piffle
Contributor
Honey, I'm going diving. You feed the dog and I'll feed the fish. lol
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I keep hearing about declining shark populations, and I have no reason to doubt that, but I do know from 1983 through the begining of 2000 when I hit my 1000th dive I saw 23 sharks of which 22 were Nurse Sharks (the other was a Blacktip). In the next 1000 dives, I saw 115 sharks of which 72 were Nurse Sharks (others were Caribbean Reef <19> Silky <1> Bull <5> Sand Tiger <16> Lemon <2>). I've never gone on a shark feeding dive. With the exception of a trip to North Carolina (where I made 2 dives and saw 18 sharks - 2 Bulls and all 16 Sand Tigers), my diving has not changed much from the 1st 1000 dives. It looks to me that we're more likely to see sharks than we were 10, 20 or 25 years ago even without feeding them.
halemano:don't celebrate the shark recovery too loudly.
What about places in FL and elsewhere that "train" people to wrestle 'gators?
LRobbins :On the one hand we don't know if sharks begin to associate humans with food
What about places in FL and elsewhere that "train" people to wrestle 'gators? Do they not have the same goal of messing with dangerous wild animals for cheap thrills? Their clientele are roughly the same; hungover, unfamiliar with animals behavior, bound to do something stupid, etc. One could argue the sharks are more wild than 'gators on a farm, but the reef sharks at certain feed sites that get visited regularly seem equally "farmed" to me.