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In honor of shark week...more shark pictures (from diving yesterday)

1nrf.jpg
 
Nimbus - Bull sharks are more likely to be human aggressive, but the vast majority of shark attacks are a case of mistaken identity with people on the surface. Under water, a diver doesn't look, smell, or move like anything a shark eats, so as long as you're not threatening them in any way, neither species is going to really want anything to do with you.

Except miss Emma, the tiger shark...probably the coolest animal in the entire ocean:

 
I was watching shark week last night, and these scientists put some whale blubber in the water and video taped these great whites eating it and shit. Then after awhile when the great whites were full they were all fucked up like they were drunk and shit. Swimming right into the prop of the boat and running into each other. lulz
 
Under water, a diver doesn't look, smell, or move like anything a shark eats,

what if you cut yourself and you're bleeding? Then do you smell like something a shark might eat?
 
If you need a blood transfusion...can you substitute fish blood? ;)

In short, no.

Pretty sure if you were bleeding in the water a great white would eat you.
 
I was watching shark week last night, and these scientists put some whale blubber in the water and video taped these great whites eating it and shit. Then after awhile when the great whites were full they were all fucked up like they were drunk and shit. Swimming right into the prop of the boat and running into each other. lulz

whale fog :confused:
 
Pretty sure if you were bleeding in the water a great white would eat you.

A great white is one of hundreds of shark species. It's also incredibly rare to just "come across" them in the ocean because they are one of the aforementioned blue water sharks. This also means their feeding patterns are different. As blue water sharks, they aren't picky eaters. If a great white is near you and feeling aggressive or hungry, it's liable to possibly bite you whether you are bleeding or not. Aside from being blue water sharks, they also prefer cold water, and frankly, there aren't very many left in the oceans anyway. So if you're bleeding heavily and there's one nearby - which is an incredibly remote possibility in and of itself, even if you're in the correct temperature of water? Tiny chance it might come check you out. Even smaller it decides to give you a bite to see if you're tasty.

I've been spearfishing and surrounded by fish blood (which oddly, in the water, is a bright green color) and even then a shark didn't take interest in me because it didn't want to get close enough to me to take my fish.
 
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