: Cable Beach, Broome.
I guess EmaraldLecky was lucky that 8ft Tiger only bit him on the Calf. A bit higher up on the thigh and a severed femoral artery out on the GBR would have a lineball survival scenario unfolding. I reckon I would prefer to get hit by a bus than bleed out on the back of your mates tinnie as he races you the 50kms to the nearest hospital.

Scarey thought that. I have been spearfishing up here over the last few years in the Nwest and it scares the crap out of me some days. Some places just seem a little isolated and sharkey not to mention croccy up on the peninsula. One trip up near Middle lagoon we kayaked around to out favorite camping spot and had a 4m tiger shark swim past and circle us twice before moving on. 20 min utes before that I was in the water. I havn't been back to that spot since even though I know it has the biggest Coral Trout and Bluebone just sitting there for the taking.

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#1057175 - 16/01/2012 20:16 Re: sharks [Re: Popeye]
pogonantha Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 30/01/2011
Loc: el arish
I took my 10 yr old son on his first open water scuba dives at the reef last week..
was surprised at how fearless he was around the reef sharks..dont know whether thats a good or a bad thing..he also found a monster moray eel and wanted to get some pilchards and hand feed it...maybe next time son..

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#1057179 - 16/01/2012 20:30 Re: sharks [Re: pogonantha]
Kev86 Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 13/01/2011
Caught a 6ft bronze whaler on the beach Christmas weekend near Esperance, took 4 hours - Didn't realise they could swing their head so far behind them..

Have learned lesson.

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#1057199 - 16/01/2012 21:19 Re: sharks [Re: pogonantha]
Manta Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 25/01/2011
Loc: Bundaberg
Sharks are pretty cool when you are swimming with them. Having dived all over the world I have had many encounters including a swim by from a 3.5m Hammerhead. Carying dead fish when diving or spear fishing makes them look at you a bit differently as you have food. Just like a dog looking at your snag. Some dogs are gentle and some go beyond the snag and get your fingers. Moray eels are almost blind and when you feed them they often cant tell where the fish ends and your fingers start. Be carefull if you intend to feed them.

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#1059373 - 21/01/2012 19:09 Re: sharks [Re: Manta]
boomer Offline
Weatherzone Addict

Registered: 21/11/2010
Loc: Cairns
If you are going to feed a moray keep your fingers and thumbs as close together as possible.
_________________________
Our life is what our thoughts make it... Marcus Aurelius

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#1059623 - 22/01/2012 09:35 Re: sharks [Re: boomer]
pogonantha Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 30/01/2011
Loc: el arish
Originally Posted By: boomer
If you are going to feed a moray keep your fingers and thumbs as close together as possible.


Thanks for the advice...my missus would never forgive me if I bought our 10 yr old back from a moray feeding session and had to re-name him stumpy.

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#1062415 - 24/01/2012 21:50 Re: sharks [Re: pogonantha]
duckweather Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 20/12/2010
Loc: Wantirna, Vic
Quote:
my missus would never forgive me if I bought our 10 yr old back from a moray feeding session and had to re-name him stumpy.

This made me chuckle. Maybe your new name would be 'Lumpy' - after being bopped on the head for bringing your son home re-modelled.
So....the new family photo could be tagged Mrs. Grumpy (no disrespects to your wife smile ), Mr. Lumpy and Master Stumpy.
......ok, that was a bit silly.... smirk
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#1097226 - 1/04/2012 17:34 Re: sharks [Re: duckweather]
Popeye Offline
Weatherzone Addict

Registered: 30/12/2006
Loc: Cable Beach, Broome.
Sharks again hitting the headlines in WA. Another fatality off the Swest with a 33yo fella cray fishing from his boat taken by what is thought to be a 4metre great white. That is now the 4th fatal attack in the region over the last 7 months. Those numbers just seem too high. I spoke to someone about shark attacks today and he was saying that he read a report on shark attacks over the last 12 months and worldwide there have been 5 fataliltes, 4 of which were in SWest WA.

Edit, Just found this article which has WA now the world's deadliest shark attack region.

WA DEEMED WORLDS DEADLIEST


Edited by Popeye (1/04/2012 17:38)

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#1097234 - 1/04/2012 18:40 Re: sharks [Re: Popeye]
Brett Guy Offline
Weather Freak

Registered: 5/10/2010
Loc: Bently Park, Cairns
He was not actually taken was he. I thought they got his body back. Problem with a shark is they don't have hands. When they make the descision to see what you are they only have one way of doing it. A little grab in the mouth(or a big grab if they are in a feisty mood).
4 in 7 months is certainly a bad run though. Gotta feel for the victim and those affected.
However I do get sick and tired of the calls to kill the shark(as if they would know which it was).
It's not as though you hear everyone calling for all trees to be cut down when someone is killed by a falling branch.

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#1097251 - 1/04/2012 19:53 Re: sharks [Re: Brett Guy]
Popeye Offline
Weatherzone Addict

Registered: 30/12/2006
Loc: Cable Beach, Broome.
Yeah they got him back. I heard somewhere seals had been seen in the area in the days/weeks leading up to the attack which you kind of expect along alot of that coast. I am not sure if he was wearing a wetsuit but no doubt the Shark may have thought he was a seal and went in for a surprise attack.

I understand that black wetsuits are used for a reason ie attracting sun and warmth whilst in the water but it must confuse the buggery out of those sharks to suddenly see a black object freediving/diving for crays right in front of it. I wonder if the initial brain response and reaction of a shark would be different if divers wore different coloured wetsuits, red, yellow, light blue, hot pink (lol). Sharks know what their prey looks like and they are usually pretty good at getting it. Why make yourself look like their prey.

Another possibility may be the distress noise that a crayfish could make when being handled and the attraction of nearby predators to investigate. I remember once we went fishing but we had no bait so I snorkelled out and harrassed an octopus with a spear. The noise that thing made under water drew every big NWEST snapper in a 500m radius towards the distressed octopus. It was amazing to see. The same as when you spear a fish everything comes in for a look. Wouldnt be nice though for a 4 metre hungry great white to be the thing that comes in for a look.

Great whites freak me out. I have gotten used to Tiger sharks and hammerheads and feel OK near them but the big whites just sit that higher up on the amazing predator scale that I dont want to be in the water with.

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#1097745 - 4/04/2012 12:40 Re: sharks [Re: Popeye]
Sir BoabTree Offline
Meteorological Motor Mouth

Registered: 7/02/2007
Loc: Townsville Dry Tropics
Knee jerk human reaction is to destroy something that causes death. In this case the hunt would more than likely be pretty pointless as the shark that bit him was probably 30 klms away by the end of that day and a couple of hundred away the next day.

If you dress like a lettuce and lie down in a field expect to be eaten by a rabbit, same thing in the water
dress like prey expect to be treated as by sharks.
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