Long post. Very very sad incident. The shark seems a bit agitated, but the divers actions/reactions definetely stir things up and plays a significant part in the outcome too. I have dived the Red Sea regularly for more than 20 years and done many dives at this specific spot with OW:s as well, sometimes with more than five sharks at once. Most of the time they will calmly eye you, sometimes test you with a bump. It’s their natural behaviour. As said, food scraps in the water will agitate them. That is also their natural behaviour, it’s not altered.
There were a few incidents in sharm el sheikh 7-8 years ago as well as a French woman in St Johns in 2008 or 2007. Deadly outcome. Most likely some kind of baiting had been going on in a couple of those cases. A few of them were tourist snorkellers/swimmers with zero experience and knowledge about sharks, resulting in behaviour that made things worse.
Never try to hit the shark. Don’t do erratic, sudden moves. Always face it. Stay vertical. Never swim towards it. A stick or a camera can be useful, but just hold it up in between you and the shark if it comes too close for comfort. Do not attempt to strike or hit it.
All this might be easier said than done, off course. But, it is not a dive to be made if you do not know what you’re doing or being guided by someone with some degree of experience.
It’s not ”safe”. They are wild, apex predators in their own territory. If they want to hurt you, they will. Period.
Is it ”dangerous”? No. There’s an elevated risk. But the fact that thousands and thousands of encounters with oceanic wt:s happens yearly at sites like Brothers and Elphinstone with happy endings is evidence enough.
There were a few incidents in sharm el sheikh 7-8 years ago as well as a French woman in St Johns in 2008 or 2007. Deadly outcome. Most likely some kind of baiting had been going on in a couple of those cases. A few of them were tourist snorkellers/swimmers with zero experience and knowledge about sharks, resulting in behaviour that made things worse.
Never try to hit the shark. Don’t do erratic, sudden moves. Always face it. Stay vertical. Never swim towards it. A stick or a camera can be useful, but just hold it up in between you and the shark if it comes too close for comfort. Do not attempt to strike or hit it.
All this might be easier said than done, off course. But, it is not a dive to be made if you do not know what you’re doing or being guided by someone with some degree of experience.
It’s not ”safe”. They are wild, apex predators in their own territory. If they want to hurt you, they will. Period.
Is it ”dangerous”? No. There’s an elevated risk. But the fact that thousands and thousands of encounters with oceanic wt:s happens yearly at sites like Brothers and Elphinstone with happy endings is evidence enough.