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JAWS
#1
i told my son to stay out of the water this weekend. i am so glad he's going to a BC football game instead.[Image: boobshake5.gif]i mean it IS the ocean. sharks live there. duh.

JAWS ruined life for most New Englanders. thankyou Quint and Brody.


Sharks spotted near Monomoy refuge[Image: bilde?Site=CC&Date=20090904&Cate...0&Q=80]



September 04, 2009

CHATHAM ⿿ The town is on high alert after five large sharks, possibly great whites, were spotted trolling the waters close to Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge yesterday afternoon.

Town and state officials have issued warnings to the public urging people to avoid swimming where seals congregate. Town officials are expected to decide today whether further measures, such as beach closures, are necessary, said Lisa Capone, press secretary for the state Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.

The large sharks were spotted just off shore at Monomoy Island, a National Wildlife Refuge where thousands of seals sun and swim daily.

The sharks were seen in the afternoon more than one mile from Lighthouse Beach, the nearest swimming beach, Capone said.

Chatham Harbor Master Stuart Smith gave a slightly different location for the shark sighting. He said the animals were just off Monomoy's point, where Nantucket Sound meets the Atlantic Ocean.

State Division of Marine Fisheries shark expert Greg Skomal flew over the area yesterday afternoon and confirmed large sharks were in the water. But he needs to go back by boat today to identify the species, Capone said.

"I think they are leaning toward a white type of shark," Smith said of Division of Marine Fisheries officials.

Though the presence of large predatory sharks doesn't come as much of a surprise to anyone familiar with the area, town officials were concerned enough to hold a meeting and write up a "Notice of Public Interest," Smith said. The advisory warns people that the ocean is the domain of sharks and seals, and swimmers need to be aware, Smith said.

"Chatham is now a year-round home to a few thousand seals," the town's notice states. "Please note, however, that the ocean waters near Chatham are also home to large sharks, and seals are a staple part of their diet.

"Therefore, it is not surprising that there have been recent confirmed reports of sharks feeding on seals in the vicinity of Chatham's ocean beaches," the advisory continues. "As recently as Friday, August 28, 2009, the carcass of a seal was confirmed to have been partially eaten by a large shark."

It is rare for a shark to attack a human. The last documented human death in a Massachusetts shark attack was in 1936, Tony LaCasse, spokesman for the New England Aquarium, told the Cape Cod Times last year.

But the town advised swimmers to stay away from areas with seals to avoid trouble with sharks and the marine mammals.

Smith said seals are dirty and disease ridden. They outweigh most humans and they bite, he added. "This has been going on for years now," he said.

Just two weeks ago, a pair of kayakers reported seeing a shark attack a seal near Monomoy. Last year, a seal cruise captain watched a seal meet the same fate.

While sharks certainly have been spotted, beach closings even under these circumstances are rare, Smith said.

Seals began gathering at Monomoy about 12 years ago, Smith said. Their growing presence has caused some fishermen to worry that the seals' fish appetite is taking a bite out of their livelihood. Others worry that the seals are attracting more sharks.

"My greatest concern is the seal population," said David McCourbrey, a recreational fisherman and Marstons Mills resident. "It's a protected species and it's great to protect a species, but I'm not sure if we always think of all the repercussions. ... I just think this will be more and more of a problem, and someday something is going to happen."

















































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#2
It's impossible to run in the water & everytime I see the dolphins I think it's sharks and damn near dig a hole to China in my effort to get back to the beach...As a small aside, shark is delicious.
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#3
I go shark fishing from time to time.

Great Whites are a protected species and must be released if caught.

I have a great respect for sharks of all species and do follow good conservation practices when shark fishing. I practice catch and release fishing. I will only keep one shark from the trip and it must be large enough (breed specific) to have bred at least once in its lifetime.

The best shark species as far as flavor are Mako and Blue sharks. Ya just can't beat shark steaks from the grill.

Now......
Choosing to ignore the advice to not swim where there are seal populations is what gets a great many shark bite victims into the situation which allowed it to happen in the first place.

Sharks generally will not see humans as a food source and so most attacks are due to a case of mistaken identity.

The shark thinks a surfer paddling on their board is a seal due to similar profiles against the light from the surface.
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#4
Duchess Wrote:It's impossible to run in the water & everytime I see the dolphins I think it's sharks and damn near dig a hole to China in my effort to get back to the beach...As a small aside, shark is delicious.
::lmao::............I've never tried shark!
He ain't heavy, he's my brother.
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#5
Maggot Wrote:
Duchess Wrote:It's impossible to run in the water & everytime I see the dolphins I think it's sharks and damn near dig a hole to China in my effort to get back to the beach...As a small aside, shark is delicious.
::lmao::............I've never tried shark!
how was micky rooney?
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#6
BROTHER Wrote:
Maggot Wrote:
Duchess Wrote:It's impossible to run in the water & everytime I see the dolphins I think it's sharks and damn near dig a hole to China in my effort to get back to the beach...As a small aside, shark is delicious.
::lmao::............I've never tried shark!
how was micky rooney?
::dunno::::dunno::::dunno::
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#7
I've had shark too. It's delicious.

