DiveBen
Registered
My son received his open water certification last September. And yes, it is completely awesome having my 16 yr old son as my dive buddy. A bit of a concern for me, is that he is experiencing some nosebleed, since his certification. We are still trying to zero in on the cause and fix, and I think we are both currently convinced that it occurs on ascent. Anyhow, we are planning to hit the ocean starting next month. We have been hitting the Florida springs over the winter, waiting for the ocean waters to warm up enough for our "taste". Should I have much of a shark concern over his nosebleeds?
The bleeding is what I consider to be light, and does not continue at the surface. I am not being wiimpy about it, but just want to get an idea of the level of any potential risk.
Also, this one is one I always wondered about
: since they say that a shark can smell a drop of blood from a mile (or two) away, then why do you see boats on TV chumming the waters with barrels of blood and fish-heads, waiting for sharks to show up??? Why don't they just go out there with an eyedropper and drop a couple of drops of blood in the water, instead ??? Is the "smell statistic" just theoretical, and not really literal?? Seems like a very small amount of blood in the water would be diluted and overwhelmed, at any significant distance, by many other smells in the water. What is the true bottom line on this shark smell thing ????
Also, this one is one I always wondered about
: since they say that a shark can smell a drop of blood from a mile (or two) away, then why do you see boats on TV chumming the waters with barrels of blood and fish-heads, waiting for sharks to show up??? Why don't they just go out there with an eyedropper and drop a couple of drops of blood in the water, instead ??? Is the "smell statistic" just theoretical, and not really literal?? Seems like a very small amount of blood in the water would be diluted and overwhelmed, at any significant distance, by many other smells in the water. What is the true bottom line on this shark smell thing ????
Erythrocytes won't function in an oil base! OK, sharks do home in on fish oil (which is why I have a DC garberator to grind up barracuda when I chum for sharks), but fish do not have "oil based blood". Armchair pontificating about a subject which you do not understand leads to the spread of your ignorance. The enemy of truth and scientific discovery is ignorance, magical thinking, and firmly held beliefs in mythology. Also, chumming for sharks with mammalian blood does work very well. I frequently have used pig blood to chum when fishing for sharks in the Gulf of Mexico (because I don't know where I can get 5 gallon buckets of fish blood), and they tear up the hams we hang over the side to keep them interested. Sharks eat fish, birds, and mammals. Most are predators AND opportunistic scavengers.