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Next, he'll be spouting off about your snow bound Canadian Fortress.
:fortress:
Good one. But this pic. may also be a S. Floridian's view of the "tundra" (panhandle).
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Next, he'll be spouting off about your snow bound Canadian Fortress.
:fortress:
But sharks are scary and I'm a self-entitled terrestrial primate that wants to go where they are.
BINGO! WE have a winnah!
View attachment 178971
Hope foxfish don't move to Alaska! Mr Bear won't be smiling then.
Article published July 17, 2013 3:57PM
A TEENAGE girl from France was killed in a shark attack while swimming off the Indian Ocean island of Reunion, the fifth person to be killed by sharks on the island since 2011.
Local officials said the 15-year-old was attacked in the mid-afternoon while swimming just five metres from shore in the shallows of Saint-Paul bay on the western side of the island.
The teenager's body was sliced in two at the torso, and then "a part of her body was taken away by the shark", said Gina Hoarau, the head of public safety on the island.
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Authorities confirmed that the beach was not monitored and swimming was prohibited but that a warning sign was often vandalised.
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Numerous sharks had been sighted in the area in recent weeks.
There have been 11 shark attacks recorded in Reunion since 2011, all involving surfers.
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In August 2012, Alexander Rassiga, 21, was killed by sharks at Trois-Bassins located on the west coast of Reunion Island.
Rassiga was surfing when he was bitten below the knee. He survived that but a second bite severed an artery, killing him.
After the attack, Guy Gazzo, a diver and member of the Regional Fisheries Committee, said there was a clear overpopulation of sharks on the west coast.
With each dive, sharks are seen in groups of two or three, said Mr. Gazzo, advocating the removal of the sharks.
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Last year over 300 locals picketed outside the mayor's office, causing Mayor Thierry Robert to initially OK an order to cull sharks in the area, before pressure from France quickly made him retract the order.
By the time he made it back to shore, the nautical crew from the fire department was already on the beach, equipped with scuba tanks, preparing to take on the recovery of the body. According to Rzepecki and other lifeguards, the divers ran into trouble immediately. Despite employing Shark Shields (devices that emit electronic pulses to repel sharks), they were forced to retreat into caves beneath the spit of rocks that delineates the north end of Boucan Rights, while the sharks, in a highly agitated state, frisked in and out of view in the impact zone. Mathieu Schiller's body was never found.
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The locals here are staying high and dry, staging a kind of informal strike. According to native wisdom, the risk of a shark attack has become intolerable. Since the death of 21-year-old Alexandre Rassiga in July, the third fatality in just over a year, there have been protest marches, a lot of shouting, and a bit of violence, with surfers demanding that the government kill the offending animals. I've arrived in the midst of a turf war between man and shark.
Faced with the increase in the sea predators and following the deadly attacks, the prefect of the island announced a slew of measures in July, including banning swimming, surfing and body boarding off more than half of the coast.
He also said 90 sharks would be culled - 45 bull sharks and 45 tiger sharks - on top of the 20 already killed as part of scientific research into ciguatera, the illness caused by eating fish flesh contaminated with ciguatoxins.
But he acknowledged the cull was not only scientific but also aimed at "reducing the shark population''.
Thierry Robert, a prominent politician on the island, has called for more "preventative culls''.
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Authorities in the Reunion island are also looking at other ways to protect swimmers, such as using aerial balloons equipped with surveillance cameras and alert systems when they detect movement in the water.
The island's Saint-Paul district has opted for drum lines, devices fixed with hooks that are meant to capture sharks.
Meanwhile, surfers and body boarders say they refuse to be sacrificed in the name of marine conservation.
"We have to stop this worldwide lobbying that advocates the protection of sharks,'' says Jean-Francois Nativel, head of the Ocean Prevention Reunion association, which works on reducing the risks of shark attacks.
"We're in the era of Flipper the shark. We have to break the taboos... We have to bring back fishing, and put the shark back in the plates of Reunion people,'' he said.