WHAT!!???!!!??
Randy is bringing this nonsense to the Zion Train wreck trek????
The truth about these operations is coming out and is even worse than imagined.
This is probably the MOST popular wreck site in northern palm beach county, a prime site for the annual goliath spawning aggregation, and visited by many recreational boats every day. Thousands and thousands of divers each year.
This is just as bad, or worse even, than doing feeding on Breaker's Reef. The Zion Train is deep (95'), with current. The last thing many divers there want is close shark approaches by artificially stimulated animals seeking food, especially on more advanced expeditions like night diving.
Can someone verify whether this is outside the three mile limit? If not then Halcyon's post should be grounds for additional prosecution.
This guy needs to be shut down, for good. His arrogance and hubris is going to ruin the best of Palm Beach diving if this keeps up.
See, this is what I mean by "hysteria."
Guy, I took the coordinates posted on Force-E's website for the wreck and dropped them into Google Earth just out of curiosity. For bonus points, I also ran the Miss Jenny, which I've seen in the background of some of the hammerhead footage off the
Emerald. Both are a bit over 3.5 nm from the nearest point on the coastline. Federal waters and thus legal under current law.
Now, maybe you missed the part where I said Randy laid out a bunch of fish and got nothing but a bunch of nosy goliaths, and maybe some bull sharks that had zero interest in us and were only seen at a distance by him. Why might that have been? I honestly have no idea. Maybe they were satiated. Maybe they didn't feel like having to shove through a squad of refrigerator-sized grouper to get to the bait. Whichever it is, doesn't sound like the automatic frenzied response you're clamoring about.
Additionally, I dove the wreck trek from the
Kyalami on Feb. 22. Again, no sharks - even though later that day the
Emerald's Facebook page put up a picture of a great hammerhead feeding off the sand, possibly near that site. Our second dive that day we dropped on a reef line (I forget the site) right after the
Emerald's divers came up from it. Some folks got a fleeting glimpse of a lemon shark on that dive, but aside from that we had nothing but snoozing nurse sharks and a crap-ton of loggerhead turtles.
If you're going to scream about Randy endangering divers on the wreck trek and other sites, also make noise about the boats that go shoot cobia off of Governor's Riverwalk. I did a dive there last spring, and the first thing I saw on the wreck was a diver with a speared cobia spilling blood all over the place. Apparently there were three bulls and a tiger hanging around and the spearfishers had shot a few cobia off the sharks. At least one guy lost his fish to the tiger; it didn't take it off of him but the cobia fell off the spear and landed next to the tiger. The guy wisely decided not to go after it. How much of this did I see? None. I popped a few lionfish and left them for dead, and went through the dive without seeing a shark. Finding out I had missed all that was cause for a frustrated cluster f-bomb while changing my tank over. A bunch of us dropped back in on Riverwalk for the second dive to see if they were still around, but saw nothing.
Before demonizing the guy, can we find out if this is a problem or not? I know Neil Hammerschlag's group at University of Miami has done some studies about the effects of shark feeding dives; sounds like something a bright young PhD candidate should look into.