About 4x the amount of reports this year compared to last year in southern ca! some good reports here! enjoy the read and be safe.
http://www.sharkresearchcommittee.co...shark_news.htm
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About 4x the amount of reports this year compared to last year in southern ca! some good reports here! enjoy the read and be safe.
http://www.sharkresearchcommittee.co...shark_news.htm
Fuck global warming and high gas prices.
Crazy how many more there have been this year.
Yeah, I never though of Huntington as a sharky place. Guess I'm wrong.
Not really being much of a water guy, that stuff scares the shit out of me.
Does this really have to do with global warming? Are the water temps diff. than normal in SoCal?
I'm no marine biologist*, but I can imagine warmer temps causing shark prey to hang out in different locations, whether because the prey's own food source has moved or because it's spawning/rooking in different places. We saw a big seal off Malibu Lagoon earlier today, which is unusual. ("Unusual" based on lineup chatter. Of course, the crowd there is a bunch of dentists and lawyers who don't know much about marine biology.)
*Or am I?
That one most of the way down - with the pictures - of the shark thrashing around on the shore is so damn surreal!
I haven't followed the temps super closely since I can't surf currently, but from when I have checked, they seem pretty dang normal. mid-high 60's. I don't really think thats it, but who knows. There is huge water temp variability, at least on the surface, from wind and currents so it would take some real statistics to know of sure.
Yeah, you expect it all to be up north, but surfing down south currently has put it in the back of your mind. I never thought of the dog beach in Huntington as sharky.
I do wonder if it is more awareness of how to report activity that has changed things. There is an article in Surfing about possible reasons for increased activity.
In the past, whenever I heard about something I was always questionable on it. I never quite believed it. There was an incident in March at the dog beach in HB, where a guy got the back of his board bit. He reported that it was a white shark, and pretty much everyone called it a hoax. Then Ralph Collier, one of the worlds foremost experts on white sharks, examined the bit mark and the teeth that were left. He concluded that is was a 15 foot white shark.
Carlsbad seems really sharky lately. If you check out sharkresearchcommittee.com you will notice a number of encounters from that area. It is a great website, although I almost wish I did not know about it.