They have sharks out here all the time. I think they spotted great whites as far south as me too. The water is 85° here so now there are lots of sharks.

Duchess, usually the waters are shark free if you have a pod of dolphins. we don't usually get dolphins up this far but on occasion we do. A little more south like the Wildwood to Cape May area you do see them. Whales too! Sometimes you'll see dolphins running along the side of the Cape May Ferry in the rough that the boat makes.

I haven't been in the beach to go in any deeper than my knees in a very, very long time thanks to the movie!
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#8
having SCUBA dived all my life, i had a deal with them...i don't eat them and they don't eat me! i will never knowingly eat shark.

i also respect and admire all ocean life.

5 very largewhites were spotted up here at the Cape, 2 were tagged. but ALL the beaches were closed to swimming yesterday, ruining a lot of peoples' labor day last hurrah. shades of JAWS! ::lmao::the beaches may be closed for several more days.

i say let them eat a few tourists. Smiley_emoticons_biggrin

















































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#9
Tourists get eaten here every summer. Many more die from the rip currents.

Tourists are idiots. They do not understand what those flags mean. Actually, they think the flags are not for them. Lifeguard whistles are not for them either.

Last year, some idiot got her legs pulled out from under her in knee deep water. Pulled her down and snapped her neck.

Kids drown all the time in rough surf. Parents don't watch them either. Sad really.

Most of these casualties are tourists from places where they don't have beaches. These people are the ones who don't understand the power of water. I bet these are the same idiots who live near rivers that flood and wind up stuck on top of their car roof waiting rescue because they think 4 wheel drive makes them invincible.

Yeah, let whitey eat them.
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#10
JAWS



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#11
TARD ALERT!
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#12
The Antagonist Wrote:
TARD ALERT!
Where's LEO?
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#13
5 tagged now.

CHATHAM ⿿ This town has great beaches, great restaurants ⿿ and now great white sharks that are reluctant to move on.

The continued presence of as many as 10 to 20 of the solitary predators near Chatham's Atlantic beaches prompted town officials yesterday to close the town's beaches to swimming indefinitely, Parks and Beaches Director Dan Tobin said. "From what we hear, they won't leave until the water temperatures drops into the 50s."

The water temperature change isn't likely for a few weeks, state shark expert Greg Skomal said after several days of chasing the sharks off Chatham's coast with harpoonist and fisherman William Chaprales of Marstons Mills on his 32-foot boat, the Ezduzit, now out of Sandwich.

Since Saturday, Skomal, a senior biologist with the state Division of Marine Fisheries, Chaprales, and his son and boat pilot Nick Chaprales, have tagged five great white sharks with data loggers. The electronic tags may help answer many of the lingering questions about the species.

















































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#14
They're obviously there for the eats since they're solitary predators, as the article stated.
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#15
jackboots Wrote:5 tagged now.

CHATHAM ⿿ This town has great beaches, great restaurants ⿿ and now great white sharks that are reluctant to move on.

The continued presence of as many as 10 to 20 of the solitary predators near Chatham's Atlantic beaches prompted town officials yesterday to close the town's beaches to swimming indefinitely, Parks and Beaches Director Dan Tobin said. "From what we hear, they won't leave until the water temperatures drops into the 50s."

The water temperature change isn't likely for a few weeks, state shark expert Greg Skomal said after several days of chasing the sharks off Chatham's coast with harpoonist and fisherman William Chaprales of Marstons Mills on his 32-foot boat, the Ezduzit, now out of Sandwich.

Since Saturday, Skomal, a senior biologist with the state Division of Marine Fisheries, Chaprales, and his son and boat pilot Nick Chaprales, have tagged five great white sharks with data loggers. The electronic tags may help answer many of the lingering questions about the species.
have a drink and dive for donuts...............::lmao::
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#16
Actually Great Whites are NORMALLY solitary predators. They have been known to temporarily form loose schools and hunt cooperatively.

If there's plenty of food they'll barge in and belly up to the bar regardless of the presence of others.
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#17
Oh that's right, I forgot you know all about great whites BECAUSE YOU ARE ONE! ::lmao::
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#18
LuMPyPussy Wrote:Oh that's right, I forgot you know all about great whites BECAUSE YOU ARE ONE! ::lmao::

::bigg:: You ain't shittin' kitten!
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