mike_s
Contributor
ok.. We've had some fun with this thread....
but there have been real shark sightings at PCB at St Andrews Jetties. (No I'm not kidding this time.
I got this pic from someone. It was a recently taken photo.
As you can tell, those are HAMMERHEADS's swimming in the tidal pool.
Wanted to verify it, so started looking via google and found this.
This story was published about it in the news..
Panama City: Hammer time? | making, chances, panama
The news reports did a follow up story that the photos were REAL
Shark photographer surfaces : NewsHerald.com
but there have been real shark sightings at PCB at St Andrews Jetties. (No I'm not kidding this time.
I got this pic from someone. It was a recently taken photo.
As you can tell, those are HAMMERHEADS's swimming in the tidal pool.

Wanted to verify it, so started looking via google and found this.
This story was published about it in the news..
Panama City: Hammer time? | making, chances, panama
Hammer time?
St. Andrews shark photos still a mystery
By JOHN McDONALD, Florida Freedom Newspapers
2008-07-01 16:24:00
PANAMA CITY BEACH - The photos have been making the rounds. Chances are, you have gotten them via e-mail and wondered:
What are sharks doing in a popular swimming area for children?
Are these sharks dangerous?
And just who was it who took these photos?
"Nobody seems to know who took them," said Vivian McKibben-Steele, spokeswoman for the Friends of St. Andrews State Park Inc.
In the photos, three hammerhead sharks appear in St. Andrew Bay and on the west side of the eastern jetty of St. Andrews State Park. The photos have been sent to The News Herald, via e-mail, many times and from many senders since June 19, under the subject lines "Kiddie pool/St Andrews Park" and "Sharks in kiddie pool at St. Andrews!"
![]()
As McKibben-Steele notes, just the mere association of sharks and kids might be keeping the photographer anonymous.
"It's going to scare people away," said McKibben-Steele.
Corliss Burke, a park ranger at St. Andrews State Park, said the area in question is known as the jetty pool. And Burke said she had not seen any sharks swimming in those waters.
"I've seen some stingrays," she said.
The sharks in the photos appear to hammerheads, which have been categorized as aggressive predators.
Pam George, Gulf World Marine Park spokeswoman, said the Panama City Beach theme park did not have any hammerheads on site.
"I have seen them in the gulf before," she added.
Hammerheads' distinct look make them easy to identify. The species is a popular resident at the Georgia Aquarium, where it is pictured on the main page of the Atlanta attraction's Web site.
"They're often found in packs," said Dave Santucci, director of communications for the Georgia Aquarium. "But they don't do anything unless provoked."
After seeing the photos, Santucci and his team of experts at the aquarium said the sharks were "exhibiting normal behavior."
"It looks like they are probably foraging for fish ... probably looking for some stingrays to eat."
At St. Andrews State Park, a jetty - or wall of rocks - is situated next to the pass, an all-purpose entry point for St. Andrew Bay.
Those familiar with the terrain note that it is possible the sharks were caught in a ship's current and swept into the jetty pool.
Lee Schlesinger, Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission spokesman, said the photos had made it to his office.
"They're pretty cool," he said.
Schlesinger recalled taking his son to the jetty pool years ago.
"The water is so clear there, you can see a lot of things," he said.
When sharks appear, Schlesinger said, common sense should take over.
"People need to understand that's their environment ... they live there," Schlesinger said.
Overall, those interviewed for this article agreed that Florida's beaches, by and large, are safe.
"Shark attacks are rare, especially hammerheads," said Santucci.
And, with the photographer hard to find, there is a chance the pictures could be a big computer hoax.
"That's the other thing," McKibben-Steele said. "My husband fiddles with Photoshop from time to time."
The news reports did a follow up story that the photos were REAL
Shark photographer surfaces : NewsHerald.com
Shark photographer surfaces
Rising Arnold senior's pictures of hammerheads at state park circulated on Web, e-mail
July 03, 2008 06:10:00 AM
By John McDonald
News Herald Writer
PANAMA CITY BEACH — Logan Darling doesn't consider himself a famous photographer.
"It was a normal day at the beach," said Darling, 17, a rising senior at Arnold High School.
One day in early June, Darling said, he and his girlfriend, Krista Dalton, were fishing from the west jetty at St. Andrews State Park. That's when three sharks were spotted swimming in the pool area between the jetty and land.
"You see that sign in the picture," Darling said. "They were circling that sign."
According to George H. Burgess, a director of shark research at the University of Florida, the sharks are scalloped hammerheads, which typically are not aggressive toward humans.
Burgess, who also serves as curator of the International Shark Attack File at the Florida Museum of Natural History, examined the photos taken by Darling and rendered this conclusion at the behest of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission: "A basically harmless fish and crustacean eating species," Burgess wrote in a report to the FWC.
Darling said he wasn't scared of the sharks.
"They were pretty long," he said. "They had to be 8 or 9 feet."
While most people around him headed for dry land, Darling grabbed a digital camera and got as close to the sharks as he could.
"He's a little daredevil," said David Darling, Logan's father. "He was showing off for his girlfriend."
When he returned home, Logan put the photos on his MySpace Web page.
"I thought they were pretty cool," he said.
His father did, too, and began e-mailing them to friends, thus triggering a chain reaction which circulated across cyberspace.