FairyBasset
Contributor
I haven’t dived in Galapagos. I meant the Galapagos sharks in Cocos. Sorry for any confusion.
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Two one meter sharks were following the large female tiger who was identifiable by her dorsal fin. We saw that twice in one day. I would think that if the rangers consider her to be pregnant that she probably was. But I’m not an expert and I didn’t attend the birth! Quite possibly they were just very small sharks. We all assumed they were baby tigers, but as I said we are not experts. One thing is for sure, that particular sharks is huge.
Thank you for your take, John.
Given your experience and what you've been able to learn about this occurrence, do you think there is anything we (the diving community) should take away from it? Or to put it differently, if you were on a boat scheduled to dive at the same location tomorrow, is there anything you would do differently? Or do we just chalk this up to the terrible realization of a relatively low probability risk?
In other words, we take deaths from shark attacks as acceptable losses.I think we should be aware that sharks are unpredictable animals with a lot of teeth. They are not pussycats. They don't predate on humans but they investigate. I have been grabbed by a large tiger more than once and swum off with but I made damned sure to keep as still as possible so that those teeth didn't hurt me! Know that there is always a risk.