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-   -   Shark Attack 12/21 in South Maui (https://www.fodors.com/community/united-states/shark-attack-12-21-in-south-maui-577500/)

kamahinaohoku Dec 22nd, 2005 10:01 AM

Shark Attack 12/21 in South Maui
 
Per the Honolulu Advertiser:
http://starbulletin.com/2005/12/22/news/story01.html
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FainaAgain Dec 22nd, 2005 10:16 AM

It was in the news - he lost one finger and part of another one.

GoTravel Dec 22nd, 2005 10:53 AM

So the warning signs were posted and he went swimming anyway????

kamahinaohoku Dec 22nd, 2005 11:01 AM

GoTravel, the way I read it is that they posted warning signs and closed the beach after he was attacked...not before. Though I agree that the way they wrote it is unclear.
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Barbara Dec 22nd, 2005 11:33 AM

"were closed in the aftermath of the shark attack"

Seems clear enough to me, they closed the beaches after the attack occurred.

FainaAgain Dec 22nd, 2005 11:52 AM

Sorry I didn't read the article, but please tell me, was it Kal who was attacked? He's vacationing on Hawaii these days.

gyppielou Dec 22nd, 2005 12:08 PM

Naaaa - the only sharks attacking Kal are here!

JohnD Dec 22nd, 2005 12:09 PM

Thanks for posting the article, <font color="blue">kamahinaohoku</font>, had my own first shark encounter a couple weeks ago: http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34719670

OldSouthernBelle Dec 23rd, 2005 05:43 AM

Good one gyppielou!!

Belle

kamahinaohoku Dec 23rd, 2005 06:19 AM

John - all I can say is wow, are you ever lucky.

I've only seen sharks in the water twice while SCUBA diving. One 9-foot black tip in the Caribbean about 30 years ago and a relatively harmless nurse shark on the back side of Molokini Crater about 15 years ago. Neither got close enough to me to be threatening, which was fine by me.
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Sarah Dec 23rd, 2005 06:26 AM

I am curious to know if this guy was swimming in murky waters? I have been getting a lot of flood alerts for Kauai and the North Shore of Oahu. I know you are more at risk if you swim in waters clouded up by a storm.

JohnD Dec 23rd, 2005 07:00 AM

Reply to <font color="blue">kamahinaohoku</font>, mahalo for sharing! I guess my caribbean reef shark was ((P)) shy, even though my camera was out of film it may have helped divert him away-I sure wouldn't be up to giving him a finger.:S-

GoTravel Dec 23rd, 2005 07:19 AM

John, scary isn't it? I've encountered a shark twice at most over at least 100 snorkel and dives. Oh the adreniline!

My husband, who is a dive master, got bumped by a great white while diving in the kelp forest in a red tide off the coast of San Diego. He was very fortunate.

I live on the beach and it horrifies me to see people in the water when the schools of baitfish start jumping. They don't realize that something much bigger is making them jump.

My husband and I were snorkeling off the coast of Isla Murjeres in Mexico and ran into a school of about 12 of those four foot long barracuda. I screamed through my mask and snorkel and obviously scared the fish because they were outta there quick!

Who would have thought you could yell at fish?

:-D

JohnD Dec 23rd, 2005 08:01 AM

Hey <font color="blue">GoT</font>, thanks for sharing-curious what kind of sharks and in which waters you saw them((?))
Do you snorkel/dive with any means of defense now based on your encounters:?

GoTravel Dec 23rd, 2005 08:14 AM

Hi John!

One time that particularly stands out in my mind was when my husband and I spent a week fishing, snorkeling and diving in the Florida Keys back in the fall of 2001. We were done fishing around noon (fish stopped biting)and anchored the boat off the lighthouse at Lignumvitae Key. We were trying to set the anchor in about 35 feet of water in underwater desert like conditions and the boat kept dragging along the sand.

I looked up and saw a massive school of pompano followed by barracuda followed by a sand shark.

I guess no one was hungry because the shark nor the barracuda bothered us or the pompano.


GoTravel Dec 23rd, 2005 08:18 AM

Sorry, it was the iron lighthouse at Indian Key on Alligator Reef.

chepar Dec 23rd, 2005 08:24 AM

Shark sightings are my most prized &quot;critter encounters&quot; when I go diving. I typically only run into reef sharks and nurse sharks, though. I was told that I saw a galapagos shark once, but I can't really tell the difference on most of them.

I would probably be a mite concerned if I saw a tiger or as with GoT's husband - a great white.

kamahinaohoku Dec 23rd, 2005 09:09 AM

chepar - I always said that if I ever saw a hammerhead under water, it wouldn't have to kill me, because I'd probably already be dead from the fright. For some reason, those things REALLY scare me. Fortunately, I've never seen one.
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here_today_gone2Maui Dec 23rd, 2005 10:06 AM

He was swimming 400 yards off-shore, in 30 foot deep water, in an area inhabited by turtles, a favorite food of sharks.


chepar Dec 23rd, 2005 10:21 AM

kamahinaohoku:

I know people who have seen hammerheads here, but I've not yet been lucky enough. I think my eyes would almost bug out of my head if I did see one, though.

My ultimate &quot;dream critter&quot; sighting is the whale shark. Every winter there are a few sightings off the back wall of Molokini or off the east shore of Oahu - but again, I've not been so lucky.


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