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Cages or no cages? ... Whose business is it anyway?
Are divers tempting fate with Guadalupe Island Great White sharks? Tour operators engage in a war of words over shark diving practices.
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Weighing in at up to 3,000 pounds and attaining lengths of 18 feet, Great White sharks are among the oceanâs most feared yet revered inhabitants. Having a face-to face encounter with the oceanâs apex predator is a bona-fide adrenaline rush, with divers worldwide shelling out mega bucks and traveling great distances for the privilege. Boasting pristine blue water with 100-foot visibility, Guadalupe Island situated west of Baja California, Mexico, is one of the worldâs premier Great White destinations.
Have your say and win a SharkTee
What do you think? Is it just crazy to dive with big sharks without a cage? It is anybody elseâs business if you want to encounter wildlife close up? It this just a war of words between competing operators? We would like to hear what you think. Letâs hear your opnion and post a comment on our Facebook page. Three SharkTees with designs by diving legend Schlomo Cohen will be awarded the to the writers of the three best entries. Editor decision is final. Debate closes Aug 15. T-shirts will be posted directly from SharkTees
More info on the Sharktees here .. Check it out!
Wolfgang Leander, who free dives with Tiger sharks in open water, writes:
âOut of principle, I would never go into a cage just as I would not visit a zoo, where âdangerousâ animals are kept behind bars. But I do understand that most divers would not venture into the territory of [Great] whites without the protection of a cage. Diving with whites outside of a cage is not for everyone.
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âWhites, as any other sharks, are very sensitive, and basically shy animals. Thus, if you want to dive with themâon scuba or free-divingâyou have to have a lot of experience to feel very comfortable interacting with large sharks, and you have to know how to interpret their body language.
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âSome whites could display a merely inquisitive behavior while others could be either aggressive or not interested in interacting with you at all.
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âAll sharks have different personalities, but as circumstances could change quickly, you always have to be on the lookout and never feel over-confident. I would act like that with whites all the time, as they are not as forgiving as tigers.
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âI have had many Tiger sharks sneaking up to me from the back and touching me with their noses. These were not dangerous situations as the tigers were clearly just curious and really quite gentle. I would not want to be in such a situation with a Great White shark though. Whites are ambush predators one shouldnât ever overlook that.â
Nachoum also points out that it is also a matter of logistics: âWhile they [the other operators âed.] are operating full boats servicing anywhere from 18-24 guests, I only conduct one or two trips with a maximum of ten guests. Of these, only five are screened and allowed to go cageless, and only one at a time.
ââI am sure that when it comes to movie and TV projects, they will and do go out of the cages, too. But they are not able to offer that same thing for their regular clientele. It is simply down to the difference between mass production and hand made products,â said Nachoum.
Freaking out
Mike Lever, owner of the Nautilus Explorer, which goes to Guadaloupe, told us that diving without cages like Nachoum does is not permitted according to the local regulations. But he is also concerned that Nachoumâs operation is an accident waiting to happen. âWhat concerns me is that someone outside the cage gets freaked out by a shark, and itâs easy to get freaked out by a sharkâ Iâve been freaked out by them,â he said. âIf that person bails to the surface, what kind of reflex are they going to trigger in that animal? And then that person is on the surface thrashing, and then what happens?â
âYes, I am aware of the prophecy of âwhat ifââI do everything humanly to avoid it and withdraw when there are more than two sharks around us.â Nachoum said other operatorsâwho will remain unnamedâare in violation of regulations by using whole tuna attached to ropes to lure sharks to surface cages and inspire them to open their mouths for camera-toting passengers. The crews yank the tuna away before the sharks can snatch them and this, Nachoum says, âmakes the sharks crazy.â
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However, whatâs legal and illegal is largely moot because Guadalupe is 160 miles off the Baja California coast and enforcement of any rules is difficult. Mostly itâs up to the operators to watch each other, and they do so with great suspicion. One thing they all agree on is that if a fatality occurs, Mexico might immediately shut down all operations. In turn, that would open the island to poaching and shark numbers would be decimated. In the end, itâs in everyoneâs best interest to work together, keeping both sharks (and customers) alive. â
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