She's 13' and weighs in at 1,000 lbs...and they said she'd been spotted close to Assateague shores for a while.
do you remember telling me i didn't see a gws at assateague? ...thats ok, not going anywhere w/this....next question: pony hunter?
Yeah, my biscuits. I am a little shocked that a 13' Tiger is in the bay , though and up this far north, I thought they stayed south.
I'm actually relieved that Septima is a shark. I read that as Septimia and thought it was a flesh eating disease, lol.
what do ya think about tertiary pony predation? put some real action into the chincoteague pony swim...
We have tigers up here every summer. few and far between, but they're here. A few caught out in Montauk the last few weeks
Now, I'm not saying it's not the shark. It probably is, Martin, it probably is! It's a man eater, it's extremely rare for these waters, but the fact is, the bite radius on this animal is different than the wounds on the victim. I just- I wanna be sure. You wanna be sure, we all wanna be sure,
I was following a great white for a minute and saw some pings over land. Makes me wonder how pinpoint accurate this is
From Ocearch.com Why did the shark ping on land? When the shark's fin breaks the surface, sometimes it is for a very short time which effects the accuracy of the ping. There is a classification system that rates the quality of the ping as follows: Class 3: better than 250 m radius Class 2: better than 500 m radius Class 1: better than 1500 m radius Class 0: over 1500 m radius Class A,B,Z = no accuracy could be calculated For example, when you see a ping on land that is close to the shore, the shark is more than likely swimming along that shore.