Shark attack Santa Barbara County

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by cresto4, Oct 22, 2010.

  1. zach619

    zach619 Well-Known Member

    Jan 21, 2009

  2. Bronze Whaler

    Bronze Whaler Well-Known Member

    269
    Aug 22, 2009
  3. cresto4

    cresto4 Well-Known Member

    460
    Aug 19, 2010
    so tragic. it makes me think about how fine the line is between a perfect day and disaster. i'm wondering, if it were somehow possible, would you want to know how close sharks you've never seen have come to you over the years or would you rather just not know? i don't think i would want to know - might not get back in the water. ignorance is bliss in this case...
     
  4. zach619

    zach619 Well-Known Member

    Jan 21, 2009
    You NEVER want to know. We are all aware of the fact that we have been looked up and down by many-a-predetor, but for real. You dont want to know. Whenever im surfing in the winter at the reefs that break like 400-500+ yards out and in certain areas, the water is like 20-30 feet deep. I do my best NOT to look down. There are kelp beds, but I have surfed on days where earlier in the morning, there was a 15 foot white shark under the lineup. Signs everywhere... So, when you go out, you just try not to think about it. I often find myself laying on my board in the lineup with my feet up, crossed. My wife always know when im sketched out, cause I stop sitting and lay on the board.... She always comments when I get out, like did you see something out there. The answer is NO, but I want to keep it that way....

    You never want to know.
     
  5. LOSTsoul

    LOSTsoul Well-Known Member

    543
    Apr 29, 2009
  6. Groundswell

    Groundswell Active Member

    39
    Aug 24, 2010
    I think it was Jacques Cousteau who said, "We are never more than 50 feet from some kind of shark when we are in the ocean"!!!!
     
  7. Bronze Whaler

    Bronze Whaler Well-Known Member

    269
    Aug 22, 2009
    I've seen decent size (6 ft maybe 8 ft max) sharks breaching and hitting bait balls pretty close to me and that doesn't bother me, I figure they are pre-occupied & I've seen a smaller 4-5 footer cruise past me, but I've wondered for a long time what I would do if I ever saw a large shark when I was in the water- as in would I not want to paddle out anymore.
     
  8. NJ SPONGIN

    NJ SPONGIN Well-Known Member

    573
    Feb 24, 2009
    18 foot.....................my god.
     
  9. cap2nd

    cap2nd Well-Known Member

    70
    Nov 10, 2007
    I love shark attacks, I love the way it inspires irrational fear and keeps people out of the water. GO JAWS GO!!! :)
    Take up lawn bowling.
     
  10. cresto4

    cresto4 Well-Known Member

    460
    Aug 19, 2010
    i don't think anyone is irrational and i seriously doubt if this attack will keep anyone on this forum out of the water. i just think it's an interesting conversation. the psychology of hanging out (literally) in places where you're not at the top of the food chain is fascinating to me. i admit i don't spend much time thinking about sharks in va beach but when i'm surfing on cape cod with seals all around or down in panama where i've seen hammerheads and bigass barracudas, i do. and it makes me wonder what other people think about when they're out there. i appreciate zach's candor. seems like an intelligent dude who thinks about things and has the ability to share his thoughts without the macho/dismissive bs of many other posters on this forum.
     
  11. McLovin

    McLovin Well-Known Member

    985
    Jun 27, 2010
    I try not to think about it, but the thought randomly pops into my head from time to time, and a cold chill runs down my back. I even imagined how a shark would initially stalk me, and the violence that would happen when it finally decides to attack, and when the attack is just out of nowhere. I just have a rule that I promised myself and my wife, and that's never to surf alone.

    But there is still that feeling that everybody here probably get: if it looks fun, the risks just disappear from my head.
     
  12. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    Hey Jackass, shut the f*** up. Get a clue. That kid's family doesn't need to hear your poseur, faux macho crap. You wouldn't be woofing in front of the kid's family. So don't do it here.

    Tell you what: Just tie a porterhouse to your leg & surf a break off Durban. The subsequent silence will be a good thing for intelligent humans.

    Real tough guy you are.
     
  13. staystoked

    staystoked Well-Known Member

    628
    Dec 27, 2009
    you enter the ocean, you enter the food chain.
     
  14. eppeldaa

    eppeldaa Well-Known Member

    191
    Nov 9, 2009
    I firmly believe that a boogie borader, a weak swimmer, a female with her period are all easier and more attractive targets than a full grown man on a 7' + surfboard...
    I think a shark likes to be safe when it attcks and a boogie boarder looks like an easy and safe meal for an 18" shark.
    However, it is obvious that for an 18' shark, even a big guy on a long board may look like a safe meal.
     
  15. idsmashh

    idsmashh Well-Known Member

    404
    Aug 2, 2010
    damn. did you read that? the friend said he screamed "Help me dude!", before he got drug under. man, thats sad
     
  16. idsmashh

    idsmashh Well-Known Member

    404
    Aug 2, 2010
    dude, your so right man. i get the same goosebumps sometimes. the odds are slim dude, but its all on the sharks. its up to them. no fightin it. they say your dead, your dead. thats the only thing that scares me
     
  17. Koki Barrels

    Koki Barrels Well-Known Member

    Aug 14, 2008
    It is terrible about that kid, damn that's got to be the worst way to go...you won't find me surfing in water where there are seals, though...in that case, I'm not so sure the reward is worth the risk!
     
  18. aka pumpmaster

    aka pumpmaster Well-Known Member

    Apr 30, 2008


    It's not just sharks, it's life. You never know when your time is up.
     
  19. leethestud

    leethestud Well-Known Member

    Aug 12, 2010
    he speaks the truth. whenever i start to get sketched in the line-up i think about all of the people who die on the interstate on the way to/from work. Or those poor sick kids wasting away in childrens hospitals. I wish we could all be so fortunate to die in the water rather than from a heart attack or some kind of Fu$ked up cancer one day.

    "Its OK to die doing something that you love"